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Posts Tagged ‘speeding solicitors’

Speeding Celebs: Justin Beiber Investigated For Speeding

Prepare your teenage daughters for heartbreak!   Squeaky clean teen idol Justin Beiber is being investigated after driving his Ferrari at a “startling high rate of speed”.

The 19 year old had police officers turn up at his Los Angeles home following two separate reports of his speedy driving around his gated community at around 8pm on Sunday evening.

It isn’t the first problem the teen star has encountered in his Ferrari.  Earlier this year, he was investigated for assault against a man who had reported him for driving recklessly through the same gated community.

The speeding matter has been referred to the L.A. County District Attorney.

Beiber isn’t alone in this matter; many celebrities have been found speeding, including Stephen Fry, Katie Price, Anne Robinson, Mel Gibson, Robert Downey Jr, Kim Kardashian, Jodi Foster, Gisele Bundchen, Britney Spears and even Bill Gates!   We don’t just act for celebrities! If you need advice call us on 01623 397200

Driving Offence Solicitors in Newcastle Magistrates Court

If you are looking for expert legal advice regarding a Notice of Intended Prosecution or Summons for any motoring offence at Newcastle Magistrates Court, or any Magistrates Court in England or Wales, our specialist motoring solicitors can help.

Our motoring lawyers are experienced in all motoring offences and provide specialist representation for drink drivingspeeding, driving without insurance, dangerous driving, failure to provide a sample and all other driving offences.

Our motoring lawyers regularly appear in Newcastle Magistrates Court representing clients charged with totting up, failing to provide driver’s details, and all other motoring offences.

We can help you if you have received a Notice of Intended Prosecution (NIP) or a Summons to attend Newcastle Magistrates Court.

For a free, no obligation assessment of your case, contact us now on 01623 397200.

Sheffield Magistrates Road Traffic Lawyer speeding case

I was at Sheffield Magistrates Court this week with a speeding case. This is still the most common sort of case we get as Motoring Lawyers.

Sometimes we get clients who admit that they were speeding but deny that they were going as fast as the police say they were.

This can make a big difference. This case was an extreme case. The police case was that the client was travelling at at least 80 mph in a 40 and up to 110mph! The client admitted that he was speeding but at no more than 60mph maximum.

If the court believed the police he would been banned for a very long time, if they believed the client he was looking at points on his otherwise clean licence.

The procedure here is to plead guilty and ask for a Newton Hearing to establish the speed he was doing.

The police stated that they saw the client enter a large roundabout as they were on the other side. They caught up with him and followed him for .5 miles and he never went below 80, they then lost him and had to go up to 110 to catch him.

The problem for the police was that once I did the maths the figures didn’t add up. With the aid of google maps we established that by the time the police got around the roundabout the client was .2 miles ahead of them. They claimed they followed him for .5 miles until the next roundabout. The distance from one roundabout to the next was .8 miles. This meant that to catch him up in time to follow him for .5 miles the police had to travel .3 miles in the same time as the client traveled .1 miles. So 3 times as far, he was traveling (according to the police) at 80mph meaning they had to travel at 240mph to catch him up!

Obviously the police had got their calculations wrong, unfortunately for the client the police ‘on board computer’ appeared to have broken just before they followed him so they had no footage nor any VASCAR calculations to help the court!

I spent a lot of time preparing spreadsheets to prove that the police were wrong and was, frankly, looking forward to the cross examination.

On the day of the hearing neither police officers attended court and the CPS accepted our clients case.

Good outcome for the client but I never did get to ask the police officer if he knew how long it would take his car to get from 40-240mph!

Forrest Williams TV