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York driver fails to win licence back after cannabis claim
http://www.taxi-driver.co.uk/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=39136
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Author:  StuartW [ Tue Jan 10, 2023 11:44 am ]
Post subject:  York driver fails to win licence back after cannabis claim

I don't believe his story here about contamination. On the other hand, given the way these limits are set, I suspect he wasn't exactly 'stoned' when he was stopped [-(

And the reason he was stopped by police was because he was driving 'much quicker' than the speed limit :roll:

One of them? Suspect police were tipped off he was a user. But I doubt he was 'stoned' as described by the judge, thus a bit hard done by :?


York taxi driver Timothy Duckitt fails in vape pen bid to end ban

https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/232360 ... d-end-ban/

A TAXI driver who claimed he was the unwitting victim of a contaminated vape pen has failed in his bid to get his driving licence back after he was caught drug driving.

Timothy Duckitt, 58, was “stoned” on cannabis as he drove much faster than the speed limit, York Crown Court heard.

He was convicted of drug driving and banned from driving at York Magistrates' Court last year.

He appealed to the higher court to have his ban removed.

He claimed that he had been the unwitting victim of a contaminated vape pen and hadn’t realised he had cannabis in his body when he was driving.

But after listening to him and a defence witness, Judge Simon Hickey and two magistrates rejected his account.

Judge Hickey said Duckitt had known that he was high on drugs when he was pulled over.

“He had ingested cannabis late at night, he was stoned, and the reason he was driving a van far too fast was he was under the influence of drugs,” he said.

They dismissed Duckitt’s appeal against his driving ban.

Duckitt, of Hanover Road East, off Leeman Road, York, did not appeal against his conviction for drug driving. He remains banned from the roads and cannot work as a taxi driver.

A driver is guilty of drug driving if he or she fails a drug test. A court can exceptionally not impose a driving ban if the driver can produce evidence to convince it that he or she could not have known he or she had taken drugs before driving.

Reading a police statement, prosecution barrister Brooke Morrison said Duckitt had been driving “much quicker” than the 30mph limit on Huntington Road at 1.35am on May 26, 2021.

After being arrested, Duckitt provided a sample of blood which when analysed gave a reading of 5.3 micrograms of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive element of cannabis.

The legal limit is 2 micrograms, said the barrister.

Duckitt alleged that before driving, he had smoked a vape pen containing cannabidiol (CBD) oil to see if it would act as a painkiller and did not think it contained cannabis. He had felt fine before driving, he alleged. In cross-examination, Duckitt said he had been a user of cannabis in the past. That, said Ms Morrison, meant that he knew the effects of cannabis on his body.

Defence witness Richard Daniel Hughes, of the same address, alleged he had smoked the pen with a cannabis oil containing THC before filling it with CBD oil and handing it to Duckitt.

Ms Morrison said Duckitt had not told the police officer about the CBD oil when asked about food, drink and drugs he had consumed that night.

She told Duckitt the reason was “that was a story that you made up later”.

She also said the drug test reading was too high to be the result of cannabis traces.

Author:  Sussex [ Tue Jan 10, 2023 7:59 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: York driver fails to win licence back after cannabis cla

Quote:
A driver is guilty of drug driving if he or she fails a drug test. A court can exceptionally not impose a driving ban if the driver can produce evidence to convince it that he or she could not have known he or she had taken drugs before driving.

I cannot emphasise enough how high a bar it is for the defendant to prove the above, akin to athletes caught with banned drugs in their bodies.

You would need independent scientific data to show that what you claim you eat or inhaled will lead to the levels found in the body.

In other words the chance of being found not guilty is slim at best.

It's also worth remembering that cannabis stays in your system for up to 90 days after you have taken it. :shock:

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