Latest news with #RoadTransportAct


The Advertiser
17 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Teen could lose Jaguar after being caught at 215km/h, then recklessly driving without number plates
A teenager who was caught speeding three times in one day at separate points along the Hume Highway has pleaded guilty to six driving offences. 7News reports 19-year-old Jade Muscat was pulled over by police on three separate occasions on Saturday, April 12 in her black Jaguar F-Pace as she attempted to travel from Sydney to Melbourne, breaking multiple road rules in the process. She's now due to appear at Gundagai Local Court for sentencing on August 15, and police have reportedly requested her car be forfeited to the crown upon her conviction under section 245 of the Road Transport Act. Under the Act, a vehicle is eligible for confiscation by the government if its driver commits a serious offence for a second time within five years. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. ABOVE: Image courtesy of 7News The drama began when the teen, from Paddington in Sydney's eastern suburbs, was issued with a speeding ticket after she was clocked travelling at more than 20km/h over the 110km/h limit on the Hume Highway at Gunning, in the NSW Southern Tablelands, at around 10:40am on April 12. After continuing south on the Hume, Ms Muscat was again pulled over by highway patrol officers just over an hour later, after she was detected driving at 215km/h about 11:45am at Tumblong just south of Gundagai. Police issued her with a court attendance notice for two offences – driving at a dangerous speed and exceeding speeds more than 45km/h as a green P-plater. They suspended her licence, confiscated her number plates and issued her with a confiscation notice, which was affixed to her windscreen. ABOVE: Jaguar F-Pace But less than two hours later at about 1:30pm, police received a complaint about a black SUV without number plates weaving in and out of traffic and driving at excess speed while travelling south on the Hume near Little Billabong. Police apprehended Ms Muscat after taking up a stationary position on the Hume Highway at Table Top, before taking her to Albury police station. She was charged with a further five charges – drive recklessly/furiously or speed/manner dangerous, Class A motor vehicle exceed speed more than 45 km/h, drive motor vehicle while licence suspended, operate vehicle during number-plate confiscation period, and tamper with number-plate confiscation notice. Police later dropped one of the seven charges, which was issued during the second speeding incident – P2 exceed speed more than 45km/h – and Ms Muscat pleaded guilty to the six remaining charges during court hearings in Gundagai and Albury last month. ABOVE: Jade Muscat via social media Court documents obtained by 7News show Ms Muscat told police in Albury that she continued to drive because "she needed to get to Melbourne to see family" and "had no other means of getting there as police in Gundagai told her there were no trains from there". "Police formed the opinion that the accused had no regard for other people on the road and showed no remorse relating to her driving behaviour," according to the documents, which stated the sequence of events occurred during fine, sunny weather on sealed, dry roads while traffic was "medium to heavy due to school holidays and families travelling". "Gundagai is a township with a 24-hour service centre, and a bus service that is available for travel if booked." Content originally sourced from: A teenager who was caught speeding three times in one day at separate points along the Hume Highway has pleaded guilty to six driving offences. 7News reports 19-year-old Jade Muscat was pulled over by police on three separate occasions on Saturday, April 12 in her black Jaguar F-Pace as she attempted to travel from Sydney to Melbourne, breaking multiple road rules in the process. She's now due to appear at Gundagai Local Court for sentencing on August 15, and police have reportedly requested her car be forfeited to the crown upon her conviction under section 245 of the Road Transport Act. Under the Act, a vehicle is eligible for confiscation by the government if its driver commits a serious offence for a second time within five years. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. ABOVE: Image courtesy of 7News The drama began when the teen, from Paddington in Sydney's eastern suburbs, was issued with a speeding ticket after she was clocked travelling at more than 20km/h over the 110km/h limit on the Hume Highway at Gunning, in the NSW Southern Tablelands, at around 10:40am on April 12. After continuing south on the Hume, Ms Muscat was again pulled over by highway patrol officers just over an hour later, after she was detected driving at 215km/h about 11:45am at Tumblong just south of Gundagai. Police issued her with a court attendance notice for two offences – driving at a dangerous speed and exceeding speeds more than 45km/h as a green P-plater. They suspended her licence, confiscated her number plates and issued her with a confiscation notice, which was affixed to her windscreen. ABOVE: Jaguar F-Pace But less than two hours later at about 1:30pm, police received a complaint about a black SUV without number plates weaving in and out of traffic and driving at excess speed while travelling south on the Hume near Little Billabong. Police apprehended Ms Muscat after taking up a stationary position on the Hume Highway at Table Top, before taking her to Albury police station. She was charged with a further five charges – drive recklessly/furiously or speed/manner dangerous, Class A motor vehicle