Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Taxi driver who deliberately swerved into cycling policeman could face jail

Driver angered by cyclist who gesticulated at him for u-turning right in front of him

A taxi driver who deliberately swerved into a policeman on a bicycle in a road rage incident could face jail.

Ivor McAiney was driving his Vauxhall Astra minicab in Farnworth in April last year with a hot drink in his hand when he decided to perform a u-turn in in front of DC Adam Gleave, who was cycling and was forced to brake suddenly.

The officer gesticulated at the driver, indicating that he should watch where he was going.

McAiney wound down his window, shouted an obscenity, then jerked his steering wheel to the left, trapping the cyclist between the taxi and a parked car, a jury at Bolton Crown Court heard.

DC Gleave, who was clipped into his pedals, thumped the vehicle to get McAiney to stop. When McAiney drove off, the officer was left with bruised wrists and damaged bike and clothing as he lay in the road.

Fortunately he had the model and a partial numberplate, and McAiney was later arrested at the office of his cab firm, S and D Taxis.

He denied assault causing actual bodily harm and dangerous driving but following a two-day trial, a jury unanimously convicted him.

Judge Timothy Stead arranged a sentencing hearing on February 10 and granted him bail till then.

“You should not read into that anything about the ultimate sentence,” he said. according to The Bolton News.

A jail sentence would contrast with a similar case we reported in 2012, where a school caretaker who deliberately ran down a cyclist in a fit of rage walked away from court with a £350 fine.

Cal Groves, 45, shouted abuse at Gerard Lumb before knocking him over and driving off, Hull Crown Court heard.

Both the cyclist and the driver were attempting to turn right at the same junction in Anlaby, East Riding.

They nearly collided, causing Groves to shout at Mr Lumb before swerving and hitting him on purpose. Mr Lumb had cuts and bruises to his legs and ankles .

Groves, a caretaker at Hull Collegiate School was found guilty of careless driving and was fined £350, ordered to pay £500 costs and given nine points on his licence.

Add new comment

47 comments

Avatar
Posh | 10 years ago
0 likes

Before people start assuming, on the basis of the judge's comments, that this guy is "going down", being synical about such thing, let's see what the outcome of the Sentencing Hearing is.
If it is custodial, it will be good to see such a precedent.
Now hope the same process is applied to all other cases where the victim is just Joe Bloggs and not a PC.

Avatar
skippy | 10 years ago
0 likes

A summary of the Vine v clarkson lark :

tourdafarce.blogspot.com

Wonder if clarkson tweeted photo is enough to get him an empty pocket ?

" LIKE " f/book/RightofWayAustralia

The life you help save , might be YOUR OWN !

Avatar
hood | 10 years ago
0 likes

i hope the copper thro th b****y book at him and it sets a precedent for future morons who intentionally try to hit us with their 1,2 and 3 ton boxes of metal and armchairs

Avatar
farrell | 10 years ago
0 likes

This is the story of a more standard GMP response:

http://thisistheupside.tumblr.com/post/73240078092/worst-ride-home-ever

Avatar
oozaveared | 10 years ago
0 likes

Lots of comments on here about this guy only getting prosecuted because he did it to a cop and that cops don't protect us.

I only have one incident to report that involved me calling the police. A white van forcing me to the curb then the passenger hosing me down with a bottle of juice.

I got my phone out of my pocket and reported it right there and then. That was a Thursday evening at around 6.30. I was called back later that evening at around 8pm and an appointment was made to come and take a statement at my home.

The outcome was that the driver was identified. Though not the passenger. Was prosecuted for dangerous driving. Was given 6 points and a fine. The six points added to his total and therefore he was banned.

The police seemed to take it seriously. Now it may be that they had an interest in this particular driver. He had a number of points already! Maybe there were other reports and incidents that made him a person they were keen to pursue. Maybe me being at the time 50. An advanced driver etc helped them take my account a bit more seriously. Maybe the officer dealing with it was a cyclist. I don't know But it was dealt with pretty well and better than I expected.

