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Footballer 'was chased by police at 125mph'

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Published Date: 04 July 2009
A FOOTBALLER told police he was on his way to a nightclub after a 125mph chase, a court heard yesterday.
Aberdeen striker Lee Miller, 26, was allegedly recorded driving at up to 120mph on the A90 Aberdeen to Dundee road.

He is also alleged to have driven at 90mph along a 40mph limit through a contraflow set up on the dual carriageway.

Miller was c
harged with dangerous driving after the alleged incident on 30 March last year.

During his trial at Stonehaven Sheriff Court yesterday, a police officer told how officers struggled to catch up with him at 125mph after spotting his car on the road shortly after midnight.

Police Constable Alistair MacLeod said: "We saw a car travelling south. It was quite clear it was travelling in excess of the 70mph limit. When you do this job as a traffic officer, you get a fair indication of how fast cars are going. However, on this particular night the car wasgrossly over the speed limit."

The officer said they saw Miller's car while parked in a patrol car at Fourdon junction near an accident blackspot.

He said they went in pursuit of the vehicle at 125mph, but the officers believed they were not going to catch up with him.

Mr MacLeod said: "I remember at that point I turned to my colleague and said 'This guy has escaped. We're not going to get him'. I was concerned something was going to go horribly wrong. It just needs a puddle in the road. If someone is going to crash a car at that speed the minimum that could happen is serious injury."

He said the speedometer in the police car showed an average speed of 90mph through a contraflow system for roadworks.

Asked if the footballer gave any explanation for his driving, he replied: "He had some text from his girlfriend, some nightclub he wanted to go back to."

Miller, of Perth, denies the charge of dangerous driving. The trial continues.





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  • Last Updated: 03 July 2009 9:46 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

truthsleuth,

ex Brrm Brrrm boy 04/07/2009 03:01:12
Having just returned from a touring holiday covering all points from Stranrear to Dunnet Head 125mph seems to be the average speed of most Scots drivers whether they be In the Countryside in town on motorways or down country lanes.
Drivers of 44t lorries set their Sat Nav to automatic and hurtle towards you on a single carriageway road at 40mph and above.
Streams of Harlet Davidsons overtake on bends roaring around curves and seeing who can get closest to knocking wing mirrors off at 90mph on single carriageway roads.
Petrolheads, determined to outdo the bikers attempt to knock the wing mirrors off by creating a sonic boom as they streak past with the obvious aim of using their speed to become airborne as they leap over blind inclines.
Drivers on the M8 (is this a motorway or a vehicle test track trial designed for a suicidal succesor to the Indianapolis 500) weave in from juctions behind you streak into the outside lane then cut you up because they have to leave at the next junction after the one they joined the motorway.

The scenery is beatiful. In good weather there is no better. In all the time I was never in a traffic jam of any note except in Glasgow/Edinburgh.

If only these speed addicts would realise it fast drivers are always at the back of the queue by driving at road speed you miss most of the jams because the idiots are nearly always behind you trying to overtake by breaking the speed/dangerous driving aspects of the law.
To bad there are not enough police to ENFORCE the traffic laws roads would be a far safer place for all if the petrolheads were removed from the roads.
2

Pocket Dictionary,

04/07/2009 07:58:17
Yesterday a Lothians bus was trying to turn onto the South Bridge in Edinburgh. A cyclist who was waiting for the lights to turn green refused to move back 3 feet to let the bus round. He was shouting at the bus driver he was on his side of the road and refused to budge. Pedestrians and other drivers, shouted, pleaded and swore at him to move - he refused.
A fire engine with twos and blues arrived on its way to an emergency and couldn't get onto South Bridge because of the cyclist. The cyclist pulled out a mobile phone and made a call, while the fire engine driver tried in vain to get him to move. Eventually the cyclist moved onto the pavement and headed off up the High Street still fuming at the bus driver and the Fire Service.
It was unbelievable to witness this.

 

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