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Motorist fined after being caught on camera driving at group of cyclists, causing one to fall off bike (+ video)

Footage that secured conviction was submitted to Northamptonshire Police’s Operation Snap

Helmet ​camera footage submitted to Northamptonshire Police under the force’s Operation Snap has helped secure the conviction of a motorist who drove towards a group of cyclists on a single-track country road without slowing down, causing one of them to come off her bike.

Land Rover Defender driver Paul Nigel Miley, aged 52 and from Ashby St Ledger, pleaded guilty at Northampton Magistrates’ Court earlier this month to driving without due care and attention in connection with the incident, which happened on 11 June last year.

PC Mo Allsopp-Clarke of Northamptonshire Police’s Safer Roads Team commented: “Miley initially pleaded not guilty to the offence, claiming he had driven extremely slowly past the group and was unable to move further across.

“The video evidence clearly showed that Miley had no consideration for the cyclists on that day, and when he appeared at Magistrates’ Court, he changed his plea to guilty.

“His driving fell below the standard of a competent and careful driver, which could have very easily ended in tragic consequences, and I’m pleased the courts have dealt with the driver positively.

“Drivers should always try to give cyclists and other vulnerable road users at least 1.5m of space and pass slowly. In this instance, on this road, that would not be possible.

“On this occasion, the correct thing to do would have been to come to a stop to allow the cyclists to pass safely. It takes a couple of seconds and then everyone can continue their journey in safety.”

Miley was fined £1,008 and ordered to pay £100 in costs and a £101 victim surcharge, and also had his driving licence endorsed with five penalty points.

“The success of Operation Snap is down to the continued support from the public, who enable us to take action against driving offences we otherwise wouldn’t see,” PC PC Allsopp-Clarke added.

“Hopefully this case demonstrates that we take all instances of poor driving very seriously and we will prosecute offenders accordingly, which can only be a good thing to help keep our roads safer.”

The Operation Snap portal enables members of the public to upload video evidence and complete a form that automatically generates a witness statement, with police staff then reviewing the footage to ensure it meets the scheme’s remit and the vehicle’s registration can be identified.

If so, the force’s Safer Roads Team then examines the footage and refers it for prosecution if they are satisfied that a motoring offence has been committed.

In the past, road.cc readers have shared with us their frustration at the force not acting upon the video evidence of poor driving that they have submitted to it, however.

As one example, in October 2018 we published a Near Miss of the Day video showing a motorist making a very close pass on a cyclist, but Northamptonshire Police took no action because they deemed that he was riding too far out in the road and the driver had given him sufficient space.

> Near Miss of the Day 187: Cyclist persuades police to launch close pass operation - then has his close pass video rejected

Five months earlier the cyclist, named Dave, had met with the force’s chief constable to express his concern over the safety of people riding bikes on the county’s roads.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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56 comments

Avatar
Ride On | 2 years ago
1 like

This is always a concern of mine on rural roads; people driving too fast because they "know the road" I've had a couple of close encounters with 4x4 going too fast round narrow bends having no idea what was around the corner.

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Grahamd replied to Ride On | 2 years ago
1 like
Ride On wrote:

This is always a concern of mine on rural roads; people driving too fast because they "know the road" I've had a couple of close encounters with 4x4 going too fast round narrow bends having no idea what was around the corner.

Had exactly this with a Land Rover a week ago, wrong side of the road around a blind corner. Found hitherto unknown bike handling skills that saved me. 

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jh2727 | 2 years ago
3 likes

Did anyone else look him up on Companies House?

Toad of Toad Hall - Wow.

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Velophaart_95 | 2 years ago
6 likes

There is a thread about this on Pistonheads; " he didn't hit the cyclist..." Seems to be the defence. What about the speed and closeness of the pass? 

Absolutely depressing.....we share the road with these people.

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Hirsute replied to Velophaart_95 | 2 years ago
4 likes

The thread I found has the majority saying the driver was at fault and he should have slowed down.

