BREAKING NEWS
 

Nine Scunthorpe offenders dealt with by court

Trusted article source icon
Thursday, January 03, 2013
Profile image for Scunthorpe Telegraph

Scunthorpe Telegraph

THE following cases were dealt with at North Lincolnshire Magistrates' Court:

Paul Hinsley, 38, of Whitestone Road, Scunthorpe, pleaded guilty to failing to comply with a direction given by a police constable not to return to a locality for a period of 48 hours. He was fined £75 and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 and costs of £85.

  1. CourtLg

James Mclean, 63 of Salisbury Close, Scunthorpe, pleaded guilty to speeding and driving otherwise than in accordance with a licence. He was fined £170, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15, costs of £40 and his licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

Khater Miakhel, 18, of Parkinson Avenue, Scunthorpe, was found guilty of using a motor vehicle without third party insurance. He was fined £600, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15, costs of £85 and his licence was endorsed with six penalty points.

Business Cards From Only £10.95 Delivered www.myprint-247.co.uk

myprint-247

View details

Print voucher

Our heavyweight cards have FREE UV silk coating, FREE next day delivery & VAT included. Choose from 1000's of pre-designed templates or upload your own artwork. Orders dispatched within 24hrs.

Terms: Visit our site for more products: Business Cards, Compliment Slips, Letterheads, Leaflets, Postcards, Posters & much more. All items are free next day delivery. www.myprint-247.co.uk

Contact: 01858 468192

Valid until: Sunday, June 30 2013

Tony Robinson, 45, of Gunby Road, Scunthorpe, pleaded guilty to using a motor vehicle without third party insurance. He was fined £150, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15, costs of £40 and his licence was endorsed with six penalty points.

Tracie Craven, 30, of Neville Road, Scunthorpe, pleaded guilty to using a motor vehicle without third party insurance, driving otherwise than in accordance with a licence and while over the alcohol limit. She was fined £256, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20, costs of £85 and was disqualified from holding a driving licence for 17 months.

Connor Reece Emeny, 19, of Peacock Street, Scunthorpe, pleaded guilty to being in possession of stolen property and controlled Class B drugs. He was fined £190, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20 and costs of £85 and the drugs were forfeited and destroyed.

Hannah Elizabeth Zaffuto, 21, of Ashby Road, Scunthorpe, pleaded guilty to driving a motor vehicle while over the alcohol limit. She was ordered to send her driving licence to the DVLA within seven days, was fined £110, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20, costs of £85 and was disqualified from holding a driving licence for 22 months.

Matthew John Briggs, 28, of Everest Road, Ashby, pleaded guilty to failing to provide a specimen of breath as required and the possession of a controlled Class A and B drugs. He was required to carry out unpaid work for 80 hours within the next 12 months, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £60, costs of £85, was disqualified from holding a driving licence for 12 months, was fined £140 and the drugs were forfeited and destroyed.

James Jack Towle, 21, of Blyth Court, Barton-Upon-Humber, pleaded guilty to driving a motor vehicle otherwise than in accordance with a licence and without third party insurance. He was fined £150, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15, costs of £40 and his licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.

0
Tweet this article
Report

Comments

  • Profile image for user_deceased

    by user_deceased

    Thursday, January 03 2013, 7:28PM

    “The thing is each case will be dealt with on an individual basis with any number of different factors affecting the outcome. It is impossible to tell from a report like this what those factors are. In addition to this things like the deterrent effect of the sentence to other (similar aged, perhaps) people is taken into account - hence why the sentences handed down to rioters in 2011 seemed excessive at the time. So whilst there can seem to be a vast discrepancy in sentencing for crimes being classified under the same label, you would have to have been privy to all of the facts of the case as well as have an understanding of what society's priorities are in relation to certain crimes to decide whether there had been unfairness. Additionally, magistrates and judges are humans and so are subjective beings, too. It would be expected that a certain amount of variation would be inherent, here, too. This is why the authorities try to recruit magistrates from the local community. Are each of these sentences just or unjust if considered in isolation, though?”

  • Profile image for nick_nick_

    by nick_nick_

    Thursday, January 03 2013, 7:00PM

    “you'll probably find the guy with no insurance has a job.”

  • Profile image for scunnyexile

    by scunnyexile

    Thursday, January 03 2013, 10:56AM

    “No insurance...600 pounds.
    No insurance, no licence, drunk 256 pounds.
    No insurance, no licence 150 pounds.
    Are we being starved of the facts or are there discrepancies here?”

        Your comments awaiting moderation

        Be the first to comment

        max 4000 characters
         
         
         
         
         
         

        Tell us about your area

        Got some interesting news? Write about it and let your whole community know.

          Write an article