News Archive

Morning Warning

by msecadm4921

Drivers can still be over the drink drive limit hours after drinking.

The reminder from police follows a court case in which a Heathfield, Sussex woman lost her licence having been found to be nearly twice over the limit the morning after an evening during which she had been drinking.<br><br>At 6.20am on Monday, 20 June Sussex Police Road Policing officers went to the scene of a single vehicle collision on the A267 at Hellingly.<br><br>The driver, Anna Holdway, 23, of Cuckoo Drive, Heathfield, had lost control of her vehicle and collided with a road sign but was unhurt. Miss Holdway was subsequently arrested and charged for being in excess of the drink drive limit.<br><br>She subsequently pleaded guilty at Eastbourne Magistrates Court and was disqualified from driving for 17 months, fined £150, and required to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs. She was offered a small reduction in her disqualification if she successfully completes a rehabilitation course.<br><br>Sergeant Dan Pitcher of the Sussex Road Policing Unit at Polegate said after the case: "This incident reinforces the drink drive message, Miss Holdway had been drinking the night before. She woke up in the morning and considered herself fit to drive but this was clearly not the case. Alcohol stays in the body for some considerable time, and even if you feel fit to drive you must ask yourself the question, is it worth losing your driving licence for?"<br><br>More than 160 drivers were arrested in Sussex Police’s summer drink drive campaign and the force has warned offenders that they will be removed from the road.<br><br>During the national campaign, which took place throughout June, officers from across Sussex carried out both high visibility and plain vehicle operations to target drunk or drugged drivers.<br><br>Overall, 4,229 drivers were breath tested during the campaign and of these 161 were arrested. 308 of these tests were following crashes, resulting in the arrest of 30 people (included in the 161 overall total). Twelve arrests were made between 6am and 10am.<br><br>During the corresponding campaign last year, 3,298 people were tested and 152 arrested. This year shows an increase in the activity by police against a lower test failure rate, which is good news and indicates more people are getting the messages and choosing not to drink or take drugs and drive.<br><br>Chief Inspector Di Roskilly from Sussex Police’s Road Policing Unit said: "We are pleased with the results of this campaign which suggest more people are choosing not to mix drinking or taking drugs with driving. However, in just one month, 161 have been arrested and that is too many people who clearly blatantly disregard the law and are prepared to gamble with their lives and the lives of others. We will continue to focus our efforts on removing them from the roads of Sussex before they cause harm.<br><br>"Aside from the social and financial aspects of a drink driving charge – loss of job, a substantial fine, the stigma of a criminal conviction, imprisonment – drunken drivers take lives and ruin others with devastating consequences for themselves, their families and the friends and families of their victims.<br><br>"Our message to them is very simple: if you drink and drive, we will catch up with you and you need to hope that’s before you kill or maim. Don’t do it. I would like to thank the public for their support throughout this campaign. Information that has been provided has been invaluable in removing the risks from our roads."<br><br>If you suspect someone of anti-social driving you can report them (or an abandoned vehicle) via the Operation Crackdown website – www.operationcrackdown.org.

Related News

  • News Archive

    Health And Safety

    by msecadm4921

    Court case: Northern Ireland police fined after man crushed in police station security gates: In the early hours of 17 March 2003…

  • News Archive

    Safety Shows

    by msecadm4921

    Health and Safety ’09 – North will take place at The Reebok, Bolton on October 6 and 7, 2009. Meanwhile despite the…

  • News Archive

    Social Report

    by msecadm4921

    From a senior Labour and Tory politician: Good Parents, Great Kids, Better Citizens, by Graham Allen MP and Iain Duncan Smith MP.…

Newsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to stay on top of security news and events.

© 2024 Professional Security Magazine. All rights reserved.

Website by MSEC Marketing