Avatar
FluffyKittenofT... replied to oozaveared | 10 years ago
0 likes
oozaveared wrote:

Lots of comments on here about this guy only getting prosecuted because he did it to a cop and that cops don't protect us.

I only have one incident to report that involved me calling the police. A white van forcing me to the curb then the passenger hosing me down with a bottle of juice.

I got my phone out of my pocket and reported it right there and then. That was a Thursday evening at around 6.30. I was called back later that evening at around 8pm and an appointment was made to come and take a statement at my home.

The outcome was that the driver was identified. Though not the passenger. Was prosecuted for dangerous driving. Was given 6 points and a fine. The six points added to his total and therefore he was banned.

The police seemed to take it seriously. Now it may be that they had an interest in this particular driver. He had a number of points already! Maybe there were other reports and incidents that made him a person they were keen to pursue. Maybe me being at the time 50. An advanced driver etc helped them take my account a bit more seriously. Maybe the officer dealing with it was a cyclist. I don't know But it was dealt with pretty well and better than I expected.

Encouraging to hear such things do sometimes get treated seriously. And in any case the police are also at the mercy of the CPS who in turn have to take into account the prejudices of juries and magistrates etc, so ultimately its the wider culture that's the issue, I'd say.

Avatar
farrell | 10 years ago
0 likes

If this had been one of us "plebs", then the fact that we had gesticulated at the driver and banged on his door probably would have seen us up on charges and no doubt would have been as justifying the taxi driver's almost murderous actions.

It also rankles a bit that GMP can get off their arses and do something to get a proper conviction for one of their own in the same week GMP released their notes on Operation Grimaldi which amount to a cyclist degradation exercise.

It really is an out and out disgrace to be honest.

Avatar
nostromo | 10 years ago
0 likes

Police officer's training and experience was probably key in giving good evidence such as accurate time of offence and circumstances, plus of course the partial plate and make/model/colour of car. he may have also noticed it was a taxi, which would have made identifying it easier.

He did this despite being knocked to the floor, while the vehicle drove off.

How many of us could do the same?

The successful prosecution here has as much to do with the victim's skillset as it does with 'preferential' treatment by the Force or CPS.

Avatar
northstar replied to nostromo | 10 years ago
0 likes
nostromo wrote:

Police officer's training and experience was probably key in giving good evidence such as accurate time of offence and circumstances, plus of course the partial plate and make/model/colour of car. he may have also noticed it was a taxi, which would have made identifying it easier.

He did this despite being knocked to the floor, while the vehicle drove off.

How many of us could do the same?

The successful prosecution here has as much to do with the victim's skillset as it does with 'preferential' treatment by the Force or CPS.

Well..I've remembered 4 number plates, makes and colours of vehicles whose drivers tried to kill me in several minutes, where's my justice like this? non-existant.

Avatar
nostromo replied to northstar | 10 years ago
0 likes
northstar wrote:
nostromo wrote:

Police officer's training and experience was probably key in giving good evidence such as accurate time of offence and circumstances, plus of course the partial plate and make/model/colour of car. he may have also noticed it was a taxi, which would have made identifying it easier.

He did this despite being knocked to the floor, while the vehicle drove off.

How many of us could do the same?

The successful prosecution here has as much to do with the victim's skillset as it does with 'preferential' treatment by the Force or CPS.

Well..I've remembered 4 number plates, makes and colours of vehicles whose drivers tried to kill me in several minutes, where's my justice like this? non-existant.

Well, apart from being super observant, you are certainly very unlucky. I've never had a driver try and kill me in 40 years of cycling.

Avatar
ironmancole | 10 years ago
0 likes

But then you'd find a very proficient CPS pushing your file for impersonating a police officer  40

We just have to face current facts and that seems to be cyclists are fair game on the roads. Until anyone using a car views hitting a fellow human being with a couple of tonnes of metal as even remotely serious we'll continue to read similar stories...and this has to be led by government and all its departments with a thorough and precise plan of action.

