Tuesday, April 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Delta Police Video Shows How Officer And Motorist Nearly Struck By Speeding Car On Highway 17

Darpan News Desk , 11 Oct, 2019 05:46 PM

    Recently a Delta Police officer was on Highway 17, stopped outside of his unmarked police car, speaking with a driver who he’d just pulled over. Both he and the other driver were pulled over on the edge of a turning lane – a lane one driver decided to make inappropriate use of on Sept. 30.


    That driver was weaving in and out of traffic, speeding excessively and putting others at risk with their unsafe driving habits, as seen in the video.


    The DPD officer never got a look at the driver, but felt the wind at his back as the driver narrowly avoided colliding with both his vehicle and him. Another driver, concerned by what they witnessed, happened to catch the incident on his dash cam, and turned the video into Delta Police. The DPD officer had his red and blue flashing lights activated during the stop, but the dashcam video is of lower quality and doesn’t capture the police lights well.



    “Our officers were able to isolate the license plate of the car in question from the video, and the officer who was nearly struck decided to pay a visit in person with the registered owner of the vehicle,” says A/Inspector Ryan Hall, who oversees the Traffic Unit.


    The registered owner, who lives in Delta, received a $368 ticket for drive without due care and attention. However, because the driver is unidentified, the ticket does not comes with its typical six points.


    “This type of driving behaviour is so reckless,” says A/Insp. Hall. “This is exactly how fatal collisions happen. Less than a second of difference and we could have had a significantly different outcome.

     

    It was a beautiful sunny afternoon. It takes just one person, with selfish or unthinking driving behaviour, to cause unbelievable carnage and pain. We would also ask people to slow down and move to the opposite lane as dictated in the Motor Vehicle Act for their and the officers’ safety.”


    In British Columbia, motorists are required to slow down and move over for all vehicles stopped alongside the road that have flashing red, blue or yellow lights.

     

    This includes first responders, maintenance workers, tow trucks, Commercial Vehicle Safety Enforcement personnel, land surveyors, animal control workers, garbage collectors and other roadside workers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Civilian Agency Investigating Fire Started After Man Hit With Stun Gun

    B.C. Civilian Agency Investigating Fire Started After Man Hit With Stun Gun
    A statement from the Independent Investigations Office says it happened on Oct. 6, in a busy pedestrian area along the downtown Vancouver waterfront.    

    B.C. Civilian Agency Investigating Fire Started After Man Hit With Stun Gun

    Charity Calls On Ottawa To Rescue 25 Canadian Kids Trapped In Syria

    Charity Calls On Ottawa To Rescue 25 Canadian Kids Trapped In Syria
    TORONTO - An international charity is calling on Ottawa to rescue at least 25 Canadian children caught up in Turkey's offensive into northeastern Syria.    

    Charity Calls On Ottawa To Rescue 25 Canadian Kids Trapped In Syria

    Tories To Release Platform On Friday, Jagmeet Singh Sets Terms For NDP Minority Support

    The Conservatives are to release their campaign platform on Friday, coinciding with the opening of advance voting, a party spokesman said Thursday.    

    Tories To Release Platform On Friday, Jagmeet Singh Sets Terms For NDP Minority Support

    Girl Recalls Stabbing That Injured Her And Killed Her Friend At Abbotsford Senior Secondary School

    Girl Recalls Stabbing That Injured Her And Killed Her Friend At Abbotsford Senior Secondary School
    The girl, who was in Grade 9 at the time and cannot be named because of a publication ban, spoke in a video statement played in B.C. Supreme Court about the attack that killed 13-year-old Letisha Reimer.

    Girl Recalls Stabbing That Injured Her And Killed Her Friend At Abbotsford Senior Secondary School

    Climate Change Threatens Crops, Water For Billions Around Globe: Study

    Climate Change Threatens Crops, Water For Billions Around Globe: Study
    Canadian research is part of an extensive global climate change study that has found billions of the world's poorest people are at risk.

    Climate Change Threatens Crops, Water For Billions Around Globe: Study

    Only 10% Of Young Canadians Picture A Woman When They Think Of A CEO: Survey

    Only 10% Of Young Canadians Picture A Woman When They Think Of A CEO: Survey
    A new survey examining young Canadians' views on leadership says only 10 per cent picture a woman when they think of a CEO.

    Only 10% Of Young Canadians Picture A Woman When They Think Of A CEO: Survey