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“How to go from clean licence to six points in under a minute”: Cyclist tells drivers to put their phone away when driving, after motorist ordered to pay £1,727 because of rider’s camera footage + more on the live blog
First Published: Feb 23, 2026
SUMMARY

"How to go from clean licence to six points in under a minute": Cyclist tells drivers to put their phone away when driving, after motorist ordered to pay £1,727 because of rider's camera footage
This was a very expensive minute for the motorist who almost hit a couple of cyclists before the second rider’s camera footage clearly showed them using a mobile phone. The result? Six penalty points on their licence (it could have been significantly worse) and being ordered to pay £1,727 in court having faced charges of careless driving and mobile phone use behind the wheel.
“Please don’t use a mobile phone while driving, and do check properly before moving” the cyclist who uploaded the footage to YouTube after the culmination of the court case wrote.
“I understand the driver was trying to clear the junction so he wasn’t blocking vehicles from the left side. Unfortunately he didn’t appear to see the first cyclist and started to drive toward them, Then [he] definitely didn’t see me. Luckily I rang the bell and he heard that. Also holding a phone in his hand with lit up screen while driving.
“Attended Magistrates court as a witness. Due to both charges he was at risk of 12 points and possible disqualification on a clean licence. I am glad he wasn’t disqualified because this was careless, not malicious. The Magistrates took a while deciding on the careless driving charge, then again on the fine, costs and points. I feel six points is a fair judgement and feel he will be much more careful in future.”
In total, the driver was ordered to pay £1,727 which included a chunky £769 fine and other costs. All for the sake of not waiting a few minutes to go on a mobile phone.
But what if I need to carry a dining table? Can't do that by bike, can you?
Tom Pidcock opens account for 2026, concern as Met Police disbands specialist cycle and motorcycle safety units... and indicators for cyclists are back (again)
The weekend began with the news that the Metropolitan Police has disbanded its specialist cycle and motorcycle safety units, prompting fears about a potential impact on vulnerable road users’ safety. The commercial vehicle unit and dedicated cycle and motorcycle teams will be merged into a new “road danger reduction” unit. Megan had the full story here…

Meanwhile, I had the dubious honour of taking a look at this Kickstarter campaign…

Elsewhere on the tech front, Stu’s been riding the BMC Roadmachine 01 Three, here are his thoughts on that. And finally, the weekend brought Tom Pidcock his first win of 2026, the Brit taking the final stage of Vuelta a Andalucía.
Over in the UAE, Isaac Del Toro overhauled Antonio Tiberi’s advantage with a stage win on the second summit finish of the week, a stage and GC win that’ll keep the sponsors happy. There was also enough time for a third win of the race for undisputed sprint king Jonathan Milan too.
Oscar Onley’s first race for the Ineos Grenadiers ended with a fourth place finish on GC at the Volta ao Algarve, Juan Ayuso topping a stacked top 10 and beating Paul Seixas, João Almeida, Onley, fellow Ineos debutant Kévin Vauquelin, and Florian Lipowitz to the win. Things are quieter this week after the three-a-day racing of the past few days, but there is the small matter of Opening Weekend to look forward to…
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Yes, that matches my experience with reporting to Kent Police over the last 4 years (they were more responsive before that, during a period when video could be uploaded as part of the initial report). In email communication I had with them in 2022, they confirmed that they deprioritise any report that does not state that a collision occurred. In other words, they aren't interested in preventative policing.
So that when you are at the side of the road in a heap on the ground after being mowed down and the indicator is still flashing the police can ignore it?
So that you can look the person who bought this ridiculous thing directly in the eyes and ask why?
It’s become some kind of amateurish website now. Bring back the old one lads, only for the simple fact that it wasn’t janky-looking and dysfunctional.
I’m catapulted back to 2003 with this website. It’s rubbish. Nothing particularly noteworthy about the old one but at least it worked. This one looks like a suspicious hack job with no designers involved. It’s really a shame because your content is so good and now I visit the site only to skim around since the layout is just unoptimized for reading in mobile.
Another really weird review from road.cc. They take a product, use it for something it wasn't designed for and then mark it down. I've just upgraded my Boost to the Boost 3 and I can say it does the jobs it is designed for very well. I use it on rides in daylight for Saturday group rides and occasional all day epics. I feel that cars are more likely to see me and the significantly brighter day flash and doubling of battery life are significant upgrades, especially for longer rides. It's also so light that there's really no downside to using it so safety wins. I also use it for short 30-min commuting. The easy of detachment and robustness of the light here are key and it's perfect for this use case. For longer rides that involve significant unlit or off-road, such as along a canal path, at night I use the Exposure Strada RB. Again, road.cc, right tool: right job. It's also great that Exposure use common mounts for all their lights. I change the Boost and RB between multiple bikes using the mount with a red pin and it takes seconds to move from bike to bike or to detach for charging. The table for setting brightness is something I tend to set only once. Then the single button is a boon.
Yes, I can't wait: a duff BMC frame with a crap oval BB, and carbon rims set up tubeless and without a pressure -relief hole so you can pressurise the cavity and which would likely (to complete the disaster waiting to happen) be hookless/ mini-hook and explode with no notice
About time they got more of them out of cars and onto bikes. Do their fitness levels some good.
I cannot tell if they relate to my report or someone else’s Yes, that's the point - the aim of the pseudo - database is to shut the punters up and deceive them about how little the police have done. They know the deception scheme has been successful when people report on here that they have achieved successful outcomes from most of their reports. They haven't.
Mayor Adams perverted a lot of laws, hence the fact that he is no longer Mayor. New York cyclists have had an ongoing problem with members of the ultra-orthodox Satmar Jewish community in Williamsburg. They don't like people in cycle shorts and skimpy tops cycling through the neighbourhood. They used their political influence to get a cycle lane removed from a local highway. There was talk of a naked bike ride through the area but I think wiser counsels prevailed.


















