| General road traffic offences
Failing to Stop/Give Particulars after an accident (AC10) (AC20) The Offence Maximum Penalty Comment The likelihood of being imprisoned increase
with the severity of the accident and if there is both a failure to stop and a
failure to report the accident, if If you can satisfy the Court that you were unaware that an accident had occurred this may be a defence to the charge. Failing to Report an Accident (AC10) The Offence Maximum Penalty Speeding/Exceeding the speed limit (SP30) Offence Maximum penalty Comment If you are offered a fixed penalty option, and you are guilty then you are probably best to take this option, as your licence will be endorsed with the minimum number of penalty points and the fine (currently #60) is likely to be less than that imposed by the court. There will also be no court fees. Possible defences are that you were not speeding, that it was not you driving, or that you were driving an exempted vehicle in an emergency. The prosecution may obtain a conviction by producing in evidence photographs taken from speed cameras. There is no requirement that such photos have any other evidence to back them up. If no photo is available then the evidence to convict you must come from at least two different sources, although one of these may be mechanical such as the police car's speedometer/radar gun/VASCAR. Under s20 of the Road Traffic Offenders Act (as amended by s23 of the Road Traffic Act 1991) where a radar device is used the police merely need to provide a record produced by the prescribed device AND (in the same or a separate document) a certificate as to the circumstances in which the record was produced, signed by constable or authorised person. Speeding on a Motorway (SP50) Offence Maximum Penalty Comment Totting up Under the totting up provisions a driver can be disqualified where he/she accumulates a certain number of penalty points within a three year period. The 'magic' number is 12. If you reach 12 penalty points within the 3 year period (and it is the date of the offences and NOT the date of the hearings which is relevant), then you will be disqualified for a minimum period of 6 months. If you are then disqualified the slate is wiped clean of points at the date you get your licence back. To avoid being banned for totting up you will need to be able to convince the court that there are 'mitigating circumstances'. This means that you will have to show that a disqualification would cause exceptional hardship. The loss of your job could be considered to be exceptional hardship. As could the loss of employment for others dependant on you, or hardship to members of his family. Level of Fines Level 1: £200Level 2: £500 Level 3: £1,000 Level 4: £2,500 Level 5: £5,000 Information supplied by and copyright Road Law (www.road-law.co.uk/), part of LAW on the WEB UK Ltd |