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Can this be right?
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aracerFree Member
G – I agree with you.
The sentences are disproportionate – those drivers doing worse things and killing people should get far longer sentences so they’re in line with giving somebody who’s ignored 3 warnings and been caught a 4th time for speeding a 6 month ban. The Rhyl incident was a travesty – that was all down to the failure of the police to investigate properly, and the failure of the CPS to bring the charges he deserved (not their fault directly – fairly sure it was down to the police not providing the evidence they needed).
mastiles_fanylionFree MemberI do like how so many people feel they have a right respond to a post, yet so many of them are unable to read, understand and digest a post…
Now then, no argument regarding that fact he’s done wrong
No sermonising please
As a certain advert would have us say ‘simples’
cynic-alFree MemberWhat you and many others forget is that the punishment for breaking the law is based upon what the driver did – not on what the consequences were
Eh?
deadlydarcyFree MemberAs a certain advert would have us say ‘simples’
How about a website: comparethepunishment.com
mastiles_fanylionFree Member🙂
I have that site bookmarked and it has nothing to do with driving offences 😉
deadlydarcyFree MemberI have that site bookmarked and it has nothing to do with driving offences
They promised to pixelate my face…I haven’t looked in a while 😯
GFree MemberSpot on Mastiles.
TJ : Read up on the inquest and the general aftermath to the Rhyll disaster. You will find that the Police who ARE the people who press charges, didn’t investigate properly and failed to offer any evidence of all of the other things that the driver could have been charged with. They not the CPS were roundly criticised for their failures. Basically I do hear what you are saying, but frankly its not relevant or correct.
So in these circumstances where in my mates case no discretion (all speed camera jobbies) has been exercised there is one particularly severe sentence, and then in the Rhyll case where discretion (or perhaps more accurately lack of it!) has been exercised and a ludicrous outcome has occurred. To me that rather suggests that cyclists lives aren’t actually taken as having much importance.
IdleJonFree MemberI’ve just literally got home from picking my daughter up from school and had to pull her out of the way of a guy who accelerated through a red light on a pedestrian crossing. I’m very angry..
Your mate got the correct punishment for his offence, the Rhyl driver didn’t, it’s a very poor comparison. The only link being that they both are both careless drivers.
The fact he stands to lose his livelihood is circumstantial to anyone not directly involved.
Most of us drive G, most of us are fairly mature, most of us speed. Most of us don’t get banned. What do you expect us to do, be outraged that another speeding driver is taken off the road?
aracerFree MemberAh, so your point is that the police should have made a mess of gathering the evidence for your mate’s speeding offences, so that he could get off in the same way as the Rhyl driver?
DracFull MemberInterestingly overlooking these bits Drac
Nope didn’t over look just pointing out that you also opened that chance up, anyway forums are areas of discussion you can’t stop people saying how the feel about your mate if you ask.
willyboyFree MemberYou cannot compare the Rhyl incident to this. That was a travesty of justice and this is a case where someone has broken the law on numerous occasions and now is moaning about a relatively tame punishment. 6 months is not really a long time at all. If your that bothered buy him a bike or taxi him around for 6 months.
We have punishments for a reason and thats to deter people doing things – your mate clearly needs to learn…. Its his own fault so stop moaning.david_rFree MemberSo in these circumstances where in my mates case no discretion (all speed camera jobbies) has been exercised there is one particularly severe sentence, and then in the Rhyll case where discretion (or perhaps more accurately lack of it!) has been exercised and a ludicrous outcome has occurred. To me that rather suggests that cyclists lives aren’t actually taken as having much importance.
Don’t think there is anything particularly severe about your mates sentence at all, but if you feel the urge to put pen to paper to highlight the injustice of other sentences handed out to drivers who have killed or injured, you should do it.
The law go it right for your mate, but wrong for the Rhyl case (and other similar episodes).
Stu_NFull MemberFrom now on, should only people who wish to agree with the OP and validate his point of view be able to post on this thread?
therealhoopsFree Membermaybe the orginal question should have been reworded to summit like: My mate has been caught speeding again (the bellend), I reckon the punishment doesn’t really fit the crime in this case, what do you think?
or have I misunderstood…..again 🙂
TRH (STW lynchmob official)
GFree Membernow is moaning about a relatively tame punishment. 6 months is not really a long time at all
Firstly hes not moaning about it, and nor am I, he is however, very upset about letting us and his family down. So stop pontificating, Secondly 6 months is not tame at all, the norm with the circumstances that appertain here is somewhere between 3 and 6 weeks. Even the court officals were taken aback by the severity of the punishment.