exceed speed more than 45 km/h, drive motor vehicle while licence suspended, operate vehicle during number-plate confiscation period, and tamper with number-plate confiscation notice. Police later dropped one of the seven charges, which was issued during the second speeding incident – P2 exceed speed more than 45km/h – and Ms Muscat pleaded guilty to the six remaining charges during court hearings in Gundagai and Albury last month. ABOVE: Jade Muscat via social media Court documents obtained by 7News show Ms Muscat told police in Albury that she continued to drive because "she needed to get to Melbourne to see family" and "had no other means of getting there as police in Gundagai told her there were no trains from there". "Police formed the opinion that the accused had no regard for other people on the road and showed no remorse relating to her driving behaviour," according to the documents, which stated the sequence of events occurred during fine, sunny weather on sealed, dry roads while traffic was "medium to heavy due to school holidays and families travelling". "Gundagai is a township with a 24-hour service centre, and a bus service that is available for travel if booked." Content originally sourced from: A teenager who was caught speeding three times in one day at separate points along the Hume Highway has pleaded guilty to six driving offences. 7News reports 19-year-old Jade Muscat was pulled over by police on three separate occasions on Saturday, April 12 in her black Jaguar F-Pace as she attempted to travel from Sydney to Melbourne, breaking multiple road rules in the process. She's now due to appear at Gundagai Local Court for sentencing on August 15, and police have reportedly requested her car be forfeited to the crown upon her conviction under section 245 of the Road Transport Act. Under the Act, a vehicle is eligible for confiscation by the government if its driver commits a serious offence for a second time within five years. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. ABOVE: Image courtesy of 7News The drama began when the teen, from Paddington in Sydney's eastern suburbs, was issued with a speeding ticket after she was clocked travelling at more than 20km/h over the 110km/h limit on the Hume Highway at Gunning, in the NSW Southern Tablelands, at around 10:40am on April 12. After continuing south on the Hume, Ms Muscat was again pulled over by highway patrol officers just over an hour later, after she was detected driving at 215km/h about 11:45am at Tumblong just south of Gundagai. Police issued her with a court attendance notice for two offences – driving at a dangerous speed and exceeding speeds more than 45km/h as a green P-plater. They suspended her licence, confiscated her number plates and issued her with a confiscation notice, which was affixed to her windscreen. ABOVE: Jaguar F-Pace But less than two hours later at about 1:30pm, police received a complaint about a black SUV without number plates weaving in and out of traffic and driving at excess speed while travelling south on the Hume near Little Billabong. Police apprehended Ms Muscat after taking up a stationary position on the Hume Highway at Table Top, before taking her to Albury police station. She was charged with a further five charges – drive recklessly/furiously or speed/manner dangerous, Class A motor vehicle exceed speed more than 45 km/h, drive motor vehicle while licence suspended, operate vehicle during number-plate confiscation period, and tamper with number-plate confiscation notice. Police later dropped one of the seven charges, which was issued during the second speeding incident – P2 exceed speed more than 45km/h – and Ms Muscat pleaded guilty to the six remaining charges during court hearings in Gundagai and Albury last month. ABOVE: Jade Muscat via social media Court documents obtained by 7News show Ms Muscat told police in Albury that she continued to drive because "she needed to get to Melbourne to see family" and "had no other means of getting there as police in Gundagai told her there were no trains from there". "Police formed the opinion that the accused had no regard for other people on the road and showed no remorse relating to her driving behaviour," according to the documents, which stated the sequence of events occurred during fine, sunny weather on sealed, dry roads while traffic was "medium to heavy due to school holidays and families travelling". "Gundagai is a township with a 24-hour service centre, and a bus service that is available for travel if booked." Content originally sourced from: A teenager who was caught speeding three times in one day at separate points along the Hume Highway has pleaded guilty to six driving offences. 7News reports 19-year-old Jade Muscat was pulled over by police on three separate occasions on Saturday, April 12 in her black Jaguar F-Pace as she attempted to travel from Sydney to Melbourne, breaking multiple road rules in the process. She's now due to appear at Gundagai Local Court for sentencing on August 15, and police have reportedly requested her car be forfeited to the crown upon her conviction under section 245 of the Road Transport Act. Under the Act, a vehicle is eligible for confiscation by the government if its driver commits a serious offence for a second time within five years. