Skip to main content

European Police enforcement actions target offenders

Police enforcement actions in Europe against trucks and buses have helped boost road safety and arrest criminals. One week long operation resulted in 4,400 trucks being removed from the road network due to dangerous defects. The action followed checks of more than 137,000 trucks across 26 countries and was co-ordinated by TISPOL, the European Traffic Police Network. The operation saw police carrying out a wide range of safety inspections that focused on speeding, alcohol, drugs, seatbelt use, tachograph inf
April 8, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Police enforcement actions in Europe against trucks and buses have helped boost road safety and arrest criminals. One week long operation resulted in 4,400 trucks being removed from the road network due to dangerous defects. The action followed checks of more than 137,000 trucks across 26 countries and was co-ordinated by 4753 TISPOL, the European Traffic Police Network. The operation saw police carrying out a wide range of safety inspections that focused on speeding, alcohol, drugs, seatbelt use, tachograph infringements, excess weight, dangerous loading and document offences. In all 51,187 offences were detected including 379 drivers committing alcohol and drug offences, 9,269 exceeding the speed limit, 8,102 instances of drivers exceeding their maximum permitted time at the wheel, 2,391 overweight trucks and 1,146 insecure loads. Of the 4,400 trucks prohibited from continuing their journeys, most were because of technical defects on the vehicles. Stopping drivers provides officers with the opportunity to make other appropriate safety and security checks and police also detected and dealt with offences connected with irregular immigration and human trafficking, possession of drugs, firearms, stolen goods and other crimes.

In a separate action checking buses travelling through 18 countries, more than 36,000 vehicles were controlled, resulting in the detection of 6,505 traffic offences and a further 77 crimes. The offences included 825 cases of exceeding the speed limit, 14 drink-drive detections, 1,113 seatbelt offences and 759 contraventions of tachograph regulations. Included in the total of 77 crimes were 21 illegal immigration and human trafficking offences, 11 drug detections and 45 other crimes.

Another combined police action was operation Trivium II, involving officers from Lithuania, Poland, Romania and the UK. This action included members of the UK’s HMRC, the National Crime Agency (NCA) and the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA). During the week, 2,689 vehicles were stopped, 367 vehicles were seized and 197 people were arrested. In addition, police received 1,049 intelligence submissions and 1,624 enforcement activities were recorded overall.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • EU road safety plan to cut casualties
    May 23, 2018
    The European Commission has announced a major package of road safety measures. These include new targets, in a bid to cut road deaths and serious injuries in half by 2030. New car safety standards will make life-saving technologies such as Automated Emergency Braking and overridable Intelligent Speed Assistance a standard feature on all new vehicles. At present these features are only available as an option on some models. The Pan-European policing body TISPOL has welcomed this package of measures, which
  • IAM’s FOI reveals England and Wales’ worst speeding offenders
    May 28, 2014
    A motorist travelling at 149mph (239.8kph) on the M25 at Swanley, Kent, south-east England, holds the record for the highest speed clocked by a speed camera in England and Wales between April 2013 and May 2014. The astonishing figure was revealed following Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to 39 police authorities by the IAM (Institute of Advanced Motorists). Other shocking figures from the 85% of police authorities that responded to the FOI request revealed that the highest speed recorded on a 30mph
  • Safety for Sri Lanka
    April 19, 2012
    Sri Lanka is struggling to deal with a road safety problem that is crippling and killing large numbers of its citizens. In the past three decades over 40,000 people have been killed and 68,440 seriously injured in 1,120,848 road mishaps in Sri Lanka according to official reports. Unreported accidents mean that the actual figures may be far higher however. Young people face particular safety problems in the country and in 2011 225 schoolchildren were killed in road accidents while 4,100 others critically inj
  • UK average speed camera installation proving successful
    January 27, 2015
    Data from the A9 route in Scotland shows that the installation of average speed camera technology is helping cut crashes. This is Europe’s longest single enforcement scheme, with the technology having been installed along a 220km stretch of the A9 in Scotland. Figures from the route show that the average speed enforcement scheme, which uses SPECS technology supplied by Vysionics, is helping cut casualties while improving journey reliability and driver behaviour.