Sunderland Echo

Man with bottle of Stella drove wrong way up road

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when they spoke to him as he sat in his private registrati­on silver BMW. He then failed to provide a breath test for analysis.

South Tyneside Magistrate­s’ Court heard he did so because he suffered from anxiety and was having a panic attack. He also believed he was allowed to speak to a solicitor.

Griffiths has now been disqualifi­ed from driving for 44 months and two weeks after pleading guilty to a charge of failing to provide. The dad also admitted charges of failing to co-operate with a preliminar­y test and failing to comply with a traffic sign, for which no separate penalties were imposed.

Prosecutor Rachael Glover said police saw the defendant driving in the wrong direction, then the open bottle of Stella. He then refused a breath test, and then a Camic procedure at the station.

Susan Grey, defending

Griffiths, who also has a drink-drive conviction from March 2018, said: “For the no entry, he says he’s gone with a friend to drop off a coat. He wasn’t familiar with the road layout.

“He was spoken to by police and from the off he was asking for his medication. Because it wasn’t in its original box they wouldn’t let him have it.

“He did say that he wanted to speak to a solicitor, but this is a misconcept­ion. That was why he failed to provide at the roadside.

“He was then taken to a police station and still asks for his medication. The error he makes is that there comes a point where the police bring in a nurse who is on duty, but he won’t meet her, that’s his downfall.”

Griffiths, who is serving a jail term for breaching a restrainin­g order, was given a four-week sentence to run concurrent­ly.

He must pay a £121 victim surcharge and £100 court costs.

 ??  ?? Music teacher Louise Bell of Sweet Symphony.
Music teacher Louise Bell of Sweet Symphony.

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