Thirdly, and perhaps most significantly,
You cannot compare the Rhyl incident to this
yes I can and that is precisely what I am doing, in terms of the sentencing handed down.
thegreatape – Member
G – have you got a link for the inquest findings?Nope but this will give you a flavour of it. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_east/6246140.stm
Post the inquest the coroner made a complaint to the Home Secretary and the issue was then taken up and I believe some Police folks were hung out to dry for their failure to even charge the guy.
Stu_N – Member
From now on, should only people who wish to agree with the OP and validate his point of view be able to post on this thread?I couldn’t give a flying toss who agrees with my point of view, which incidentally is that I’m not defending his actions, but I think there is disparity in the sentences handed down for relatively minor traffic offences, and what happens if you kill a cyclist negligently at best and culpably at worst. However what really does boil my piss is idiots like you who choose either not to read or simply can’t, but apparently have no problem with typing shite.
As I’ve said repeatedly, it just seems injust NOT TO MY MATE, but to the ever increasing list of cyclists who lose their lives on the roads. Basically if you want to assasinate someone, buy them a bike and then run them down. You will get away with it.
druidhFree MemberIf you really are SO concerned about the Rhyl case, then surely the time to complain about it was then, not now. And as I asked before – are you suggesting that the charges brought against that driver would have been different if it had been pedestrians and not cyclists involved?
aracerFree MemberAs I’ve said repeatedly, it just seems injust NOT TO MY MATE, but to the ever increasing list of cyclists who lose their lives on the roads. Basically if you want to assasinate someone, buy them a bike and then run them down. You will get away with it.
With which we all generally agree. Why bring your mate’s justified sentence into it and so confuse the issue?
IdleJonFree Memberaracer – Member
As I’ve said repeatedly, it just seems injust NOT TO MY MATE, but to the ever increasing list of cyclists who lose their lives on the roads. Basically if you want to assasinate someone, buy them a bike and then run them down. You will get away with it.
With which we all generally agree. Why bring your mate’s justified sentence into it and so confuse the issue?
Because the original question was made with direct reference to his mate with the Rhyl cyclists thrown in for good measure, and then when he didn’t get the answers he wanted the focus changed to the sentences handed out for killing cyclists or pedestrians.
Which we all seem to agree on.
G – Member
Very interested to know what the feeling is about my mate. He’s our software support guy, basically self-employed, works really hard and is excellent at his job. He’s just come in this morning, and tearfully announced that he is probably going to be unable to continue to offer us a service, on the basis that he’s just been banned from driving for six months. His crime? He had 9 points on his licence for “minor speeding offences”, (what I mean by that is one of them was for triggering a camera at 2:00am in the morning travelling at 37mph at the end of a section of national speed limit dual carriageway), and then got clocked again. He’s been summonsed, sent to court and banned for 6 months. (NB: 6 of the points were incurred in 2006 and are now off his licence.)
Now then, no argument regarding that fact he’s done wrong, but is this punishment, that looks like making him unemployed, as the sole breadwinner in a family of 5 proportionate, (given that for example the driver who recklessly killed the Rhyll cycling club 4 only got £180 fine and 6 penalty points), reasonable and proportionate.
TandemJeremyFree MemberAnd as repeatedly pointed out the driver in the Rhyl case did not get a small fine for the killing – he got a small fine for a minor offense because thats all he was charged with
stufieldFree Memberit takes 4 years for points to come off your license, so your mates 6 points from 2006 have possibly another 12 months to go. He’s obviously not learning as seems to be getting caught regularly for speeding you’re going to be treated more harshly then someone with no points that crashed albeit with disastrous consequences.
I did write to my MP about the Rhyl case, he promised to talk to the Transport Minister, never heard anything after that.
Still think you mate deserved it.
fatsimonmk2Free Memberjust got home to find that i have picked up another three points making six in all and guess what thats nobodys fault but mine i drive just the same amount of miles as your mate G and guess what from now on iam driving like a vicar as my job is linked to having a license(service engineer) we all speed at times and do know what only you are to blame if you get caught.
