62-year-old Mohammed Malik claimed a mechanic was driving his Toyota
Avensis when it was clocked traveling at 37mph in a 30 zone in
Washwood Heath Road, Birmingham, in April last year.
Officers
then wrote to the mechanic, only to have the letter returned saying he
no longer lived at the address given. They also visited the address
and found it was a residential property that had never been a garage.
This
aroused more suspicion, so police then spoke to the cabbie's firm to
get a print out of his journeys on the day in question - they clearly
showed Malik had actually picked up a fare at the time, with the person
clearly visible on speeding camera footage sitting in the back seat. Still, Malik insisted it was his mechanic at the wheel.
With
the evidence stacking against him, Malik finally admitted the speeding
offence and was subsequently charged with perverting the course of
justice for lying about who was behind the wheel.
The driver, of
Coleshill Road, Ward End, pleaded guilty to the charge and on 31 March
he was handed a four month prison sentence - suspended for 18 months -
plus 80 hours unpaid work and costs of £400. He was also banned from
driving for six months.
PC Steve Jevons said "Malik may have avoided jail but the suspended
sentence is hanging over him for the next year-and-a-half and it’s
likely he will now be stripped of his taxi licence. With no livelihood,
clearly this will have a huge impact on his life and he will have to
ask himself if all his lies were worth the risk. We hope this case
serves as a warning to others that lying to the police and the
authorities is a serious offence and can ultimately land you behind
bars."
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