Such cases of apparent inconsistency in the application of the law surely give us, a concerned collective, good reason to question any subsequent incarceration when as many of us have found to our cost the CPS decline to prosecute for very similar cases.

Avatar
WolfieSmith | 10 years ago
0 likes

I love it that a fair few comments are by Police officers and barristers. The more legal industry folk riding the better. I intend to have 'Off Duty POLICE Officer stencilled on the back of my gilet. Should kill all argy -bargy dead.

Avatar
northstar | 10 years ago
0 likes

Oh.The.Irony.

Avatar
Stumps | 10 years ago
0 likes

charlie bravo and pepelepew - you will find a minority of people on this forum have no time whatsoever for the Police and the job we do and will go as far to slag us off without any comprehension of what we do or how we have to do it so be prepared for some serious slagging by know it alls and general numpties.

On the other hand there are hundreds of people who are great craik and will comment objectively about various topics in the news. Welcome to the road.cc forum though.

Avatar
pepelepew_2724 | 10 years ago
0 likes

The general theme seems to be 'It's only because he's a police officer'.

If anyone on here thinks the courts or CPS do us any favours as police officers then they are very sadly mistaken. I was assaulted whilst on duty and there is a general perception in the court system that it is an acceptable occupational hazard with fines and sentencing reflective of that. We get messed around with our leave and days off, whereas heaven and earth is moved for the usually non-employed defendant.

What is most likely in this case are 2 things.

1) Somewhat regrettably the investigating officers are showing some more enthusiasm than they may otherwise have done. Which is undoubtedly linked to;
2) the victim is this matter is a professional who is well versed in the evidential requirements and is robust enough to actually be willing to attend court.

Lots of people report things and think that once they have done that it will be the end of any involvement on their part. They then complain on forums saying the police did nothing.

Some of this reads like a Daily Mail comments section. The police workforce is no different to any other occupation. Some people are lazy. Some are dishonest. Most work hard and want to do a good job.

Avatar
dave atkinson replied to pepelepew_2724 | 10 years ago
0 likes
pepelepew_2724 wrote:

What is most likely in this case are 2 things.

1) Somewhat regrettably the investigating officers are showing some more enthusiasm than they may otherwise have done. Which is undoubtedly linked to;
2) the victim is this matter is a professional who is well versed in the evidential requirements and is robust enough to actually be willing to attend court.

Lots of people report things and think that once they have done that it will be the end of any involvement on their part. They then complain on forums saying the police did nothing.

Some of this reads like a Daily Mail comments section. The police workforce is no different to any other occupation. Some people are lazy. Some are dishonest. Most work hard and want to do a good job.

You want to take a look at martin porter's blog if you'd like to see what the weight of evidence required for the CPS to take up a case like this is normally. He's a QC, so fulfils your requirements of being "well versed in the evidential requirements and is robust enough to actually be willing to attend court"

http://thecyclingsilk.blogspot.co.uk/2010/12/police-caution-for-unprovok... is a good one to start with

Avatar
charlie bravo replied to dave atkinson | 10 years ago
0 likes
Dave Atkinson wrote:

You want to take a look at martin porter's blog if you'd like to see what the weight of evidence required for the CPS to take up a case like this is normally. He's a QC, so fulfils your requirements of being "well versed in the evidential requirements and is robust enough to actually be willing to attend court"

http://thecyclingsilk.blogspot.co.uk/2010/12/police-caution-for-unprovok... is a good one to start with

Oh I've seen that Dave. Still dumbfounded why some drivers are ignored by the system intended to punish them.

My wife was a victim of a serious RTC on a bike 17 months ago and still struggles with injury and PTSD to this day. She even supported CTC by making a film of her RTC for their Road Justice campaign. Some of you may have seen it. Just search CTC road justice and it is the highest viewed video. Still makes for harrowing viewing for me. And for the record - I was less than impressed by the 'service' we received from the police. Even considering I have worked with the bobby dealing before (not same force but close by) she and I still felt let down by the system.

