Skip to main content

Taking the high seat

Police officers in the UK stopped a motorist recently when they spotted her driving with a rather unusual alternative to a safety belt. The woman was peering from between the legs of a high chair, which she had somehow managed to squeeze into the front of her car. The officers felt that this was unsafe as it obscured her view and stopped her accordingly. Why she did not opt to put the high chair in the boot (trunk) of her car is not known.
December 18, 2017 Read time: 1 min

Police officers in the UK stopped a motorist recently when they spotted her driving with a rather unusual alternative to a safety belt. The woman was peering from between the legs of a high chair, which she had somehow managed to squeeze into the front of her car. The officers felt that this was unsafe as it obscured her view and stopped her accordingly. Why she did not opt to put the high chair in the boot (trunk) of her car is not known.

Related Content

  • UK police carry out spot checks on suspect vehicles
    December 18, 2014
    UK officers from Dyfed-Powys Police in Wales recently carried out vehicle checks on a Saturday evening shift. The focus for these checks were on enforcement of drink drive legislation and the officers stopped a number of other vehicles during the evening.

    By midnight the officers had conducted more than 85 breath tests. There was only one positive test, provided by a male driver who blew a reading of 85 (the alcohol/breath limit in England and Wales is 35).
  • Angry wife tells husband it’s over with a message on a freeway billboard
    October 9, 2015
    Billboards are used to advertise everything, from toothpaste to airplanes and also to get a message across, such as don’t litter the highway. But one wife in Sheffield, United Kingdom, decided to make it personal, and tell her cheating husband that it was all over.
  • Professional Pavement Products’ LaneAlert 2x grabs ATSSA award
    June 27, 2018
    LaneAlert 2x, the latest safety system from Professional Pavement Products, has won the Most Innovative Product award from the American Traffic Safety Services Association (ATSSA). Professional Pavement’s LaneAlert 2x is a bi-directional marking that displays two distinct messages, Depending on which way the driver approaches, he or she will see only one message. Professional Pavement, headquartered in Jacksonville in the US state of Florida, makes safety products including road markings and also distribu
  • Taxing times
    May 16, 2014
    A taxi driver in Kyrgyzstan attempted to drive off after being stopped by police for a traffic infringement. The plucky policeman however had different ideas and held on tightly to the bonnet of the car, even as the driver veered from side to side of the road in an attempt to throw the officer off the vehicle.