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Cycling Mikey scores points victory over Chris Eubank after filming boxing champ going through red light

Former world champion joins film director Guy Ritchie on list of law-breaking drivers brought to justice by London helmet-camera user

The undisputed champion of London helmet camera users, Cycling Mikey, has claimed another notable scalp after catching former WBO middleweight and super-middleweight champion boxer Chris Eubank driving through a red traffic light in London’s Hyde Park.

As happened in November 2019, when he caught film director Guy Ritchie using a handheld mobile phone in Regent’s Park, Mikey – real name Mike van Erp – initially had no idea who the driver was when he spotted Eubank with his phone in his hand. He was sat at the wheel of his Rolls-Royce convertible near the junction of West Carriage Drive and South Carriage Drive, which run alongside the city’s Cycleway 3.

> Guy Ritchie handed driving ban after cyclist caught him using his phone at the wheel

The Evening Standard reports Mikey told Bromley Magistrates’ Court that on 2 September last year, he was “filtering up past the queue of traffic and noticed this Rolls-Royce driver holding his phone.”

In the video, he said to Eubank, “Nice car, mate,” before adding, “I hope you are not using the phone.”

He continued: “I was the person who got Guy Ritchie. I didn’t know who he was. Are you famous? I wouldn’t know who you were either.”

Eubank told him: “Go away, go away, I’m an officer,” and when Mikey sought clarification of whether he meant he was a police officer, the former boxer said, “Yeah, off you go, off you go.”

“The traffic lights then changed, and we moved along,” Mikey said. “He drove through an early red light,”

Mikey told the court: “I’m not particularly good with faces, especially those of famous people I’ve never seen in real life,” but said, “I thought that he [Eubank] was so well dressed that he must most likely be someone famous.

“I googled the numberplate to discover who he was, and it turns out that he was given status of a certified law enforcement marshal in Louisiana in the USA due to his fame.”

Eubank, who was born in London but lived as a youngster in Jamaica then New York City’s South Bronx, was granted that position by the city of Opelousas when he visited it in 2018.

At the time, he said in a tweet accompanied by a video of him attending a road traffic collision: “Sergeant Eubank proudly on duty in Louisiana. All warriors protect and serve, whether one wears a badge or not.”

In court, Eubank said he was trying to get away from the cyclist, whom he claimed is a “stalker.”

He said: “I unintentionally ran the red light trying to get away from this man who admits he is a stalker.

“He admits this when talking online and in a newspaper article, how he proudly had the famous director, Guy Ritchie, banned for six months.”

After pleading guilty to failing to comply with the indication given by a traffic sign, Eubank was given three penalty points and told to pay £280 in fines, court costs and fees.

Eubank has been in court several times over the years for motoring-related offences and in 1992, he was fined £250 for driving without due care and attention after he lost control of his Range Rover and crashed into a building site, killing 33-year-old Kevin Lawlor.

In 2013, he was found guilty of taking a vehicle without consent after he drove a beer delivery lorry parked outside his home in Hove 150 yards down the road, only coming to a halt when he hit a road sign.

Many of the videos from Cycling Mikey which have resulted in drivers being prosecuted were filmed at a spot on the Outer Circle of London’s Regent’s Park which has been nicknamed Gandalf Corner. This is a nod to the scene in the Lord of the Rings film The Fellowship of the Ring in which the wizard, played by Sir Ian McKellen, tells a balrog, “You shall not pass!”

Mikey, who has said that his efforts to bring law-breaking drivers to justice is in part motivated by his experience as a teenager when his father was killed by a drunk driver, has said that in 2019 alone he caught 358 drivers – and two cyclists – breaking the law, with fines totalling tens of thousands of pounds after his submission of footage to the police.

In the 'about' section of his YouTube channel, he says: “I seem to upload an average of roughly 1 in 5,000 driver interactions to YouTube. That surprised me – far fewer than I expected, and it shows just how nice most people are to other road users. I tend to thank tens or hundreds of people on every commute for nice driving. It makes for boring footage though, so only the exceptionally good driving gets uploaded.

“I'm a driver too, I love cars, but I don't like dangerous driving and people taking risks with vulnerable road users,” he adds.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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39 comments

Avatar
Sriracha replied to David9694 | 3 years ago
2 likes

Honestly, I'd rather they did not have the use of a handsfree kit. That way they can be prosecuted for driving while distracted by a phone call. With a kit they'll likely get off. But the distraction remains the same either way.

Avatar
lukei1 | 3 years ago
20 likes

Eubanks comes across as a bit of a knob, yo'd think a guy who'd killed someone in a car might learn some humility. His defence is a joke and what is this "I'm an officer" nonsense

Avatar
Hirsute replied to lukei1 | 3 years ago
3 likes

He is "a certified law enforcement marshal in Louisiana in the USA"

Avatar
brooksby replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
11 likes

hirsute wrote:

He is "a certified law enforcement marshal in Louisiana in the USA"

Apparently so.  Ironic, really - I wonder how a Black man driving an expensive car would be dealt with for a traffic offence in that there Louisiana...

Avatar
Bmblbzzz replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

hirsute wrote:

He is "a certified law enforcement marshal in Louisiana in the USA"

Apparently so.  Ironic, really - I wonder how a Black man driving an expensive car would be dealt with for a traffic offence in that there Louisiana...

Probably with a lot more respect than a black man driving an old jallopy... 

Avatar
brooksby replied to Bmblbzzz | 3 years ago
7 likes

Bmblbzzz wrote:

brooksby wrote:

hirsute wrote:

He is "a certified law enforcement marshal in Louisiana in the USA"

Apparently so.  Ironic, really - I wonder how a Black man driving an expensive car would be dealt with for a traffic offence in that there Louisiana...

Probably with a lot more respect than a black man driving an old jallopy... 

Do you think?

There's a lot of anecdata about Black drivers being pulled over on suspicion of their having stolen said expensive car.

And 'driving while Black' is alleged to be a pretty dangerous activity in America.

Avatar
Secret_squirrel replied to lukei1 | 3 years ago
9 likes

Eubank has always been a prize knob.  He used to regularly drive around Brighton in an American Truck Rig holding up the traffic.  He also used to go for a jog down the main road with his entourage following behind in a black Range Rover, again during rush hour. 

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
4 likes
Secret_squirrel wrote:

....holding up the traffic.....

Sure he's not one of us....?

Avatar
markieteeee replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
4 likes

Oddly, his huge outsized truck probably stood out a mile at the time, whereas nowadays it would just look like a slightly larger vehicle.

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