The New Zealand Herald

Revealed: Carter drink-drive fine at the lower end

All Blacks great now cutting a ‘sorry figure’ after secret French court hearing document details are finally released to the public

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All Blacks great Dan Carter was given a light $1700 fine on a French drink driving charge, according to documents his lawyer tried to keep out of the public eye.

French journalist Catherine Field told NewstalkZB’s Mike Hosking she had to make two applicatio­ns to the court before the informatio­n was released.

Carter was pulled over by police for speeding in the centre of Paris in February and found to be almost twice the legal drink drive limit. He was given an initial five-month driving ban, before the state prosecutor handed the case to the court.

Field said: “This is first time we’ve got our hands on this document. We applied for them in November. The clerk of the court said we couldn’t have them even under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act because Mr Carter’s lawyers asked for the hearing to be private. “No public were allowed into the court room. I appealed that decision and today we received details of it. “It seems Dan Carter got a 1000 fine [$1682], which, to be honest, is at the lower end of what the judge could have given. You generally expect a 4000 to 4500 fine. “It’s interestin­g that none of this has come out into the public domain. I had to apply twice even under the official Freedom of Informatio­n Act to get this one document.” Field said the Japanbound Carter “cut a sorry figure” at Racing 92 where he last played on October 21. “He’s not well, even if you talk to the man who owns the club . . . Dan Carter is 35-years-old, has played rugby most of his life, his body is telling him it is time to take it easy,” she said.

“He comes out on to the pitch to congratula­te players. People shout and scream, the girls love him, but one gets the feeling that the team has moved on.”

In October, Carter told Radio Sport’s Martin Devlin he felt “sick” about what happened.

“I felt like I let a lot of people down and still feel pretty sick about it,” he said.

“It was a really challengin­g time for me and my family, I felt like I let a lot of people down but people make mistakes in their life. The most important thing is that you learn from it.

“It’s not about the punishment that the judge gives you or the fine or anything like that, it’s actually the potential consequenc­es hit home for you. It actually made me feel sick and it makes me feel sick now. It’s something I’ll have to live with for the rest of my life.”

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