logo
Moment cyclist ticketed for 'riding no handed' confronts City of London officer over his fine - but who do YOU think was in the wrong?

Moment cyclist ticketed for 'riding no handed' confronts City of London officer over his fine - but who do YOU think was in the wrong?

Daily Mail​7 hours ago
This is the moment a frustrated barrister ticketed for allegedly cycling no-handed confronted the police officer who fined him.
Paul Powlesland posted a video of the 'utterly bonkers' encounter with the female City of London officer on social media.
It came after he was accused of 'careless and inconsiderate cycling' and 'riding with his arms outstretched wide' on March 5 by the officer.
He later filmed a separate altercation with the police woman after approaching her in Queen Victoria Street on April 2 - before posting the video today.
In the clip, the c limate change campaigner appeared to grill the officer over why he had been fined for 'cycling no-handed' - which he claimed was not an offence.
Mr Powlesland asks: 'So anyone cycling no-handed in rush hour is going to get ticketed?' 'If I see them, yes,' replies the officer.
The barrister then hits out, accusing the police of wasting resources while describing the bike theft rate plaguing the capital as 'endemic'.
'You don't even investigate most bike theft,' he tells the female cop. 'There's phone snatching going on - you could be getting robbers.
'You're letting phone snatchers and bike thieves go to ticket law-abiding citizens cycling no-handed. Do you honestly think that's a good use of City of London Police time?'
Pictured is Mr Powlesland's post on X, which has been seen almost 800,000 times
I recently got stopped & ticketed by the City of London Police for, & I kid you not, 'cycling no handed'. Even though it's clearly not an offence, the officer said they were ticketing me under the Human Rights Act as I was infringing other people's Article 2 'Right to Life', in… https://t.co/LU4BUKZZ4w pic.twitter.com/3DBE6XUgSN
— Paul Powlesland (@paulpowlesland) July 3, 2025
The officer, who was armed with a Taser, replies: 'Cycling with no hands on the handlebars places others at risk, and contravenes Article 2 of the Human Rights Act.'
Laughing, the lawyer repeats: 'Cycling no-handed violates Article 2 of the Human Rights Act? That's the Right to Life, isn't it?'
Attempting to clarify the comment, the police officer says: 'No, I said it endangers people on the road,' at which point he cuts in: 'No, you said me cycling no-handed violates Article 2. I think we're done at that. It's rather silly, isn't it?'
In the UK there is no specific law that makes cycling no-handed a crime - unlike in Cyprus, which made it illegal in 2016.
However, there is a grey area which allows police to fine riders deemed to be cycling dangerously and not in proper control of their bikes.
And while the Highway Code does not expressly forbid bikers from cycling no-handed, there are rules in place against riding dangerously.
Rule 66 of the code states 'you should avoid any actions that could reduce your control of your cycle.'
While rule 68 adds 'you MUST NOT ride in a dangerous, careless or inconsiderate manner'.
However, Mr Powlesland was penalised under Section 29 of the Road Traffic Act 1988.
Posting the 63-second clip of the encounter on X, formerly Twitter, Mr Powlesland insisted he was not in the wrong.
'I recently got stopped & ticketed by the City of London Police for, & I kid you not, 'cycling no handed',' he wrote.
'Even though it's clearly not an offence, the officer said they were ticketing me under the Human Rights Act as I was infringing other people's Article 2 'Right to Life', in case I fell off & injured them: utterly bonkers stuff.'
He added: 'With bicycle theft basically legalised in the City due to the complete failure of the Police to bother investigating such thefts & people being regularly terrorised in London by e-bike phone muggers, it's good to see the City of London Police concentrating the resources on what really matters.'
The encounter, which has been seen by almost 800,000 people, comes as City of London Police continues with its summer street safety crackdown.
It has seen 284 cyclists fined for running red lights in the first six months of 2025 - more than ten times as many as the 25 motorists penalised for the same offence.
A City of London Police spokesman told MailOnline: 'We're aware of a social media post that shows a small clip from a longer interaction between a cyclist and a City of London Police officer on the April 2 2025.
'The cyclist approached the officer and during their three-minute chat, the Human Rights Act was mentioned. The cyclist was not ticketed on this day, but he had approached the officer because she had issued him a ticket on the March 5 2025 in the City of London.
'On the March 5 2025, the officer observed the cyclist riding with his arms stretched out wide and off the handlebars during rush hour.
'The officer stopped the cyclist and issued him with a ticket for careless and inconsiderate cycling under s29 of the Road Traffic Act 1988.
'A ticket was processed on the May 19 2025. Should the cyclist contest the ticket, officers will attend court and present any relevant evidence that we have obtained.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ferne McCann's acid attacker ex Arthur Collins is 'dumped by Love Island star Amelia Peters after eight month romance'
Ferne McCann's acid attacker ex Arthur Collins is 'dumped by Love Island star Amelia Peters after eight month romance'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ferne McCann's acid attacker ex Arthur Collins is 'dumped by Love Island star Amelia Peters after eight month romance'

