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UPDATED: Near Miss of the Day 464: Police finally take action against a driver who refused to give his identity after a punishment pass

Our regular series featuring close passes from around the country - today it's Surrey.....

A police force who previously told a cyclist that they would take no action over a video submitted to them that we featured in our Near Miss of the Day series have now done a U-turn. 

The registered keeper of the vehicle had refused to disclose the identity of the driver filmed making a very close punishment pass on a pair of cyclists riding two abreast.

While failure to disclose the identity of the driver is in itself an offence, Surrey Police previously explained to Andy, the cyclist who sent the footage to them, that it was the force's policy, 'during the pandemic, not to prosecute persons for this, if this is a first offence, and there is no evidence to suggest that the keeper has failed to notify previously.'

Now, however Andy said the force appeared to have changed its mind. 

He said:  "After pestering Surrey Police and eventually getting them to acknowledge their error in previous responses (i.e. 'mistakenly' stating it was their policy to not proceed when a registered keeper failed to respond to a NIP172 notice if it was their first known offence), we now have a result and an update with regards to NMOTD 464..."

The registered keeper has now plead guilty at a magistrates court to the offence of failing to identify the driver. 

He was handed a £110 fine, given six points, and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £34 and costs of £90.

The original clip was shot on Lingfield Common Road in Surrey back in August by road.cc reader Andy while he was on a group ride.

> Near Miss of the Day turns 100 - Why do we do the feature and what have we learnt from it?

Over the years road.cc has reported on literally hundreds of close passes and near misses involving badly driven vehicles from every corner of the country – so many, in fact, that we’ve decided to turn the phenomenon into a regular feature on the site. One day hopefully we will run out of close passes and near misses to report on, but until that happy day arrives, Near Miss of the Day will keep rolling on.

If you’ve caught on camera a close encounter of the uncomfortable kind with another road user that you’d like to share with the wider cycling community please send it to us at info [at] road.cc or send us a message via the road.cc Facebook page.

If the video is on YouTube, please send us a link, if not we can add any footage you supply to our YouTube channel as an unlisted video (so it won't show up on searches).

Please also let us know whether you contacted the police and if so what their reaction was, as well as the reaction of the vehicle operator if it was a bus, lorry or van with company markings etc.

> What to do if you capture a near miss or close pass (or worse) on camera while cycling

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25 comments

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wtjs | 3 years ago
5 likes

Well done Andy! Persist, persist, persist! It's the only way, because my experience is definitely that the police will try all known dodges to get out of doing anything. 6 points= excellent result ( as long as this is not just some false report of what went on in the court given by a police officer like the PC in Gloucestershire who was dismissed for lying about a driver going on the driving course when he had really only been given the even more useless 'words of advice'. (Thanks to whoever told me about it!}

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zero_trooper | 3 years ago
7 likes

6 points get in!  1

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CXR94Di2 | 3 years ago
9 likes

The MS90 code for failure to identify is considered more serious by insurance companies. Expect a huge premium increase

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iandusud replied to CXR94Di2 | 3 years ago
3 likes

Unfortunately I suspect that the sort of person who would behave like this might well choose not to inform their insurance company about the conviction. Obviously they are running the risk of invalidating their insurance but they probably don't give a toss as long as they have the paperwork to show that they are insured (or not!).

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brooksby | 3 years ago
11 likes

They were probably punished more for failing to disclose than they would have had they simply been done for the close pas...

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S1mWa1k replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
12 likes

brooksby wrote:

They were probably punished more for failing to disclose than they would have had they simply been done for the close pas...

Surely that's a good thing. Otherwise drivers would be tempted to always fail to disclose if they thought they would get a lesser punishment.

It probably happens because either the driver thinks it won't be followed up (as almost happened here) or they're at risk of losing their license due to existing points so the registered keeper (e.g. their partner) to take the hit.

 

 

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Sriracha replied to S1mWa1k | 3 years ago
5 likes

That's why I think in most cases, unless there are more than two people on the vehicle's insurance, all the insured should be sanctioned equally for failure to disclose when asked. Only if there if there are at least three possible drivers can any one of them claim not to know who was driving.

Failure to disclose should also mean a no contest conviction on the alleged offence automatically attracting the full penalty, plus some weighting for failing to disclose.

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Sriracha | 3 years ago
11 likes

I guess that for cases of failure to identify the driver, sometimes there might be a genuine reason (I'm struggling to think of one...). However in many cases there will be only two drivers on the insurance one of whom is also the registered keeper, at which point the scope for genuine ignorance is vanishingly narrow. In such cases I believe both insured drivers should be held jointly liable to divulge the identity of the driver on pain of the same, increased, penalty in parallel. So if no single name is given, both pay the penalty, increased because they are deliberately frustrating the justice system.

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hawkinspeter replied to Sriracha | 3 years ago
3 likes

A friend once got a visit from the police about her car being used in a ram-raid, but she'd sold it a few months previously to some ne'er-do-wells who didn't register the new owner.

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Sriracha replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
6 likes

And was your friend "fined or prosecuted" for failing to notify the DVLA, as the seller of the vehicle?

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hawkinspeter replied to Sriracha | 3 years ago
4 likes

No, the police were satisfied with her account of the events (she doesn't look like a typical ram-raider). I'm not entirely sure how or why she was still the registered keeper if she'd followed those rules, but she tends to be quite good at paperwork - possibly some mistake at the DVLA or a false address given to her when they bought the car.

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Mungecrundle replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
7 likes

Mrs Mungecrundle was once pulled over by Her Majesty's Constabulary, quite aggresively by all accounts. We had recently purchased a new second hand car, reputable dealer and everything (not from hawkinspeter's dodgy lady friend). Turned out that the number plate had been cloned and used on a vehicle involved in an armed robbery a few days earlier. As Mrs M was 7 months pregnant at the time, they checked the VIN, made some phone calls and she was quickly eliminated from their enquiries.

