Skip to main content

Slow down! Too many UK speeders being caught.

The UK’s police forces have been working with local communities to keep a watchful camera eye on speeders tearing up quiet village streets and suburban roads. The Community Speed Watch programme has successfully enabled volunteers to raise awareness of the dangers of speeding and poor driving. Many use hand-held cameras and speed-guns connected to warning signs to let drivers know they are breaking the law. Sometimes car details are noted and handed to the police which successfully prosecute the offending d
February 19, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The local community is watching you
The UK’s police forces have been working with local communities to keep a watchful camera eye on speeders tearing up quiet village streets and suburban roads.

The Community Speed Watch programme has successfully enabled volunteers to raise awareness of the dangers of speeding and poor driving.

Many use hand-held cameras and speed-guns connected to warning signs to let drivers know they are breaking the law. Sometimes car details are noted and handed to the police which successfully prosecute the offending drivers.

But one Speed Watch volunteer has been so good at his job that police have asked him to not catch as many drivers, according to media reports. The 69-year-old volunteer, David McCandless, says he has recorded 40,000 speeding motorists with a hand-held speed gun over the past four years.

McCandless’s team of 50 volunteers in the county of Cambridgeshire were catching 1,600 motorists every month.

Police have dutifully been issuing warning letters to the drivers but now enough is enough, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal according to media reports The telegraph: Vigilante Speedwatch volunteer sacked for catching too many drivers false http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/11416070/Vigilante-Speedwatch-volunteer-sacked-for-catching-too-many-drivers.html false false%>.

McCandless claims police told him to report no more than 500 motorists a month, mainly because they could process only 2,000 cases across the entire UK.

McCandless says his team is “a victim of our own success” and they will have to go easy from now on.

"Because we were turning in these high numbers [of offenders] and they were so accurate they [police] became suspicious that something was going on. I basically got sacked for doing a good job and being too accurate.”

Cambridgeshire Police said McCandless’s position became "unsustainable" because he was "unable to share our vision of education". At the heart of Speed Watch is the goal to educate people about the dangers of speeding, police said.

Related Content

  • Video: Wheelchair user hitches car ride up a hill
    November 12, 2015
    A wheelchair user was recently caught hitching a ride up a hill in the Brazilian city of Salvador. It’s slow progress, as the video shows, and care was taken by the driver to deliver his “passenger”. It is not known if the wheelchair owner had to pay for his external ride. His feat was not the first time he has picked up a lift, according to media reports that quote some of his neighbours. Media have also said the city is one of Brazil’s worst for getting around if you are in a wheelchair. The head
  • Let’s go party
    October 3, 2018
    Some friends in the US decided to turn a toy Barbie Mustang car into something rather more entertaining. The men fitted a Honda motorcycle engine and new driveline components, including go-kart tyres. This allowed a top speed of 115km/h, which it could reach in just six seconds, making it rather lively and spirited and also difficult to control. The vehicle is definitely not likely to be made road legal any time soon and nor is a model with a similar performance ever likely to be available from the original
  • Seoul street sitters disrupt traffic all because of a dare
    March 18, 2015
    Traffic on an eight-lane road through one of Seoul’s wealthiest districts was disrupted for half an hour by two men sitting in chairs in the middle of the road. It wasn’t a political protest but reportedly a dare agreed by the men, in their 20s, to see who could last the longest sitting in the road, the fashionable Gangnam Avenue. The two men were sitting in the road for half an hour before police arrived to arrest them, Korean media reported. A witness apparently said they didn’t appear afraid of getting h
  • Five things road construction crews should not do
    June 19, 2015
    Sometimes you need a sense of humour to complete a task. Sometimes that sense of humour can overstep the mark and not everyone will see the joke, as these five road construction site pictures show. Here are five things that construction crews should not do.