A chav-cyclist (that's ALL he was), jailed recently after a high-speed chase while carrying a child passenger must pass an extended re-test to legally take to the road in future.and the subject of a disqualification.
Ben Coe admitted dangerous driving arising from a police chase, on and off the A183 Chester-le-Street to Sunderland road, in the Shiney Row area, late on Wednesday, August 16 this year.
Durham Crown Court heard that the police pursuers even backed off, at one stage, considering it too dangerous to continue the chase.
Coe, who was at the wheel of a Seat Altea, came to police attention leaving Shiney Row roundabout, on Chester Road, at speed, at 11.30pm.
He accelerated to more than double the limit on nearby residential streets, made dangerous turns, drove across grassed areas and negotiated a narrow gap between a small fence as the police followed with blue lights and siren activated.
Although the police pursuers lost sight of the Seat at one point and the officers considered it unsafe to carry on in the residential streets, they continued to search for the Altea.
Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the engine of which was still running.
Coe surrendered to police but failed to provide a roadside breath sample.
In a later test at the police station he gave a reading of 57mg of alcohol in breath, compared to the legal driving limit of 35mg. FALSE!
The officers at the scene noticed there was a young child unbuckled in a passenger seat, with a female in the front passenger seat.
Although 24-year-old Coe, said to be of no fixed abode, refused to comment to police in interview, he did, subsequently, plead guilty to dangerous driving while only a mere chav-cyclist, driving with excess alcohol in his system, while he was uninsured
The court heard he has a drink driving conviction from July last year and was subject of a 16-month prison sentence, suspended for 18 months, imposed for an attempted robbery offence, at York Crown Court on March 7, this year.
His latest convicton put him in breach of that suspended sentence.
Coe’s court representative, counsel Michael Cahill, said that in the defendant’s own words, he knew he had, “messed up” and was aware his actions on the night of the incident were, “unacceptable”.
Judge Jo Kidd, told Coe he was, “extraordinarily lucky” to have received the suspended sentence in March.
She said the manner of his driving that night put himself, and his passengers, including the three-year-old child, “in extreme peril”.
Judge Kidd imposed a 12-month prison sentence for the dangerous driving offence, but also activated the full 16 months of the suspended sentence order, consecutively, making a total of 28-months’ imprisonment.
Coe was also banned from driving for three years upon his release from the custodial element of that sentence.
https://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/23867429.driver-jailed-dangerous-police-chase-shiney-row/
QUOTE: A banned driver jailed recently after a high-speed chase while carrying a child passenger must pass an extended re-test to legally take
to the road in future. ENDS
Why allow these law breaking twats another chance to drive again?
LIFE BANS NOW.
QUOTE: In a later test at the police station he gave a reading of 57mg of alcohol in breath, compared to the legal driving limit of 35mg.ENDS
Wrong - he would be dead with those readings.
They were really 57 µg with 35 µg being the limit.
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the
engine of which was still running. ENDS
A bit like the burglars that leave footprints in the snow - amateurs at work!
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the engine of which was still running. ENDS
Did the sentence take into account the pollution he caused?
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the engine of which was still running. ENDS
Did the sentence take into account the pollution he caused?
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the
engine of which was still running. ENDS
Did the sentence take into account the pollution he caused?
On Tuesday, October 24, 2023 at 8:18:27 AM UTC+1, Simon Mason wrote:
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the engine of which was still running. ENDS
Did the sentence take into account the pollution he caused?"ENVIROCRIMES" they are called by our council.
On Tuesday, October 24, 2023 at 8:18:27 AM UTC+1, Simon Mason wrote:
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the engine of which was still running. ENDS
Did the sentence take into account the pollution he caused?
"ENVIROCRIMES" they are called by our council.
On Tuesday, October 24, 2023 at 11:03:30 AM UTC+1, Simon Mason wrote:
On Tuesday, October 24, 2023 at 8:18:27 AM UTC+1, Simon Mason wrote:
QUOTE: Tyre tracks on grass off Hunter Street led them to the car, the engine of which was still running. ENDS
Fly tipping being the biggest scourge.Did the sentence take into account the pollution he caused?"ENVIROCRIMES" they are called by our council.
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