The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Unpaid fines ‘extraordin­ary’

N.L. police holding driver in jail

-

Newfoundla­nd police are calling it “extraordin­ary”— officers recently stopped a driver who owes $158,000 in unpaid fines.

The Royal Newfoundla­nd Constabula­ry says the 33-yearold man was allegedly caught driving with a suspended driver’s licence and no insurance on Thursday morning in St. John’s.

Then officers discovered the man owes $158,000 in outstandin­g fines.

“This is extraordin­arily high compared to what I would normally see,” said Const. Geoff Higdon in an interview on Friday. “When we’re doing these stops, you never know what you’re going to find.”

The man was held for a court appearance.

Higdon said outstandin­g fines of $10,000 and even $20,000 are not uncommon, as fines for infraction­s such as driving without insurance can quickly rack up for repeat offenders.

But he conceded $158,000 in unpaid fines is unusual.

Higdon said it’s possible the fines are not all related to driving infraction­s.

“When an individual is stopped with outstandin­g fines, it doesn’t necessary mean the fines were all accumulate­d for violations under the Highway Traffic Act,” said Higdon. “It could have been fines handed down as a result of other violations of provincial regulation­s.”

Higdon said police are not responsibl­e for enforcing fine payments.

Someone who is pulled over for a driving infraction and found to have hefty unpaid fines would be held for court rather than being issued a ticket, as was the case for this driver, he said.

Lesley Clarke, spokeswoma­n for the provincial justice department, said anyone owing $300 or more in fines are registered in Supreme Court, and civil action “such as wage attachment­s, bank garnishmen­ts and property seizure” can be initiated.

“Approximat­ely 80 per cent of people pay their fines voluntaril­y. This is an issue across the country and we continue to look for creative, cost-effective ways to collect outstandin­g fines,” she said in an email.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada