Tony Gibb has been sentenced for a road rage offence after blocking another car and throwing the driver's keys across the road. The 39-year-old, who won Commonwealth bronze in Manchester in 2002 and silver at the World Track Championships the same year, was found guilty of dangerous driving. He was given a three-month suspended sentence and ordered to pay costs of £3,500.
The BBC reports that the incident took place near Tring on June 21 last year. Gibb, who was on his way to a cycling event in his Volvo XC90, pulled out of Cow Lane onto the A4251 in front of Kyle Gilroy's Astra SRI. This forced Gilroy to do an emergency stop and Judge Andrew Bright QC said that at this point the matter could have been dealt with ‘sensibly’.
Instead, after swearing and gesticulating from both men, Gibb got out of his car, snatched Gilroy’s keys and threw them across the road.
Bright said that blocking Gilroy’s car with his own constituted dangerous driving and gave him a three month jail term suspended for two years. Gibb was also ordered to perform 100 hours of unpaid work and was disqualified from driving for a year after which he must take an extended test.
Earlier this year, Gibb announced plans to open Full Gas Bikes, a series of concept bike stores with the first, in Fox Valley, Sheffield, set to house a test track, coffee shop and technical centre. It is due to open on June 16 with plans for five more outlets in locations across the UK.
Bdaily reports Gibb as saying:
“The Tour de France coming to Sheffield in 2014 really focussed the whole area on cycling and it was a great experience to see the passion for the sport first hand during the Grand Depart.
“Welcome to Yorkshire have done a fantastic job of building on that love of the sport in the region with the Tour of Yorkshire. This definitely feels like the right place to open our first Full Gas store.
“We are surrounding by some of the best cycling routes in the region and of course a lot of challenging hills.”
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6 comments
would have been better running him over and claiming he didnt see him....and he wasnt wearing a helmet
Meanwhile, admittedly in Scotland, stopping your car and not causing an obstruction, but following it up with an assault, doesn't get you much at all.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-edinburgh-east-fife-36091485
"The full footage shows the cyclist banging on the taxi" so quite obviously a dangerous close pass then.
"I don't have the authority to sack him" but you do have the autility to chose whether or not to back him, and you chose to back him.
No mate, it's not, in a lot of ways we live in a crazy fucked up world .
I'm confused (Not for the first time and certainly not for the last).
A car blocking the progress of another is dangerous? The fact that he made an error of judgement exiting the junction may be an agravating factor, I'll grant you that. So, no injuries and no damage; just two cockwombles shouting and swearing at each other. Have I missed anything?
You know where I'm taking this don't you?
Smash in to a VRN (Vulnerable Road User) with a motor vehicle and "It's not your fault", "The sun was in your eyes","How could you be expected to expect that there would be a pedestrian on a pedestrian crossing", "The Lollipop man was camoflaged by his Hi-Vis [This really did get a driver off!!!!!]", "You could not be blamed for failing to see the cyclist on a dead straight road in good visibility", "The death of Mr/Mrs/Miss must weigh heavily on your mind, even more so than the family of your victim", ... I could go on and on for ever! All these have been used to exonerate or diminish the crime committed.
Is it me?
Interesting that car on car near miss attracts a harsher sentence than killing a cyclist.