Avatar
Critchio | 10 years ago
0 likes

I don't have an axe to grind but I've seen too many plod over the years cuff jobs because they cannot be arsed to carry out a thorough and proper investigation for something they think is petty or not worth pursuing. That is not their decision.

In this case the point I was [poorly] making was this officer's colleagues went the extra mile and ended up getting a guy charged by presenting CPS with sufficient evidence because of the extra effort his colleagues made. The offender was not charged just on the say so of an officer alone. There would have been supporting evidence in the form of injury photos and medical evidence and maybe marks on the car or even independent witness evidence, the type of damage to the bike etc.

You present all that kind of evidence to a CPS lawyer that corroborates the officer's version of events you get a charge.

Now, had our victim not been a police officer, then some bumbling plod would have probably said to him, "it's not worth it mate. Your word against his, it won't go to court. Do you want to make a complaint?"

In a lot of incidents the evidence is there but it's lazy, incompetent, officers who can't be arsed to deal with members of the public like they would if that person were a colleague or a family member. They take the easy way out by not investigating correctly when it comes to trivial things like another fucking cyclist getting in the way and holding things up...

Avatar
rojre | 10 years ago
0 likes

I don't mean to be flippant or trainspoterish ! Iv only ever seen those police bikes once and that was down at Saltdean near Brighton. They don't have cops on bicycles here but I guess they must be good hardy bikes. Does anyone know what make and model they are.

Avatar
philtregear | 10 years ago
0 likes

one law for the law anther for the rest of us. i do not trust the judiciary.. still, im glad hes going down

Avatar
mattsccm | 10 years ago
0 likes

"going to court with a lack of evidence just because the victim is a police officer and all you people who are in the police know it, so cut the crap out please. "
oooooooooh!
Someone with an axe to grind methinks  4

Avatar
Stumps | 10 years ago
0 likes

6 - 8 hours for a simple prosecution file ? bloody hell where do you work ?

My Sgt would have kicked my arse if it took me that long. An abbreviated file should take no more than 1 hour to compile.

However if your talking about including the time it takes to take a statement as well as putting the file together i see where your coming from but its still a ridiculous amount of time your taking.

Avatar
charlie bravo replied to Stumps | 10 years ago
0 likes
stumps wrote:

6 - 8 hours for a simple prosecution file ? bloody hell where do you work ?

My Sgt would have kicked my arse if it took me that long. An abbreviated file should take no more than 1 hour to compile.

However if your talking about including the time it takes to take a statement as well as putting the file together i see where your coming from but its still a ridiculous amount of time your taking.

including time to interview both witnesses and suspect

we have a new file system now that is beyond ridiculous and is designed to save the briefs time digesting a case. Imagine a concise MG5 for a complex case and multiply it five fold then you get somewhere near the new PRS (Police Report Summary) system. It is without doubt the biggest stinking fetid pile of dung ever conceived.....and then some

Avatar
Stumps replied to charlie bravo | 10 years ago
0 likes
charlie bravo wrote:
stumps wrote:

6 - 8 hours for a simple prosecution file ? bloody hell where do you work ?

My Sgt would have kicked my arse if it took me that long. An abbreviated file should take no more than 1 hour to compile.

However if your talking about including the time it takes to take a statement as well as putting the file together i see where your coming from but its still a ridiculous amount of time your taking.

including time to interview both witnesses and suspect

we have a new file system now that is beyond ridiculous and is designed to save the briefs time digesting a case. Imagine a concise MG5 for a complex case and multiply it five fold then you get somewhere near the new PRS (Police Report Summary) system. It is without doubt the biggest stinking fetid pile of dung ever conceived.....and then some

Oh dear not good. In Northumbria its all computerised and so simple and once you type in one section it automatically transfers it to the next section.

Avatar
charlie bravo replied to Stumps | 10 years ago
0 likes
stumps wrote:

Oh dear not good. In Northumbria its all computerised and so simple and once you type in one section it automatically transfers it to the next section.