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. ABOVE: Image courtesy of 7News The drama began when the teen, from Paddington in Sydney's eastern suburbs, was issued with a speeding ticket after she was clocked travelling at more than 20km/h over the 110km/h limit on the Hume Highway at Gunning, in the NSW Southern Tablelands, at around 10:40am on April 12. After continuing south on the Hume, Ms Muscat was again pulled over by highway patrol officers just over an hour later, after she was detected driving at 215km/h about 11:45am at Tumblong just south of Gundagai. Police issued her with a court attendance notice for two offences – driving at a dangerous speed and exceeding speeds more than 45km/h as a green P-plater. They suspended her licence, confiscated her number plates and issued her with a confiscation notice, which was affixed to her windscreen. ABOVE: Jaguar F-Pace But less than two hours later at about 1:30pm, police received a complaint about a black SUV without number plates weaving in and out of traffic and driving at excess speed while travelling south on the Hume near Little Billabong. Police apprehended Ms Muscat after taking up a stationary position on the Hume Highway at Table Top, before taking her to Albury police station. She was charged with a further five charges – drive recklessly/furiously or speed/manner dangerous, Class A motor vehicle exceed speed more than 45 km/h, drive motor vehicle while licence suspended, operate vehicle during number-plate confiscation period, and tamper with number-plate confiscation notice. Police later dropped one of the seven charges, which was issued during the second speeding incident – P2 exceed speed more than 45km/h – and Ms Muscat pleaded guilty to the six remaining charges during court hearings in Gundagai and Albury last month. ABOVE: Jade Muscat via social media Court documents obtained by 7News show Ms Muscat told police in Albury that she continued to drive because "she needed to get to Melbourne to see family" and "had no other means of getting there as police in Gundagai told her there were no trains from there". "Police formed the opinion that the accused had no regard for other people on the road and showed no remorse relating to her driving behaviour," according to the documents, which stated the sequence of events occurred during fine, sunny weather on sealed, dry roads while traffic was "medium to heavy due to school holidays and families travelling". "Gundagai is a township with a 24-hour service centre, and a bus service that is available for travel if booked." Content originally sourced from:


7NEWS
a day ago
- 7NEWS
Teen could lose Jaguar after being caught at 215km/h, then recklessly driving without number plates
A teenager who was caught speeding three times in one day at separate points along the Hume Highway has pleaded guilty to six driving offences. 7News reports 19-year-old Jade Muscat was pulled over by police on three separate occasions on Saturday, April 12 in her black Jaguar F-Pace as she attempted to travel from Sydney to Melbourne, breaking multiple road rules in the process. She's now due to appear at Gundagai Local Court for sentencing on August 15, and police have reportedly requested her car be forfeited to the crown upon her conviction under section 245 of the Road Transport Act. Under the Act, a vehicle is eligible for confiscation by the government if its driver commits a serious offence for a second time within five years. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. ABOVE: Image courtesy of 7News The drama began when the teen, from Paddington in Sydney's eastern suburbs, was issued with a speeding ticket after she was clocked travelling at more than 20km/h over the 110km/h limit on the Hume Highway at Gunning, in the NSW Southern Tablelands, at around 10:40am on April 12. After continuing south on the Hume, Ms Muscat was again pulled over by highway patrol officers just over an hour later, after she was detected driving at 215km/h about 11:45am at Tumblong just south of Gundagai. Police issued her with a court attendance notice for two offences – driving at a dangerous speed and exceeding speeds more than 45km/h as a green P-plater. They suspended her licence, confiscated her number plates and issued her with a confiscation notice, which was affixed to her windscreen. ABOVE: Jaguar F-Pace But less than two hours later at about 1:30pm, police received a complaint about a black SUV without number plates weaving in and out of traffic and driving at excess speed while travelling south on the Hume near Little Billabong. Police apprehended Ms Muscat after taking up a stationary position on the Hume Highway at Table Top, before taking her to Albury police station. She was charged with a further five charges – drive recklessly/furiously or speed/manner dangerous, Class A motor vehicle exceed speed more than 45 km/h, drive motor vehicle while licence suspended, operate vehicle during number-plate confiscation period, and tamper with number-plate confiscation notice. Police later dropped one of the seven charges, which was issued during the second speeding incident – P2 exceed speed more than 45km/h – and Ms Muscat pleaded guilty to the six remaining charges during court hearings in Gundagai and Albury last month. ABOVE: Jade Muscat via social media Court documents obtained by 7News show Ms Muscat told police in Albury that she continued to drive because 'she needed to get to Melbourne to see family' and 'had no other means of getting there as police in Gundagai told her there were no trains from there'. 'Police formed the opinion that the accused had no regard for other people on the road and showed no remorse relating to her driving behaviour,' according to the documents, which stated the sequence of events occurred during fine, sunny weather on sealed, dry roads while traffic was 'medium to heavy due to school holidays and families travelling'. 'Gundagai is a township with a 24-hour service centre, and a bus service that is available for travel if booked.'


Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Teen could lose Jaguar after being caught at 215km/h, then recklessly driving without number plates
A teenager who was caught speeding three times in one day at separate points along the Hume Highway has pleaded guilty to six driving offences. 7News reports 19-year-old Jade Muscat was pulled over by police on three separate occasions on Saturday, April 12 in her black Jaguar F-Pace as she attempted to travel from Sydney to Melbourne, breaking multiple road rules in the process. She's now due to appear at Gundagai Local Court for sentencing on August 15, and police have reportedly requested her car be forfeited to the crown upon her conviction under section 245 of the Road Transport Act. Under the Act, a vehicle is eligible for confiscation by the government if its driver commits a serious offence for a second time within five years. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. Supplied Credit: CarExpert ABOVE: Image courtesy of 7News The drama began when the teen, from Paddington in Sydney's eastern suburbs, was issued with a speeding ticket after she was clocked travelling at more than 20km/h over the 110km/h limit on the Hume Highway at Gunning, in the NSW Southern Tablelands, at around 10:40am on April 12. After continuing south on the Hume, Ms Muscat was again pulled over by highway patrol officers just over an hour later, after she was detected driving at 215km/h about 11:45am at Tumblong just south of Gundagai. Police issued her with a court attendance notice for two offences – driving at a dangerous speed and exceeding speeds more than 45km/h as a green P-plater. They suspended her licence, confiscated her number plates and issued her with a confiscation notice, which was affixed to her windscreen. Supplied Credit: CarExpert ABOVE: Jaguar F-Pace But less than two hours later at about 1:30pm, police received a complaint about a black SUV without number plates weaving in and out of traffic and driving at excess speed while travelling south on the Hume near Little Billabong. Police apprehended Ms Muscat after taking up a stationary position on the Hume Highway at Table Top, before taking her to Albury police station. She was charged with a further five charges – drive recklessly/furiously or speed/manner dangerous, Class A motor vehicle exceed speed more than 45 km/h, drive motor vehicle while licence suspended, operate vehicle during number-plate confiscation period, and tamper with number-plate confiscation notice. Police later dropped one of the seven charges, which was issued during the second speeding incident – P2 exceed speed more than 45km/h – and Ms Muscat pleaded guilty to the six remaining charges during court hearings in Gundagai and Albury last month. Supplied Credit: CarExpert ABOVE: Jade Muscat via social media Court documents obtained by 7News show Ms Muscat told police in Albury that she continued to drive because 'she needed to get to Melbourne to see family' and 'had no other means of getting there as police in Gundagai told her there were no trains from there'. 'Police formed the opinion that the accused had no regard for other people on the road and showed no remorse relating to her driving behaviour,' according to the documents, which stated the sequence of events occurred during fine, sunny weather on sealed, dry roads while traffic was 'medium to heavy due to school holidays and families travelling'. 'Gundagai is a township with a 24-hour service centre, and a bus service that is available for travel if booked.'


