27-year-old Ayesha Ahmed was caught speeding twice by a mobile police van in a 30mph zone near her home. Both times in her BMW on July 2014 5 minutes apart. One
instance at 39mph and the other at 40mph.
But instead of undertaking a speed awareness course or paying the fines, Ahmed enlisted the help of a 'legal expert' who said a 'legal loophole' could help her dodge them completely at a cost of £450 – a fee likely greater than the sum of the speeding fines.
But instead of undertaking a speed awareness course or paying the fines, Ahmed enlisted the help of a 'legal expert' who said a 'legal loophole' could help her dodge them completely at a cost of £450 – a fee likely greater than the sum of the speeding fines.
Unfortunately the legal expert sent details to police that claimed it
was a woman from Walsall who had been driving and not Ahmed. Suspicions
were raised when police discovered eight other speeding offences had
been attributed to drivers at the same address.
The international relations and politics graduate was found guilty of
attempting to pervert the course of justice at Wolverhampton Crown
Court and sentenced to three months in jail and a 58-week driving ban.
Police constable Steve Jevons said: "Ahmed has paid a heavy price for
thinking she could lie her way out of speeding offences. She never met
this "legal expert" and paid via a third-party. Ahmed was given every
opportunity to admit her guilt – an admission that would have spared her
a jail term."
He added: "It’s a sorry tale. She has no previous convictions but a
potentially promising career is now in ruins and all because she wanted
to retain a clean licence."
Jevons warned anyone caught speeding to avoid taking similar action. "Don’t be conned by anyone saying they know a person who, for a fee, can ‘make speeding fines go away.
"These people try passing blame on to ‘phantom’ drivers, knowing the authorities won’t be able to trace them and assuming the matter will be dropped." Probably best to pay up, folks. Or avoid speeding in the first place.
Source
Jevons warned anyone caught speeding to avoid taking similar action. "Don’t be conned by anyone saying they know a person who, for a fee, can ‘make speeding fines go away.
"These people try passing blame on to ‘phantom’ drivers, knowing the authorities won’t be able to trace them and assuming the matter will be dropped." Probably best to pay up, folks. Or avoid speeding in the first place.
Source
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