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Man drove at “ludicrous” speeds as he approached Highland town

Wick Sheriff Court
Wick Sheriff Court

A driver was approaching a Highland town so fast he would almost have needed to make an emergency stop to comply with the 30mph speed limit, a sheriff claimed yesterday.

Jack Henry was less than a mile from Wick when he was clocked by police at a speed – 98mph – described by a sheriff as “ludicrous”.

Sheriff Andrew Berry, who is cracking down on high-speed drivers, banned Henry, 25, for two months as a warning to others, particularly young drivers. He was also fined £500.

Police officers carrying out speed checks on the A99, on the Hempriggs straight, clocked Henry’s northbound Ford Fiesta ST breaking the 60mph speed limit, on the night of October 22. They stopped him in Wick.

Solicitor Fiona MacDonald said that Henry had allowed his speed to “creep up” despite the fact that he had not been in a hurry to get home and had no pressing engagement there.

Sheriff Berry commented: “It is an extraordinary speed for someone who wasn’t in a hurry”.

The sheriff said that not only had Henry, of Shillinghill, Wick, exceeded the 60mph speed limit but his speed was well in excess of the UK motorway limit of 70mph and went on: “You would almost have had to make an emergency stop by the time you reached the town’s 30mph limit.”

Sheriff Berry told Henry, who pleaded guilty: “I have to make it clear to you and anyone else who drives at such unholy speeds, especially young drivers, that the court has to deal robustly with them and I rather think that the disqualification imposed, will make you think twice or three times before driving at such a speed again.”

Another driver to fall foul of the Hempriggs speed limit on the same day was also fined £500 and banned for two months after he pleaded guilty.

Sheriff Berry observed that Cameron Young, 20, had been fined £480 and incurred six penalty points for speeding only four months earlier. His latest offence was 91mph

The Sheriff told Young, of Dempster Street, Wick: “I have to consider the public interest and what I can do to deter speeding drivers, especially young males, from driving at inappropriate and unholy speeds. If the only thing I can do to get the message across is to disqualify them, then that is what I will do”.