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hawkinspeter replied to Mungecrundle | 3 years ago
4 likes

She's not dodgy, though she lives in Hartcliffe, so has lots of contact with dodgy people.

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Xenophon2 replied to Mungecrundle | 3 years ago
10 likes

Exact same thing happened to me, 20 years back.  A ***tard driving the exact same make, model and colour car as mine had cloned my license plate.  All of a sudden, I started receiving fines, fortunately mostly for traffic infractions committed 30 miles from where I live (speeding detected by camera but in Belgium at the time they only took a picture of the rear of the car).  But it was fortunate that this happened because I registered complaints and could prove that at least on a couple of occasions, my car was in a car park, under camera surveillance, when the infractions were committed.  A month later the cops were at my door at 5 am with an order to search the premises, impund my car and arrest me.  My ghost had committed a hit and run a couple of hours earlier and the poor victim died but her friend had noted the license plate.  I explained and they had a forensic team look at my car which was obviously undamaged.    Then they started REALLY looking and  two days later a garage mechanic called the cops.  The guy had again put his license plates on but  the garage saw the damage and had been notified by police what to look out for.  He got 5 years, which imho is nothing.

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OldRidgeback replied to Xenophon2 | 3 years ago
3 likes

Belgium's road crash rate is the worst in Western Europe. Enforcement and penalties for driving offences are also much lower than other Western European countries. Belgium has twice the road death rate/head of population of the Netherlands and around 1 1/2 times the road death rate of France or Germany/head of population. There was a notorious incident in which a British tourist was knocked down and killed by a drunk driver in Brussels some years back and the driver was banned for just two weeks.

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Chris Hayes replied to OldRidgeback | 3 years ago
2 likes

It would be interesting to learn the nationality of the drivers involved in the crashes in Belgium as Belgiuim is basically a transit route and its motorways worn out and overcrowded.  

It may be another example of the Antwerp effect, a well-known economic phenomenon that is used to correct the misapprehension that Belgium is one of the largest exporters of goods in Europe - it isn't, obviously, its just that they pass through the port.  There's also a Rotterdam effect. 

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OldRidgeback replied to Chris Hayes | 3 years ago
1 like

I'm sure a lot of the drivers involved in crashes in Belgium are not local. But bear in mind that the Netherlands is just next door and also has a similarly high percentage of transit traffic, with half the annual road deaths/head of population. I think the road safety issue in Belgium is deep rooted and has a number of key factors, with the weak enforcement and minimal penalties for offenders being amongst those. There's a historic precedent as drivers in Belgium didn't even need driving licences until the 70s as I recall.

When other Western European countries, France, Spain and Portugal most notably, started getting tough on driving offences about 10 years ago, the casualty rates were reduced enormously. Belgium by comparison did next to nothing so its casualty rate now sticks out like a sore thumb.

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Secret_squirrel replied to Sriracha | 3 years ago
2 likes

Sounds a tad extreme. The current process of nobbling the registered keeper seems fine to me.   
people also forget that claiming to be the driver when you weren't comes under perverting the course of justice and you can get jail time for that.  I almost hope it would have happened in this case. 

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Tom_77 replied to Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
5 likes

Secret_squirrel wrote:

Sounds a tad extreme. The current process of nobbling the registered keeper seems fine to me.   
people also forget that claiming to be the driver when you weren't comes under perverting the course of justice and you can get jail time for that.  I almost hope it would have happened in this case. 

Chris Huhne and Vicky Price being the most notable example of this. They each got 8 months in jail when he got caught speeding and she claimed to be driving.

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ktache replied to Tom_77 | 3 years ago
3 likes

Vicky Price was often dragged out to give her views on the economic consequences of Brexit.  The conviction for lying and jail time hasn't seemed to have affected her career very much.

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Sriracha replied to Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
1 like

I guess it is, but it is also entirely voluntary! Neither of them is obliged to play the game.

If there are only two candidates for who was driving the car, then both must know who it was. The present system gives an incentive not to disclose when the perpetrator stands to be disqualified and the 'accomplice' has points to spare on their licence, leaving a dangerous driver on the road. In that situation, hitting both means they both get their just deserts, even if only they know who played which part.

Falsely claiming you were the driver (to protect the other) is another matter, already dealt with.

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GMBasix replied to Sriracha | 3 years ago
2 likes

It would be a legal fiction, though.  I'm on my mother's insurance as a named driver so I can sort her car out if needs be.  I don't live with her, so I can't be sure that she was driving it, if it is seen on the road.  Somebody else may have access to it for all I know. 

They may even have 3rd party cover for other vehicles on their own insurance, therefore they may be driving legally; or legally without insurance.  It may not be with her knowledge, if she happened to be out at the time.

Or it could be a cloned vehicle: the keeper might be able to prove its location at a specific time, but a circumstantially linked named driver could easily have no idea (nor any reasonable expectation to be aware) of an offence.

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Sriracha replied to GMBasix | 3 years ago
0 likes

Yes, all good reasons why it might not be a workable idea. But there has to be some change such that deliberately failing to disclose, or lying, become the worst options. A bit like how claiming to have lost your train ticket lands you with the greatest fare possible, plus the fine.

At some point the calculation has to change for motorists, from "how can I create plausible ignorance" to "I'd bloody make sure I know who is driving the car I bought because the buck will stop with me." Not so different from how gun owners would have to think about their guns.

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HoarseMann | 3 years ago
15 likes

Good news.

Just need a few of these, then the police to do a press release that's picked up in papers such as the DM, showing that drivers can be fined and get points for this sort of behaviour.

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hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
11 likes

Job done. Eventually.

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