Close X
Friday, November 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian Gets Suspended Sentence For Drink Driving In Australia

IANS, 06 Sep, 2018 01:10 PM
    A 24-year-old Indian charged with "high-range" drink driving and "driving while disqualified" in Australia received a 10-month suspended sentence on Thursday.
     
     
    Surya Teja Penugonda from Telangana pleaded guilty to both charges. In Parramatta local court, Magistrate Brett Shields placed him on the suspended sentence and disqualified him from driving for nine months. 
     
     
    Penugonda, currently living in Australia on a student visa, was also fined $750, South Coast Register newspaper reported.
     
     
    The incident took place on July 8 during which Penugonda, driving a Mitsubishi 380 sedan, was pulled over by the police in south of Nowra. He was with four other people in the car.
     
     
    Court papers said the police had received calls about "the manner in which a sedan was being driven on the Princes Highway at Falls Creek".
     
     
    Officers spotted the vehicle about 6.26 p.m and stopped the car. Court papers said officers had witnessed the vehicle swerving between lanes and it almost collided with the nearside gutter when it came to a stop.
     
     
    According to officers, Penugonda smelt strongly of intoxicating liquor, however he claimed he had nothing to drink.
     
     
    Police said he was driving on an international licence and had been disqualified from driving for a minimum of 12 months after being caught "high-range" drink driving on January 6.
     
     
    Penugonda was also supposed to have an interlock device fitted to his vehicle. It took three attempts to successfully provide his breath test, which was positive.
     
     
    The police said his eyes were bloodshot, his pupils dilated, his breathing was slow, speech was slurred and he was clumsy. He later admitted to the police that he had six glasses of wine that day.
     
     
    The court ordered Penugonda to have an interlock device fitted to his vehicle for four years.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    5 Punjab-Origin Men Jailed For Killing Sikh Man To Death For Cheating In UK

    5 Punjab-Origin Men Jailed For Killing Sikh Man To Death For Cheating In UK
    Five Indian-origin men have been jailed here after being found guilty of killing a Sikh man in a vicious and "shocking revenge attack" for sleeping with the wife of one of them.

    5 Punjab-Origin Men Jailed For Killing Sikh Man To Death For Cheating In UK

    OFFENSIVE: London Mayor Slams UK Visa Policy For Indian Students

    Dismissing UK government claims over visa overstayers from India, Sadiq Khan said the evidence did not back up the concerns.

    OFFENSIVE: London Mayor Slams UK Visa Policy For Indian Students

    India's Fake News Firestorm: BBC On Rumours Leading To Lynching

    The British public broadcaster is set to highlight the issue in a report to be aired on BBC World News on Tuesday centred around the killing of a man in Bengaluru.

    India's Fake News Firestorm: BBC On Rumours Leading To Lynching

    Donald Trump Blasts ‘Unfair’ Immigration System Seen To Hit Indians Most

    Donald Trump Blasts ‘Unfair’ Immigration System Seen To Hit Indians Most
    Indian-Americans, most of whom are highly skilled and came to the US mainly on H-1B work visas, are the worst sufferers of the current immigration system.

    Donald Trump Blasts ‘Unfair’ Immigration System Seen To Hit Indians Most

    Indian-American Engineer Aruna Miller To Contest From Maryland For US Congress Seat

    Indian-American Engineer Aruna Miller To Contest From Maryland For US Congress Seat
    If elected, the 53-year-old Hyderabad-born would be the second Indian-American woman to enter the House after Pramila Jayapal from Washington State.

    Indian-American Engineer Aruna Miller To Contest From Maryland For US Congress Seat

    Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children

    Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children
    Five Canadian families have been granted visas to return home with their newly adopted babies, after being stuck in Japan for weeks due to a bureaucratic impasse.

    Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children