• Re: Driver reached speeds of 100mph after being spotted using his phone

    From JNugent@21:1/5 to swldx...@gmail.com on Sat Jul 8 20:56:37 2023
    On 08/07/2023 08:48 pm, swldx...@gmail.com wrote:

    A dangerous driver reached speeds over 100mph while trying to evade a police dog handler.
    Kyther Pargeter, 33, of Surrey Avenue in Cheltenham, hit double the speed limit during a police pursuit on Monday 24 January last year.
    Dog handler PC Ben Smith was patrolling on Redmarley Road in the Battledown area of the Cheltenham when he spotted Pargeter driving while on his mobile phone.
    PC Smith, who was formerly a Roads Policing Officer, stopped Pargeter and detained him by his vehicle while he checked his driving licence.
    But Pargeter fled, getting back into his car and driving away before PC Smith could reach him.
    A pursuit ensued, in which Pargeter drove through residential roads at dangerous speeds. At one point he was driving at 90mph in a 50mph zone.
    Pargeter’s route took him through Whaddon Road, Cromwell Road, Mendip Road, Prestbury Road, Prestbury High Street, the B4632 Southam Road.
    Then he took the B4632 Cheltenham Road towards Winchcombe and B4632 Toddington before abandoning the vehicle in a housing estate and running away.
    Still refusing to stop for the officer, PC Smith finally had to use his Taser to bring the chase to a conclusion.
    Pargeter was subsequently arrested on suspicion of dangerous driving and released on police bail before later being postal charged with the motoring offence.
    As part of the investigation it was never established why Pargeter drove off following what was a routine stop.
    Pargeter appeared at Gloucester Crown Court on Monday 3 July where he was sentenced to 14 months in prison suspended for 18 months and disqualified from driving for two years.
    He was also ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work, undertake a rehabilitation requirement of 20 days and pay a fine of £156.
    Following the sentencing PC Smith commented on Pargeter’s actions saying: "Kyther drove recklessly while trying to evade me and it is lucky that he didn’t cause any further harm.
    "We are constantly risk assessing pursuits, which can dynamically change, and considering the safety of the public is at the forefront, Police Dog Arnie was in the car with me at the time and I also needed to consider his welfare due to the speeds
    Pargeter was travelling at.
    "Pargeter showed a complete disregard for the safety of himself, his pet dog which was in his car and more importantly members of the public."

    https://www.itv.com/news/westcountry/2023-07-07/driver-reached-speeds-of-100mph-after-being-spotted-using-his-phone

    Was it PC Smith who was on the chav-cycle?

    Or did Arnie have his own?

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  • From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 8 12:48:16 2023
    A dangerous driver reached speeds over 100mph while trying to evade a police dog handler.

    Kyther Pargeter, 33, of Surrey Avenue in Cheltenham, hit double the speed limit during a police pursuit on Monday 24 January last year.

    Dog handler PC Ben Smith was patrolling on Redmarley Road in the Battledown area of the Cheltenham when he spotted Pargeter driving while on his mobile phone.

    PC Smith, who was formerly a Roads Policing Officer, stopped Pargeter and detained him by his vehicle while he checked his driving licence.

    But Pargeter fled, getting back into his car and driving away before PC Smith could reach him.

    A pursuit ensued, in which Pargeter drove through residential roads at dangerous speeds. At one point he was driving at 90mph in a 50mph zone.

    Pargeter’s route took him through Whaddon Road, Cromwell Road, Mendip Road, Prestbury Road, Prestbury High Street, the B4632 Southam Road.

    Then he took the B4632 Cheltenham Road towards Winchcombe and B4632 Toddington before abandoning the vehicle in a housing estate and running away.

    Still refusing to stop for the officer, PC Smith finally had to use his Taser to bring the chase to a conclusion.

    Pargeter was subsequently arrested on suspicion of dangerous driving and released on police bail before later being postal charged with the motoring offence.

    As part of the investigation it was never established why Pargeter drove off following what was a routine stop.

    Pargeter appeared at Gloucester Crown Court on Monday 3 July where he was sentenced to 14 months in prison suspended for 18 months and disqualified from driving for two years.

    He was also ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work, undertake a rehabilitation requirement of 20 days and pay a fine of £156.

    Following the sentencing PC Smith commented on Pargeter’s actions saying: "Kyther drove recklessly while trying to evade me and it is lucky that he didn’t cause any further harm.

    "We are constantly risk assessing pursuits, which can dynamically change, and considering the safety of the public is at the forefront, Police Dog Arnie was in the car with me at the time and I also needed to consider his welfare due to the speeds
    Pargeter was travelling at.

    "Pargeter showed a complete disregard for the safety of himself, his pet dog which was in his car and more importantly members of the public."

    https://www.itv.com/news/westcountry/2023-07-07/driver-reached-speeds-of-100mph-after-being-spotted-using-his-phone

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  • From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 8 13:38:13 2023
    QUOTE: Pargeter appeared at Gloucester Crown Court on Monday 3 July where he was sentenced to 14 months in prison suspended for 18 months and disqualified from driving for two years. ENDS

    Yet another poxy suspended sentence - this nutter needed to get locked up.

