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NURSERY NURSE & AN APPLE
A nursery nurse was fined £60 for holding an apple in
her hand while driving around a bend after police used a
spotter aircraft, a helicopter and a patrol car to win
the case. Northumbria Police went to extraordinary
lengths to gather evidence against Sarah McCaffery who
had missed breakfast and grabbed the apple to eat on her
way to work. Magistrates ruled that she had not been in
full control of her car. Miss McCaffery was also ordered
to pay £100 costs at the tenth court hearing of the
case.
Officers would not divulge the full costs incurred by the
force for the case. Chris Kay, for the prosecution, said
that the bill was £425, not including the aerial
photographs and the squad vehicles video. The final
bill is likely to be much more. The cost of keeping a
helicopter flying for an hour can reach £500. The police
claimed that their helicopter was already on operations
in South Tyneside when it took the photos, so the
additional cost was just £66. Geoffrey Forrester, for
the defence, told South Tyneside magistrates that Miss
McCaffery had been driving in dry conditions, that there
was no traffic or pedestrians and that the manoeuvre was
carried out perfectly.
The dispute between Miss McCaffery, who lives in Hebburn,
and the police began on December 4, 2003. In an interview
given before a court hearing, she described how she took
the same route to work in her Ford Ka as she had done for
four years. As she negotiated a left turn with an apple
in her right hand she was still in second gear when she
saw the blue lights of a police car. PC Lee Butler had
spotted her driving with her right hand by her face and
believed that she may have been using a mobile phone, the
court was told.
When he discovered that she was holding a half-eaten
apple, he issued her with a £30 fixed-penalty ticket.
The nurse, however, said before the 2½-hour trial,
I wasnt speeding or swerving around. It was a
small apple and I had both hands on the steering wheel
when I turned into the road. The apple was in my right
hand but I could still hold the steering wheel and steer
the car. The court was told how police brought in a
fixed-wing spotter aircraft to fly over Miss
McCafferys route to work and take photographs.
Later the forces helicopter repeated the exercise
before a patrol car made a video of the journey.
Mr Forrester said, Nothing illustrates the nonsense
of this case more than the resources that have been
thrown at it. Ken Buck, the chairman of the bench,
concluded, We accept that there are times when you
can drive with one hand but, in holding an apple while
negotiating a left-hand turn, we consider you not to have
been in full control. We are therefore satisfied beyond
reasonable doubt that this case is proved. (Source:
Times Online)
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