Three drunk taxi drivers nabbed at Monday morning checkpoint in Cape Town

08 April 2019 - 13:47 By DAVE CHAMBERS
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A Cape Town taxi driver was slapped in handcuffs on April 8 2019 after giving a breath sample with five times more alcohol than the law allows.
A Cape Town taxi driver was slapped in handcuffs on April 8 2019 after giving a breath sample with five times more alcohol than the law allows.
Image: City of Cape Town

One checkpoint in Cape Town nabbed three drunk taxi drivers within 35 minutes on Monday morning.

Two of the drivers had alcohol of around five times the legal limit in their breath samples, and the other was nearly twice the limit.

The trio were carrying 58 passengers between them, said JP Smith, the City of Cape Town mayoral committee member for safety and security.

The drivers were stopped at a checkpoint in Jakes Gerwel Drive, near Viking Way, in Epping.

"At 7.05am, officers arrested a 26-year-old driver from Philippi who was transporting 27 passengers from Manenberg to Century City. His breath-alcohol sample was 0.45mg/l," said Smith.

"The legal limit for drivers with public driving permits is 0.1mg/L, which meant that he was nearly five times over the legal limit. The driver was also served with 17 outstanding warrants.

"Moments later, a 27-year-old driver from Khayelitsha was stopped, transporting 21 passengers on the same route. His breath-alcohol level was 0.52mg/l, more than five times the legal limit.

"At 7.40am, a 24-year-old taxi driver from Nyanga East was stopped. He had 10 passengers in the vehicle on route from Nyanga to Goodwood. The driver’s breath-alcohol sample was found to be nearly twice that of the legal limit."

Smith said the drivers were taken to Pinelands police station and their vehicles were impounded — two for operating without a valid permit and one for operating contrary to the conditions of its permit.

Smith said he was left speechless by the number of drink-driving arrests among taxi drivers. "There is no question that our enforcement agencies are doing the work; the arrest statistics vouch for that," he said .

"It’s the conviction statistics that are lagging, because why else would people continue to act with reckless abandon?"


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