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  • From JNugent@21:1/5 to swldx...@gmail.com on Sat Jul 8 21:59:40 2023
    On 08/07/2023 09:38 pm, swldx...@gmail.com wrote:

    QUOTE: Pargeter appeared at Gloucester Crown Court on Monday 3 July where he was sentenced to 14 months in prison suspended for 18 months and disqualified from driving for two years. ENDS

    Yet another poxy suspended sentence - this nutter needed to get locked up.

    Of course, Your Judgeship.

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  • From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 8 14:05:26 2023
    1 day ago

    Suspended sentence, so he's still free to continue driving if he so chooses, only now it will be with no licence and therefore also no insurance.

    Maybe he will have learned his lesson and will adhere to his ban and not re-offend. Maybe he hasn't / won't...

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  • From Spike@21:1/5 to swldx...@gmail.com on Sat Jul 8 21:35:46 2023
    swldx...@gmail.com <swldxer1958@gmail.com> wrote:
    QUOTE: Pargeter appeared at Gloucester Crown Court on Monday 3 July where
    he was sentenced to 14 months in prison suspended for 18 months and disqualified from driving for two years. ENDS

    Yet another poxy suspended sentence - this nutter needed to get locked up.

    Pavement e-scooter rider kills woman, 71, is sentenced to a Referral Order

    A 14-year-old has been sentenced for causing the death of a woman while on
    a privately-owned electric scooter.

    The boy, who cannot be named, hit Linda Davis on a pavement in Rainworth, Nottinghamshire, on 2 June.

    The 71-year-old grandmother died six days later in hospital.

    At Nottingham Youth Court on Wednesday, he was handed a 12-month referral order. Police say Mrs Davis is thought to be the first pedestrian to die in
    an e-scooter collision in the UK.

    The teenager had admitted causing death by driving a vehicle otherwise than
    in accordance with a licence, and causing death by driving a vehicle while uninsured at a hearing in February.

    Avoidable tragedy

    The boy was also disqualified from driving for five years.

    Both of his parents have been given a six-month parenting order and ordered
    to pay the prosecution costs of £85 and a victim surcharge of £26.

    District Judge Leo Pyle said: "Pavements are for pedestrians and people in wheelchairs or infants in prams. They are supposed to be free of vehicles
    of any type.

    "This mode of transport should not be there. This tragic incident was avoidable."

    The judge told the court the teenager's father had bought the e-scooter for
    him six days earlier and "in that short time", the defendant had already fractured his thumb while riding it on a separate occasion.

    The court heard Mrs Davis was about to go into a charity shop in Southwell
    Road East when she was struck, hitting her head as she fell.

    Her husband of 52 years, Gary, came out of another shop to find her on the floor, with the defendant on the phone to emergency services.

    The court heard the defendant said at the scene he was travelling at 20mph (32km/h), but investigations had not been able to calculate the speed of
    the e-scooter at the time of the crash.

    Kelly Shooter, prosecuting, said it was believed Mrs Davis could not have
    been seen by the boy before being hit as he travelled along the pavement
    past several cars parked along the kerb.

    She said: "According to a witness, Mrs Davis stepped out from behind a Ford Transit van into [the boy's] path.

    "It is likely that Mrs Davis, as she walked behind it, would not have been
    able to be seen, so it seems very likely that Mrs Davis did step out from behind the van into [the boy's] path."

    'My heart was broken'

    In a victim impact statement, Mr Davis described his wife as "my spark and
    the centre of my world". Mrs Davis's daughter, Rebecca Williams, said her mother was "a very youthful, lively and amazing nan".

    She said: "To watch your children watch someone they love die is a pain I
    would not wish on anyone. "My heart was broken and I never expected to lose
    my mum in such a devastating way.

    "I understand that accidents happen.

    "But I also understand that every time anyone gets on an e-scooter, whether
    it be a legal or illegal one, you are taking your actions in your own
    hands, so expect consequences if something happens."

    It is illegal to use privately-owned e-scooters on pavements, footpaths,
    cycle tracks and cycle lanes on roads.

    To be used on public roads they must conform to requirements, including
    being insured, taxed, and used with relevant safety equipment.

    However, the Department for Transport's website states "it is likely that
    they [riders] will find it very difficult to comply with all of these requirements", meaning their use on public roads would effectively be a criminal offence.

    They can be used on private land, with the landowner's permission.

    About 1,300 e-scooters have been made available for hire in Nottingham
    where a government-approved trial is taking place.

    These are legal on public roads in some areas of the city.

    <https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-64892358>

    --
    Spike

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  • From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 8 22:59:24 2023
    QUOTE: Upon his arrest Pargeter told police: "I should have just stopped. I'm so stupid." ENDS

    Typical driver then.

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  • From Spike@21:1/5 to swldx...@gmail.com on Sun Jul 9 06:55:58 2023
    swldx...@gmail.com <swldxer1958@gmail.com> wrote:

    QUOTE: Upon his arrest Pargeter told police: "I should have just stopped.
    I'm so stupid." ENDS

    Typical driver then.

    Yet again, you are denigrating someone for following the very advice that
    you hand out so often: “Fess up early doors”. How could he have ‘fessed up’ any earlier? Why wasn’t it good enough in this case?

    --
    Spike

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  • From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 9 03:23:54 2023
    QUOTE: Kyther Pargeter, 33, of Surrey Avenue in Cheltenham, hit double the speed limit during a police pursuit on Monday 24 January last year. ENDS

    Don't most drivers insist that 40 in a 20 is "not really speeding"?

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