Police set motorists straight after driver fined £400 for passing too close to cyclists

A driver has been fined £400 after endangering cyclists by passing too close to them.

Police in Sheffield have explained their decision to fine the driver after dashcam footage showed the 'close pass' which put the group of cyclists at risk.

South Yorkshire Police's Sheffield North West Neighbourhood Policing Team posted a video of the incident, in which the driver can be seen crossing the broken white line and passing the approaching cyclists.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

They said the driver passed "far too closely" and at "excessive speed".

This is the moment a motorist drove dangerously close to a group of cyclists in Sheffield, landing himself fines totalling £417 and five penalty pointsThis is the moment a motorist drove dangerously close to a group of cyclists in Sheffield, landing himself fines totalling £417 and five penalty points
This is the moment a motorist drove dangerously close to a group of cyclists in Sheffield, landing himself fines totalling £417 and five penalty points

The motorist was taken to court for careless driving and fined £417 - as well as being given five penalty points on their licence.

The policing team said: "If anyone thinks this is an acceptable manner of driving, let this be your warning."

While some people praised police for taking action against the driver, the post prompted a bit of a backlash from some ill-informed motorists who questioned whether the driver deserved the penalty.

Read More
Yorkshire couple chased and attacked binman because he told them he could not re...
Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Critics wrongly argued that the cyclists should have waited to pass a parked car on their side of the road, despite it being the oncoming motorist and not the cyclists who had crossed the line in the middle of the road.

Even the Alliance of British Drivers waded in, with the pressure group branding the court ruling an ‘idiotic decision that undermines the credibility of the courts and the police’.

Officers were quick to respond to comments suggesting the driver had done nothing wrong or that the penalty was excessive.

“If he had simply driven to the conditions at a less dangerous speed and stayed on his own side of the road he wouldn’t have been prosecuted,” they wrote.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Replying to one person, who asked why the fine was so high, they said: “He did have the option of paying £100 fine, and receiving only three points endorsement. He chose not to do so, and decided to argue his case in court. He chose.. poorly.”

And when another person questioned why ‘we never hear about how many cyclists you prosecute’, officers had a very simple answer.

“Exactly how many car drivers were killed by cyclists last year David? There’s your reason. We prosecute those whose behaviour is most dangerous,” they wrote on Twitter.