British police catch 8,000 drivers using mobile phones in just one week

A record number of drivers in the UK were stopped for using mobile phones while on the move during a concerted police clampdown in November 2016.

By Sam Sheehan, Autocar UK calendar 23 Jan 2017 Views icon2465 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp
British police catch 8,000 drivers using mobile phones in just one week

British police caught close to 8,000 drivers using mobile phones behind the wheel in a clampdown that lasted one week in November.

In total, 7,966 drivers were found to be on the phone, leading to more than 7,800 fixed penalty notices and 68 court summons.

Police stopped 10,012 vehicles, with 117 people charged for being distracted behind the wheel for offences such as eating while driving.

Police said the record-high numbers were achieved thanks to the use of new policing techniques that included unmarked vans and motorbike-mounted police wearing helmet cameras.

So-called community spotters are also providing police with the locations of offence hotspots ahead of a new weeklong clampdown that has started today.

 “This week forces will be working to make driving distracted as socially unacceptable as drink driving through enforcing strong deterrents and powerful messages to make people think twice about their driving habits,” said chief constable Suzette Davenport, who is the National Police Chiefs’ Council's boss for roads policing.

“Encouraging results from last year’s campaign against mobile phone use show how effective new tactics and innovative approaches can be. Officers will continue to use intelligence-led tactics to target police activity and resources and catch repeat offenders.”

Before last November, the most successful recent week-long police clampdown caught 2,690 drivers using phones behind the wheel.

In the UK, use of a hand-held mobile phone device while driving any vehicle has been illegal since 2003. Current punishments for being caught include three penalty points on the driver’s licence and a fine of £100 (Rs 8,483).

The offender could also go to court and be disqualified from driving and get a maximum fine of £1,000 (Rs 84,830). Drivers of buses or goods vehicles could get a maximum fine of £2,500 (Rs 212,075).

However, from 1 March the fixed penalty for the offence will increase from three to six for all drivers and the fine will double to £200 (Rs 16,966).

 

RELATED ARTICLES
Sept 2024 From R&D incentives to EV infrastructure: What auto components industry expects from Budget 2024

auther Autocar Pro News Desk calendar20 Dec 2024

Sept 2024 From R&D incentives to EV infrastructure: What auto components industry expects from Budget 2024

US car majors hit the brakes on driverless cars

auther Autocar Pro News Desk calendar10 Jan 2023

Ford Motor and Volkswagen to close self-driving startup Argo AI, due to lack of technology and clear regulations.

Autoliv and Geely to develop advanced safety tech for future vehicles

auther Autocar Pro News Desk calendar10 Jan 2023

Scope of cooperation includes safety for high-level autonomous driving, intelligent steering wheel technology, a 360deg ...