New Straits Times
2 days ago
- New Straits Times
Authorities clamp down on foreigners operating 'prebet sapu' in KL
KUALA LUMPUR: The Road Transport Department (RTD) and Immigration Department have joined forces to monitor and take action against foreigners, including undocumented migrants, suspected of operating illegal private taxi services in Kuala Lumpur. These activities have raised public concern over safety and the livelihoods of licensed taxi and e-hailing drivers. Kuala Lumpur RTD director Hamidi Adam said a special operation was launched earlier this month following complaints from the public. The operation was prompted by an incident on July 13 near an embassy along Jalan Ampang, where enforcement teams were deployed to monitor the area closely. "Several offences were detected during the operation, including illegal parking on yellow lines, cracked windscreens, tinted windows, and the absence of official e-hailing stickers. "However, no foreign-driven vehicles were found offering "prebet sapu" services during the surveillance," Hamidi was quoted as saying by Harian Metro. He added that the RTD has carried out several other targeted operations since early last year, including Ops Transporter and Ops PEWA. Ops Transporter focused on busy public areas such as LRT Taman Melati, Wangsa Walk Mall, Setapak Central and KL East Mall. It resulted in 23 vehicles seized and 12 notices issued. "A total of 10 local individuals and 13 foreigners from countries including Afghanistan, Somalia, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Yemen and Egypt were issued summonses and compounds under the Road Transport Act and the Land Public Transport Act," Hamidi said. Offences detected included operating prebet sapu services, driving without valid licences, misuse of vehicle licences, and illegal window tinting. Ops PEWA, conducted throughout last year, led to 243 summonses and the seizure of 101 cars and motorcycles involving foreign drivers. Hamidi urged the public to report illegal taxi activities through RTD's official complaint channels. Meanwhile, Kuala Lumpur Immigration director Wan Mohammed Saupee Wan Yusoff said his department remains vigilant in monitoring foreigners involved in such operations. "The Immigration Department does not remain idle and takes public concerns seriously," he said. He added that even though no formal complaints have directly linked undocumented migrants to "prebet sapu" activities, enforcement action would be taken if immigration laws are breached. "Anyone suspected of abusing their immigration pass will be arrested and investigated immediately," Wan Mohammed Saupee said. He said that all foreigners must possess valid travel documents and immigration passes. Misuse of such documents, including working without permission, will result in stern action under the law. The joint effort by the RTD and Immigration Department comes amid growing concerns over illegal taxi operations run by foreigners, particularly near embassies and major roads in Kuala Lumpur.


New Straits Times
22-07-2025
- Automotive
- New Straits Times
Miros: 12 motorcyclists die on roads daily
KUALA LUMPUR: A motorcyclist dies every two hours in Malaysia, a rate that road safety experts say should no longer be treated as normal. Malaysian Institute of Road Safety Research (Miros) Human Factors and Road User Behavioural Centre director Ir Ts Azhar Hamzah said motorcyclists continue to dominate road fatality statistics, accounting for nearly 70 per cent of all deaths. "Just imagine 12 people die every day. Every two hours, one person dies riding a motorcycle," said Azhar during the Allianz Malaysia Media Forum held at Aloft Kuala Lumpur Sentral on Tuesday. He said many of these deaths were preventable if the country took proactive steps in education, training and behaviour change. "The best safety for motorcyclists is prevention. You cannot rely only on post-incident measures. The best is prevention," he said. Azhar said motorcycles were originally intended for short-distance travel but have evolved into a primary means of transport across long distances in Malaysia, despite their limitations. "A motorcycle is unstable. It only becomes stable if it's moving at least 8km per hour. The engine and wheels help balance the forces to keep it upright. The faster it moves, the more stable it becomes, but that doesn't mean it should be ridden fast," he said. He described the physical vulnerability of riders as a major concern. "Other than the handlebars, it's just your body. When you ride, your legs are the most exposed. Your head is the highest point. That's why it needs protection," he said. Azhar said Malaysia's road culture has normalised risky behaviours such as weaving through traffic and speeding, adding that such actions remain a legal grey area under current road regulations. "In Malaysia, this has become the culture. Riders move through gaps in roads to maintain stability. Whether it's right or wrong is unclear, as even the Road Transport Act is a bit vague," he said. He said changing rider behaviour and enforcing the use of personal protective equipment (PPE) were urgent priorities. "If we can't eliminate motorcycles, then we must control them through better roads, more stable motorcycle designs, and stronger rules," he said. He warned that injury ratios in Malaysia were far higher than in developed countries, where the ratio might be one death to 30 serious injuries. "In our country, that number could be one to 50. From that 50, many suffer permanent disabilities and require lifelong assistance. Not just them, but their families too," he said. Azhar also singled out gig economy riders as being particularly vulnerable. "P-hailing riders spend five times longer on the road compared with regular motorcycle users. So, the risk is higher," he said. He added that slowing down was one of the fastest ways to reduce motorcycle fatalities. "If we reduce speed, we get an immediate reward. If you ride slower, you lower your risk right away," he said. Azhar urged government agencies, private companies and the public to act without delay. "If you ride a motorcycle, act now. Don't wait," he said.