Our CPS like each statement summarised accurately with key witnesses in one box and non key in others, depending on who prepares the file for court often depends on who (or what - as is CCTV etc) is key and non key - resulting in files bouncing back and forth between a stroppy clerk and a seriously f**ked off cop. It is madness and beating the good will from bobbies with every file prepared

Avatar
Stumps replied to charlie bravo | 10 years ago
0 likes
charlie bravo wrote:
stumps wrote:

Oh dear not good. In Northumbria its all computerised and so simple and once you type in one section it automatically transfers it to the next section.

Our CPS like each statement summarised accurately with key witnesses in one box and non key in others, depending on who prepares the file for court often depends on who (or what - as is CCTV etc) is key and non key - resulting in files bouncing back and forth between a stroppy clerk and a seriously f**ked off cop. It is madness and beating the good will from bobbies with every file prepared

I know where your coming from, our file prep unit used to be upstairs, its now in a different building in a different town. It takes over a week for post in the internal mail to reach them then they send out snotty emails asking for other stuff and give you 2 days to do it  14 I could go on but you know as well as i do its fooked thanks to this bloody govt. Any way back to reading the forum !

Avatar
Critchio | 10 years ago
0 likes

Clearly an investigation that has gone correctly, irrespective of whether the victim is a police officer. Yeah right...

The problem isn't so much the victim being in the old bill making the case stronger, it's the complete lack of enthusiasm off officers to investigate these type of incidents thoroughly and achieving the best evidence to assist in the prosecution. So when you say "this happened to me but the old bill did nothing" isn't because this case has a copper as the victim entirely, it's because the police didn't investigate your incident thoroughly.

There will be an element of extra effort for "one of your own" but the CPS won't decide purely on that fact

It's easy and lazy for a plod to say this won't go anywhere mate but that's just well lazy. Plod will fob you off like this.

I don't agree with the CPS telling officers not the take statements, that's BS. They review evidence the Police put before them. If they put a pile of crap investigation before a lawyer then of course the lawyer is going to say no further action. The police have do their jobs properly and investigate these type of incidents thoroughly cos right now they don't and it's shocking. I

This case was invesigated properly because the victim is a police officer. It isn't going to court with a lack of evidence just because the victim is a police officer and all you people who are in the police know it, so cut the crap out please.

Avatar
Neil753 | 10 years ago
0 likes

It's interesting that this fellow is (but perhaps not for much longer, hopefully) a taxi driver.

As a lorry driver, a standard of driving is required of me that is substantially higher than that required from an ordinary motorist; and rightly so. If I used my lorry as a tool of my aggression I would expect my licence to be permanently revoked.

Because this taxi driver has been convicted not as a result of poor driving standards, but through a premeditated act, in the full knowledge that this would reflect badly on his profession, I wouldn't wan this dangerous individual to ever drive a taxi again, partly of the safety of others and partly to help make it clear to others that this sort of behaviour comes with some serious penalties.

It's bad enough being on a white knuckle ride almost every time I get into a taxi, without the possibilty of unwittingly climbing into this guy's cab one day.

If I was the judge, I'd be permanently revoking this chap's licence. It is, after all, a privilege that must be earnt, not a right.

Avatar
fluffy_mike replied to Neil753 | 10 years ago
0 likes

You make an interesting point about the standard expected of professional drivers, but sadly anyone who rides a bike regularly knows that a large number of so-called professional drivers are anything but.

Being a professional driver gives a great many lorry drivers, van drivers and taxis drivers a massive sense of self-worth and entitlement to hog the road, while giving them nothing in the way of increased skills or empathy with cyclists or pedestrians.

I get bored of hearing professional drivers saying how well trained they are when there's plenty of evidence they're no safer to cycle around than the average car driver, and are often worse.

Avatar
McDuff73 | 10 years ago
0 likes

why arent such actions catergorised as attempted murder? throwing a 2 tonnes metal box at someone deliberately surely is?

Pages

Latest Comments