Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Driver Owes $158k In Fines: 'You Never Know What You're Going To Find'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2017 02:55 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — 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-year-old 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.
     
    The Newfoundland and Labrador government on Thursday introduced legislation that would increase penalties for a number of driving offences under the Highway Traffic Act.
     
    For example, the fine for driving without a licence would increase to a maximum of $1,600 after the second offence, up from $500.
     
    The province said the aim of the legislation is to make roads safer and to deter unsafe practices.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mountie Enforcing Distracted Driving Rules Struck In Hit-And-Run In B.C.

    Mountie Enforcing Distracted Driving Rules Struck In Hit-And-Run In B.C.
    RICHMOND, B.C. — RCMP say a Mountie enforcing distracted driving laws in Richmond, B.C., was hit by a vehicle that fled the scene.

    Mountie Enforcing Distracted Driving Rules Struck In Hit-And-Run In B.C.

    Greens Push To End 'Speculative' Sales Of Farmland To Foreign Buyers In B.C.

    Greens Push To End 'Speculative' Sales Of Farmland To Foreign Buyers In B.C.
    VICTORIA — The leader of British Columbia's Green party wants to see the government ban foreigners from buying farmland in a bid to cool the province's real estate market.

    Greens Push To End 'Speculative' Sales Of Farmland To Foreign Buyers In B.C.

    System Failed 12-Year-Old Canadian Girl Impregnated By Stepfather: Report

    In a report released Wednesday, Newfoundland and Labrador's child and youth advocate says the child protection system responded inadequately to her case, and missed opportunities to intervene.

    System Failed 12-Year-Old Canadian Girl Impregnated By Stepfather: Report

    NDP Leadership Hopeful Niki Ashton Expecting Twins Shortly After Race Ends

    NDP Leadership Hopeful Niki Ashton Expecting Twins Shortly After Race Ends
    OTTAWA — NDP leadership hopeful Niki Ashton says she is expecting twins in early November, shortly after her party selects a successor to Tom Mulcair.

    NDP Leadership Hopeful Niki Ashton Expecting Twins Shortly After Race Ends

    Halifax Cab Driver Saher Hamdan Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Female Passenger

    Halifax Cab Driver Saher Hamdan Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Female Passenger
    Saher Hamdan sexually assaulted a young woman as she waited to pay her fare on July 15, 2016.

    Halifax Cab Driver Saher Hamdan Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Female Passenger

    Dad 'Hysterically Screaming' In Fire That Killed Five-Month-Old Baby

    Dad 'Hysterically Screaming' In Fire That Killed Five-Month-Old Baby
    EDMONTON — Police say a house fire that killed a five-month old baby and left his 29-year-old mother clinging to life in an Edmonton hospital was deliberately set.

    Dad 'Hysterically Screaming' In Fire That Killed Five-Month-Old Baby