The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

178 mph on Ga. 400? Cops don’t even try to stop bike

It’s latest superspeed­er event since pandemic scattered metro traffic.

- By Henri Hollis henri.hollis@ajc.com

The Alpharetta Department of Public Safety is urging motorists to slow down after a police officer clocked a motorcycli­st going 178 mph on Ga. 400 on Sunday.

According to a post on the agency’s Facebook page, the officer did not attempt to stop the driver of the sportbike. Alpharetta police passed along a descriptio­n of the motorcycli­st to agencies farther south on Ga. 400.

“Hopefully, the driver of the sportbike matures a little before a tragedy happens,” the agency said.

With fewer people on the road due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, motorists have been putting the pedal to the metal.

The Georgia State Patrol said in late April that tickets for speeding at 100 mph or more were up nearly twothirds statewide from last year. Troopers wrote 140 citations during one twoweek period, and that didn’t include tickets issued by some local police.

That same month, a motorcycli­st traveling 172 mph on Ga. 400 was too fast to catch, Sandy Springs police said.

In Georgia, speeding is a misdemeano­r punishable by fines of up to $1,000. But, depending on how fast you’re going and where you get caught, fines vary. The state tacks on $200 for superspeed­ers, those traveling 75 mph or more on a two-lane road or 85 mph and above on any road or highway.

Most jurisdicti­ons want anyone traveling 100 mph or faster to go straight to jail. But the GSP said some jurisdicti­ons have backed off arrests for fear of spreading the coronaviru­s in local jails.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Alpharetta Department of Public Safety shared a cautionary post to social media about a motorcycli­st going 178 mph on Ga. 400.
CONTRIBUTE­D The Alpharetta Department of Public Safety shared a cautionary post to social media about a motorcycli­st going 178 mph on Ga. 400.

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