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13 comments
Joking ...
Hilarious. How's the male/female ratio in your cycling club? Oh really, that low? I wonder why.
Well, there's only one member in my cycling club.
You can join if you want, but you must have a sense of humour and be able to read.
Maybe, my cycling club isn't for you then. You're banned 😉
Not sure the self-own of "no-one will ride with me" is the win you think it is, but no worries, I will wear my ban with pride.
So she appealed to shorten the sentence she had already served? Doesn't seem the sharpest tool in the box.
The sentence was 12 months but she was out on bail. Perhaps a sucessful appeal would remove restrictions and the chance of being returned to prison.
not driving like a tool again would remove that chance as well. Seems to have a higher certainty of success than a court appeal.
Or maybe not for a journalist routinely enjoying supercar tests like a theme park visit.
Presumably another violation would have breached her parole and lead to her having to serve the rest of her sentence, so she was trying to get her sentence reduced to the time already served as a guard against future convictions (which doesn't fill one with optimism about the way she sees herself driving in future).
So you're saying she felt it prudent to hedge against breaching the parole conditions within what, five months? Yikes!
Hey - maybe she can now report on a different lifestyle? "Prison cells of the not-rich and not-famous", anyone?
Her biggest mistake was not having the incident in the UK...she would have simply received a written warning and poor old James Tan would have spent the year (her sentence) trying to get the police to do anything more.
It's weird isn't it - apparently motorists (and especially police) are way more hostile to people on bikes in oz. And yet the judge quite rightly dismisses the appeal. I can't see in this country it even getting to the stage of more than a fine and points
It's not right, people literally get away with murder here.