Ferne McCann 's acid attacker ex Arthur Collins has reportedly been dumped by Love Island star Amelia Peters after an eight-month romance. Collins, 32 is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence after being found guilty of carrying out a nightclub acid attack in 2017, leaving 16 people with serious injuries. It was reported last month that Collins was being regularly visited by Amelia at HMP Buckley Hall in Rochdale But according to The Sun, Amelia has called it quits with the convict after reports of their romance surfaced and family urged her to break up with him. A friend of Amelia told the publication: 'Some members of her family only found out about her romance after reading about it in the Sun and urged her to dump him especially after seeing the pictures of him injecting himself with steroids from behind bars.' The source went on to say that friends and family are concerned Amelia will reunite with Collins and told her he is 'bad news'. They added: 'They've told Amelia he's "bad news" and she shouldn't put her life on hold for him.' Reporting last month that the pair had allegedly struck up a romance, a source told The Sun: 'Amelia has made no secret of her relationship with Arthur and has told her friends she's mad about him and thinks he's the one. 'She says she thinks Arthur is a changed man. Some of her mates are worried about her getting involved with him but Amelia won't listen.' Collins is said to have a phone in prison that he uses to talk to Amelia 'all the time'. It is illegal to possess a phone in prison. If found guilty, the maximum penalty is a further two years imprisonment and/or a fine. In 2018, Collins was jailed for another eight months for using a smuggled mobile phone to call his reality TV star ex-girlfriend Ferne from his cell. Amelia, 26, hinted at romance last month on Arthur's birthday when she posted a picture of a bouquet of red roses with the letter 'A' above. She wrote on the Instagram snap: 'Happy birthday to the most handsome pain in the a**e, Love you x.' A separate source told The Sun that Amelia and Collins are simply 'family friends'. MailOnline has contacted HMP Buckley Hall and Amelia for comment. Former teaching assistant Amelia appeared on season three of Love Island - which was ultimately won by Kem Cetinay and Amber Davies. She entered the show as a Casa Amor bombshell but failed to couple up and was dumped from the island after just two days. At the time, she was the youngest star to have ever appeared on the show, entering the villa aged 18. In 2022, it was revealed Collins had found love with an Essex mum and former Page 3 girl while in prison and the pair were engaged to marry. Businesswoman Annie Jane, who presented an adult show on Babestation for 11 years, confirmed the couple's engagement on Instagram, telling friends and family 'I said yes' while sharing a tattoo of Collins's name she has inked on her stomach. A source close to Annie told MailOnline: 'Arthur and Annie met prior to his prison sentencing through mutual friends. 'They plan on getting married while he's still behind bars later this year after dating for the past six months. 'Annie is aware of Arthur's past but is prepared to commit herself to him, even getting a tattoo of his name to prove her love. 'They have a lot in common; Annie also has a young daughter, and believes the pair connect on a spiritual level. 'They fell in love after writing to each other and talking through prison visits and Annie believes Arthur is truly sorry for everything that happened. 'Annie has done a lot for Arthur's rehabilitation, she feels they're soul mates, and together they are looking forward to the future and one day having a family life of their own.'