GFree MemberTandemJeremy – Member
And as repeatedly pointed out the driver in the Rhyl case did not get a small fine for the killing – he got a small fine for a minor offense because thats all he was charged withAnd as repeatedly pointed out right back at you the Police were roundly criticised for it, not only that just a few weeks ago there was a report highlighting the disproprtionately high number of deaths of cyclists on the roads, so whats your point??
stufield – Member
it takes 4 years for points to come off your licenseNo actually it takes 3 as it always had done, its just that you can’t have them physically removed for 4, so as to avoid people deferring their cases so they can present aclean licence. however, regardless of that whats your point?
IdleJon – Member
aracer – Member
As I’ve said repeatedly, it just seems injust NOT TO MY MATE, but to the ever increasing list of cyclists who lose their lives on the roads. Basically if you want to assasinate someone, buy them a bike and then run them down. You will get away with it.
With which we all generally agree. Why bring your mate’s justified sentence into it and so confuse the issue?
Because the original question was made with direct reference to his mate with the Rhyl cyclists thrown in for good measure, and then when he didn’t get the answers he wanted the focus changed to the sentences handed out for killing cyclists or pedestrians.
Get yourself up to the top of the thread, read the last two sentences that you have conveniently ignored. That apart I would argue that the sentence is excessive if you take ALL of the circumstances into account, and that the Rhyll one is ridiculously slight if again you take ALL of the circumstances into account…. its called comparision, a technique often used in conversations and discussions. In fact, the inequity being displayed here is what has motivated me to raise the matter as quite rightly mentioned after all of this time, however it could equally be the guy on the Dunwich Dynamo in O7 or the guy on the A1 time trail the other week, or any number of other cases, it just is happens that the Rhyll case is a notoriously extreme example.
Also, in respect of this, “With which we all generally agree” I actually don’t think that is the case from what I’ve read above, most of the thread is wabbling on about my mate, which actually isn’t what I asked at all.
TandemJeremyFree MemberG my point being that you are getting all muddled up. In the Rhyl case the punishment appeared small because the only thing the driver was found guilty in a court of law was a relatively minor traffic offense.
You wanted the Rhyl driver to get a bigger punishment – most of us did. However he got the punishment that is normal for the offense he was found guilty of. As did your pal.
You cannot compare what you think the Rhyl driver did with what your pal was found guilty of. Innocent until proven guilty. The Rhyl driver was not found guilty of causing death by dangerous driving only of a minor offense.
Or do you think that minor traffic offense is worth a jail term?
neverfastenuffFree MemberI think the law sees him as a serial offender – 3, points anyone could get but then you think about insurance cost, to then get a further 3 points should really have underlined that his driving habits need to change – then he gets another 3 etc…
Some people really do need a kick up the arse to wake them up.. no one to blame but himself.
I hope his wife has bollocked him good and proper.markdFree Memberi am not reading all that. arguing in the matrix is just totally pointless.
i love speeding along in my old shitter. it goes brrrraaaaaaaaaaaaaaappppppppp and it pleases me.
the trick is to go faster than the rozzers and you are ok.
freakcrabFree MemberIf we all agree with G, as seems to be the goal of this thread, will it stop?
GFree MemberG my point being that you are getting all muddled up
No TJ you are getting muddled up, I’m well aware of the facts of the case. The whole point is that the Police did not take the matter seriously, and were roundly criticised afterwards for that fact. The fact that they didn’t is the symptom, the actual illness is that the “system” doesn’t treat cyclists lives as having any worth, so the case was treated as “poor fella, he’s going to have to live with killing those people”, as opposed to “this is a very serious incident, and has to be fully and properly invesitgated and if someone is culpable they should be taken to book for it”.
Whereas my mates pecadillos are minor by comparision, have never had any investigation as to the prevailing circumstances surrounding them and he has been punished more severely than most people who kill a cyclist on the roads. Yet as per usual this thread is full of twerping idiots who a) totally have missed the point, and b) have actully admitted that there by the grace of God go I, and then are idiot enough to be crticising not only my mate but themselves by implications as well. THINK ABOUT IT FFS!!!!
Try thinking about it another way, remember the guy on the £4000 moutnain bike he ran into a girl who was killed when her head hit the kerb a wee while back? Remember the villifying and public outrage surrounding that?