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&f=23&t=1980866&i=40

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Rockhopper229 | 2 years ago
0 likes

Ok so he could have slowed down a bit more but this is ridiculous.

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Rendel Harris replied to Rockhopper229 | 2 years ago
10 likes

Congratulations as a new poster on having reached double figures without posting anything that wasn't pro-car and/or anti-cyclist.

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Rockhopper229 replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
0 likes

What's being pro-car or anti-cyclist got to do with it unless people are only allowed to comment on here if they are anti-car. I ride bikes, motorcycles, drive a car and drive a minibus and van. It's called seeing things from every angle and putting over a balanced view where there is room to do so.

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Rendel Harris replied to Rockhopper229 | 2 years ago
8 likes

It's funny then that you have only ever chosen, in all of your first ten comments, to comment in favour of a car driver or car driving or against a cyclist or cycling, isn't it? It's almost as though you only see things from one angle...

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Rockhopper229 replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
0 likes

No. I see and agree with the videos of drivers that are idiots. I just don't comment on them as I am in agreement with people's comments. Now and then I see something that I don't think is as bad as people are making out. Discussion on these things is a good thing.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Rockhopper229 | 2 years ago
9 likes

So what was ridiculous about this then? The fact a driver got fined and points for a dangerous and close encounter with the cyclists? If both the Land Rover and the cyclists were going in the same direction, and he had passed at that speed, would you have called it ridiculous? Or would you have complained that the cyclists moved into it's path as you have claimed with others?

What is funny is that on a particularly close pass at speed which causes a cyclist to fall, you think "there is room" for a "balanced" view.

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Veloism | 2 years ago
3 likes

Although the driver was cleary being a d1ck, not sure why the woman fell off. Assuming it was more because the rider in front slowed down/stopped and she failed to notice and couldn't clip out in time. There was enough room to carry on riding, but obviously some riders have different abilities.

There are far more worse examples of bad drivers that don't have any repercussions compared to this, it would be nice to have more consistency from the police...

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IanMSpencer replied to Veloism | 2 years ago
1 like

I think that the front rider braked - you can see when the video returns he is stationary, so was made anxious by the speed. The lady in pink was not planning to stop and probably hadn't thought about unclipping or wasn't able to put her foot down on the ground as the verge fell away - you can see her left leg is unclipped when the video resumes, so I think that the person fell off due to the first rider feeling it was necessary to stop due to the speed of the car, which combined with the bike being forced to be too close to the edge where there was no solid verge, though I do think the video hints that they stopped suddenly and the lady was balancing for a second without unclipping.

The reality is that most of us have been on group rides where a rider has fallen off because the ride has stopped unexpectedly and the rider has failed to unclip for some reason. 

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jh2727 replied to IanMSpencer | 2 years ago
7 likes
IanMSpencer wrote:

The reality is that most of us have been on group rides where a rider has fallen off because the ride has stopped unexpectedly and the rider has failed to unclip for some reason. 

Yes and that is precisely why it is necessary for the motorist to exercise caution, which this motorist did not.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Veloism | 2 years ago
4 likes

I always find it easier to unclip with my straight leg rather then the bent one. I also tend to unclip on my right rather then left when stopping. If this cyclist was the same, she would have unclipped leaning towards the oncoming car. 

As for space, that is probably a hindsight thing but I suspect front cyclist seeing two tonnes of material coming towards them at 30-40mph with very little wiggle room might have thought slowing/stopping was easier and safer, especially if they had no chance to change down gears beforehand so that could lead to wobbles / dropped chains if trying to continue to cycle

The main takeaway though is if the advancing car had slowed down and been courteous to the cyclists with space, they both would have passed with no incident and the middle cyclist would not have been injured. 

 

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Karbon Kev | 2 years ago
7 likes

Drivers like this simply do not care. He'll probably do it again without any conscience.

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Daveyraveygravey | 2 years ago
5 likes

I don't understand why this doesn't carry an automatic 12 month ban and retest?  Sentencing for car crime is a joke.