Little girl, 1, dies after ‘concern for child' at house as police launch probe into her death
Little girl, 1, dies after ‘concern for child' at house as police launch probe into her death

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Little girl, 1, dies after ‘concern for child' at house as police launch probe into her death

A ONE-year-old girl has died as cops launch an urgent investigation into her death. Police were called to a property in Sheffield yesterday evening after reports of "concern for a child". The force were alerted by paramedics from an address on Overend Way. Yorkshire Ambulance Service rushed the tot to hospital but she tragically died a shortly after. A South Yorkshire Police spokesman said: "Last night, Wednesday 2 July, we received a call from Yorkshire Ambulance Service alerting us to a concern for a child at a property on Overend Way in Sheffield. "Officers responded and a one year-old child was taken to hospital by ambulance, where she sadly later died. "Officers are working to ascertain the circumstances that lead to the child's death and our investigation remains on-going." 1

Gap in law could see young people ‘committing terrorist acts by weekend'
Gap in law could see young people ‘committing terrorist acts by weekend'

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Gap in law could see young people ‘committing terrorist acts by weekend'

Young people 'are going to be committing terrorist acts, probably, by the weekend', Lord Walney has warned during a debate on the proscription of protest group Palestine Action. The former independent adviser on political violence and disruption described a 'gap in the law', because the Government cannot proscribe protest groups which are 'committing systematic criminality' without using terrorism powers. He backed the Home Office's plan to ban Palestine Action, adding it to the list of 81 organisations which are already proscribed including Hamas, al Qaida and National Action. Lord Walney told peers it was 'a nonsense' that groups which have advocated causing 'damage', such as Palestine Action, 'have been able to operate freely for as long as they have'. But opposing the move, Labour former Northern Ireland and Wales secretary Lord Hain warned: 'If you start labelling people willy-nilly terrorists right across the board, you're going down a very, very dangerous route.' Lord Walney said: 'There is a gap in the law, it seems to me at the moment, where we ought to be able to place a restriction on an organisation that is committing systematic criminality in the name of a cause without necessarily branding them as terrorists.' He suggested a future law change could mean authorities do not 'end up branding young people who are going to be committing terrorist acts, probably, by the weekend' as terrorists. The independent crossbench peer, who was previously a Labour MP, later said: 'I think we have to think more in the Labour movement about working people here, because they have been systematically targeted in defence factories. They have been deeply intimidated. 'At times, they have been violently injured, and it's totally unacceptable for the Labour movement to say, 'well that's ok, because it's in a cause'.' The Home Office's order, using the Terrorism Act 2000, will make it a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison to be a member of Palestine Action or to support it. The group claimed responsibility for a break in at RAF Brize Norton last month, when activists damaged two RAF Voyager aircraft using paint. Crossbencher Lord Carlile of Berriew, a former independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, urged peers to 'act responsibly' by 'accepting this instrument'. He said: 'Every day the police prosecute people for theft. The maximum for theft – I'm not sure if it still is, but it was seven years at one time. Practically nobody gets seven years for theft. 'Most people get a non-custodial sentence. The assumption that everybody who's prosecuted is going to be locked up for years and years and years is a misleading premise for this debate.' Lord Hain was one of three Labour rebels who backed a motion to 'regret' the Home Office's plan, which Green peer Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb moved. He was joined in the 'content' lobby by Lord Hendy and former Trade Union Congress general secretary Baroness O'Grady of Upper Holloway. 'Frankly, I'm deeply ashamed,' Lord Hain told peers. 'This Government is treating Palestine Action as equivalent to Islamic State or al Qaida, which is intellectually bankrupt, politically unprincipled and morally wrong.' Lord Hain earlier said: 'In 1969-70, I was proud to lead a militant campaign of direct action to disrupt all-white, racist South African rugby and cricket tours, and we successfully succeeded in getting them stopped for two decades. 'No doubt, I would have been stigmatised as a terrorist today rather than vilified as I was then. 'That militant action could have been blocked by this motion, as could other anti-Apartheid activity, including militant protests to stop Barclays bank recruiting new students on university campuses, eventually forcing Barclays to withdraw from Apartheid South Africa.' Home Office minister Lord Hanson of Flint said he had previously protested. ' Freedom of expression, freedom of assembly are cornerstones in our democracy,' he said. 'I have protested. I know of many other members who've protested against various things in our lives, and we have done so in a fair and open way.' He added: 'People engaged in lawful protests do not need weapons. 'People engaged in lawful protests do not throw smoke bombs and fire pyrotechnics to innocent members of the public, and people engaged in lawful protest do not cause millions of pounds of damage to national security infrastructure, including submarines and defence equipment for Nato.' Baroness Jones described a 'long and noble tradition of the use of direct action by protest movements'. She added that 'Palestine Action is not like any other group that the British Government has declared a terrorist organisation so far'. Her motion to regret was rejected by 144 votes to 16, majority 128. Peers who had stayed in the chamber afterwards called 'content' to back the order, which has also received MPs' backing in the Commons after a vote on Wednesday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store