Motorway Speeding Maximum Fine To Soar To £10000 As Courts Get Tough

You're Going To Face ABig Fine If You Get Caught Speeding From Now On
Speed cameras on the A12, in Essex.
Speed cameras on the A12, in Essex.
Ian Nicholson/PA Archive

A fourfold increase in the maximum fines available to magistrates is to be introduced, as part of sweeping reforms to the penalties which can be imposed by magistrates, the Government has announced.

Under the planned reforms, maximum fines for speeding on dual carriageways and for using a mobile phone while driving will also quadruple, going from £1,000 to £4,000.

Courts will also be able to levy unlimited fines for the first time for the most serious crimes dealt with in the lower courts - such as environmental offences - which at present attract penalties of up to £5,000 or more.

The planned punishments were immediately condemned as “disproportionate and draconian” by Rupert Lipton, the director of the National Motorists Action Group.

But Justice Minister Jeremy Wright said the dramatic hike - the first since 1991 and which the Government paved the way for in legislation passed two years ago - would give magistrates the "greater powers" needed to punish offenders.

He said: "Financial penalties set at the right level can be an effective way of punishing criminals and deterring them from further offending.

"Magistrates are the cornerstone of our justice system and these changes will provide them with greater powers to deal with the day-to-day offences that impact their local communities."

Rupert Lipton, director of the National Motorists Action Group, said the move was "disproportionate and draconian".

"I think it will have a serious chilling effect. We will find motorists will be deterred from going to court where they don't believe they are guilty of an offence and there is a potential challenge," he said.

The Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 allowed for magistrates to be give the power to impose unlimited fines for some offences but the Government is only now tabling legislation to put that into effect.

Magistrates' Court Guidelines set out how the appropriate level of punishment should be determined according to the seriousness of the offence.

The amount of fines collected reached an all-time high of £284 million at the end of 2012/13 and remains on an upward course.

Edmund King, president of the Automobile Association, criticised the changes.

"For the vast majority of drivers the prospect of the existing £2,500 fine is a pretty good deterrent against excessive speeding on the motorway," he told the Daily Telegraph.

"We would not condone excessive speeding in any way but fines have to be proportionate to the offence and one has to question whether increasing the fines four-fold is proportionate, and it probably is not.

"If we had more cops in cars on the motorway that would be a much more effective deterrent."

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