It seemed to be centred around the fact that he was riding a £4000 MTB, and had shouted for the girl to get out of the way while he was doing 27mph in a 30mph area. Totally overlooked the fact that on a £4000 mtb there are hydraulic brakes which actually can stop you quicker than car in the same circumstances, the girl and her friends had been drinking all day and that she stepped backwards off the kerb into his path and that he apparently bunny hopped on to the path in an attempt to avoid her, and that doing 27 mph on a public highway with a 30mph limit is in fact perfcetly legal. So wheres the similar level outrage about the Rhyl boys, even on here a cycling forum??? Seems to me that even here all you get is people totally missing the point and prattling on about irrelevancies. No doubt in a moment some jerk will come along and start warbling on about how its a choice you take and the responsibility is with the cyclist who goes out and does what he is legally entitled to, and is then subsequently killed for it.TandemJeremyFree MemberI give in!!!!!!! Are you being deliberately obtuse?
What the police did or didn’t do is irrelevant. We have a judicial system for a reason. The Rhyl driver got the punishment that fitted the crime he was found guilty of, so did your pal.
The fact you wanted the Rhyl driver to be punished more is irrelevant HE WAS NOT FOUND GUILTY OF A SERIOUS OFFENCE.
It is irrelevant about public outcry. The Rhyl driver was not found guilty of killing – get it?
If the Rhyl driver had been found guilty of causing death by dangerous driving but didn’t go to jail you would have a point. But he didn’t so you havent.
druidhFree MemberG – Member
.. the actual illness is that the “system” doesn’t treat cyclists lives as having any worth…
…and he has been punished more severely than most people who kill a cyclist on the roads.
That’s a valiant attempt to garner sympathy for your view based on making it so sort of “us and them” type of argument. However, do you feel that the Rhyl driver was left off lightly because it was “only” cyclists and that it would have been different if he had killed pedestrians?
neverfastenuffFree MemberSo in a nutshell – the LAW has stopped your mate from going out driving due to the fact his serial offending may actually cause an unwanted unecessary death sometime in the future… is it possible that you have overlooked this fact ? The law is supposed to judge each case individually and like serial burglars, serial shoplifters only the maximum penalty allowed by law can apply.
crikeyFree MemberVery interested to know what the feeling is about my mate.
He’s a dick who can’t drive very well.
The man in Rhyl (who killed one of my friends) wasn’t dealt with as harshly as I would like, but your friend still can’t drive very well.
tankslapperFree MemberLegalities aside, what are the ramifications for the bloke and his family? If its IT could he not work from home?
Have you suggested cycling to him?
Hope this helps
TSpetrieboyFull MemberTJ – you tried your best, i dont blame you!
G – the point i think you are trying to make is that your pal got a harsher sentence for what he did that the Rhyll guy got for what you THINK he probably did. now if he was tried and found guilty of death by dangerous and got points and a fine you’d be absolutely correct, but in this case he didnt so your not! the fact of the matter is that killing someone with your car will in most instances see you doing time which most would agree with and consistently driving like a fanny will in most instances get you banned if you are lucky enough to avoid hurting anyone and most would also agree with that.
RudeBoyFree MemberPersonally, I feel that using the tragic deaths of those 4 riders in Rhyl, to try and garner some sort of sympathy for your mate, is out of order. Totally separate and unrelated cases. As mentioned earlier; you are bordering on being disrespectful to those who died, and their families and friends. I’m sure you don’t intend to, but that’s how this is starting to feel.
Cold hard reality is; your mate has transgressed, and is fully deserving of his punishment. Do his family ‘deserve’ to suffer? It’s not the courts, or the Law, that is causing this, it’s him, with his lack of respect for the Law. No point in trying to blame someone else for this; it’s his own fault, entirely. Sorry if that sounds harsh, and I don’t mean the poor bugger any malice, but that’s the way the cookie crumbles.
On a positive note; hopefully, this episode will make him think more carefully in future, and become a more considerate driver. As for his ensuing employment difficulties; it’s an opportunity for him to use his intelligence, knowledge and ingenuity, to overcome this obstacle. Maybe, he’ll come out of it all a stronger person.
Case dismissed.
tankslapperFree MemberHe’s trangressed admittedly but the amount of time and money that will be lost procssing this ‘misdemearnour’ not to say the loss of earnings incurred and subsequent HMRC revenue raises some interesting questions on the fiscal validity of such cases?
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