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Inverness drink-driver told police 'I know I have done wrong'


By Ali Morrison

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A breathalyser was not working so a urine sample was taken and it showed John Collins was almost four times the legal limit.
A breathalyser was not working so a urine sample was taken and it showed John Collins was almost four times the legal limit.

An Army serviceman gave in to temptation when he joined mates who were drinking.

Inverness Sheriff Court heard that although 33-year-old John Collins, of Fort George Barracks, did not have any intention of taking alcohol, he thought he was OK to drive.

But Collins was reported to police who traced him to Longman Road in Inverness on November 1, last year and arrested him after smelling alcohol from his breath.

He told officers "I know I have done wrong," fiscal depute David Morton said.

A breathalyser was not working so a urine sample was taken and it showed Collins was almost four times the legal limit.

His reading was 253 mcgs of alcohol in 67mcgs of urine. He admitted drink-driving and was fined £640.

Collins was also banned from driving for a year but certified as suitable for a drink-driver rehabilitation course, which, if successfully completed, will earn him a three-month discount on the ban.

Sheriff Gary Aitken told him: "It is almost impossible to drink alcohol and stay under the limit."


View our fact sheet on court reporting here




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