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wtjs | 2 years ago
6 likes

Well, congratulations to Northamptonshire Police who we hope has seen the error of its former ways, and to the magistrates for doling out a not insignificant punishment. Anti-social morons like this don't even consider slowing down. You do wonder, as other posts have suggested, that no matter how many points he collected he would still retain his licence through a series 'we really will remove your licence next time'

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alansmurphy | 2 years ago
4 likes

Hmmm careless driving... pretty sure the cyclist was endangered, if only there could be an offence called something like 'dangerous driving'...

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boblo | 2 years ago
3 likes

As an FYI and absolutely zero intention of victim blaming, I think I'd ride that a bit further out from the verge. It probably would have made zero difference in this case as that driver looked to be 'going for it' regardless.

Claim your space but - be prepared to bale out if the oncomer is oblivious. Better to be alive than right and dead.

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Hirsute replied to boblo | 2 years ago
6 likes

That's what I try and do - be a bit awkward and cause them to slow or change direction but always have an escape route.

We had this on saturday on a country walk single track road - driver didn't slow much or move and when we gestured with raising our arms, he sounded his horn as a rebuke.

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IanMSpencer replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
7 likes

I have a couple of techniques - riding towards them (especially if I am on the front of a group, pulling in tight exposes people further back) ready to move aside and my patent wobble. The wobble is very useful because the driver cannot predict your path - works really well going up steep hills (indeed rarely requires thought!). The move aside is useful because the driver is usually planning their move from some distance away. so the earlier that they are less certain they are that you are moving the more likely they are to instinctively slow in preparation.

I was inspired after a particularly close pass on what I thought was a road too narrow to pass on, when the driver, who I saw a couple of minutes later outside a house declared I was "wobbling all over" - which I clearly was not or he wouldn't have got past (and of course had effectively declared he had deliberately made a dangerous pass). It did strike me that this was what I needed to do. These days, drivers would probably describe me riding in secondary position as wobbling all over.

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Hirsute replied to IanMSpencer | 2 years ago
6 likes

I do implement a wobble now on certain bits of road following previous advice here (maybe even you !)

Still disappointed when going 30/31 downhill in a 30 to be overtaken.

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andystow replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
4 likes

In my motorcycling days I would occasionally do a "safety wobble" if being tailgated. Because I sure as **** wasn't going to do a brake check.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
1 like

I've been overtaken whilst doing 37 on a 30 dual carriageway downhill. 

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to IanMSpencer | 2 years ago
0 likes

Was that a video on here? We definitely had one where driver passed dangerously and then was approached by cyclist a couple of minutes later as they had pulled over to park a few hundred yards further on. 

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Surreyrider | 2 years ago
8 likes

Happens pretty much every ride on every country road in Surrey. The sentence should really include the removal of the driver's licence for a set period every time this happens without any recourse to 'undue hardship' arguments so often laughably used successfully. 

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Flintshire Boy | 2 years ago
5 likes

.

Yup, that's about right. Farmer expects other road user to get out of his / her way, and doesn't slow down.

.

Sin it a million times.

.

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jh2727 replied to Flintshire Boy | 2 years ago
0 likes

He might have exactly the same name and age as someone who lives in nearby Rugby, but I think it is more probable that he's a management consultant, and not a farmer (landrovers are not made exclusively for farmers).

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Shades | 2 years ago
6 likes

The Daily Mail comments on this were pure anti-cyclist victriol.  I did a ride in Dorset last weekend and got a load of this motorist behavour; it was new territory for me and ironically I left my cameras off thinking that a Sunday morning would be quiet!  Mentioned it to my friend on the ride (Dorset local) who said it was unusual.  We did notice that an A road was closed due to a vehicle fire so most likely rat-runners causing the issue.  Spent half the ride glancing behind looking out for cars; kind of my first decent ride of the season so was a bit "f#cking hell, here we go again for another year" (ie d#ckheads in cars).

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