First off, how does a 20 year old afford any of those cars ?
And whatever side job they have going on, i want in. That is all ..
And whatever side job they have going on, i want in. That is all ..
Is it really that difficult? .... a nerd writing an app for iPhone LOL
First off, how does a 20 year old afford any of those cars ?
And whatever side job they have going on, i want in. That is all ..
N...?Thats what I am thinking also.... plus the N in the windows.... I remember how everyone HATES the people with the Ns.... I never got more tailgated than when I had my N.... ok till I moved to Toronto but still.
N...?
most of those are probably bought with fake ids and credit scams. Hate to say it but there is a lot of name fraud and identity theft with the type of drivers of those vehicles. They often apply for credit under multiple versions of their names and create multiple alias ID's. I work for the bank and I see it all the time.
Tse Hung
H. Tse
T. Se Hung
Se. T Hung
etc.
That may be true generally, but this looks like a case of rich parents to me.
They were all younger than 21, nearly half had novice driving licences, and the 13 highpowered cars they raced down Highway 99 Wednesday afternoon at speeds upwards of 200 km/h included Maseratis, Lamborghinis and Mercedes.
Now they face charges of driving without due consideration for others, which comes with a $196 ticket and six driver penalty points, which will trigger a $300 penalty point premium.
RCMP Supt. Norm Gaumont, officer in charge of traffic services, said Thursday there is a lot of disappointment that the drivers face only $196 fines, but there is not enough evidence to charge them with the more serious offence of dangerous driving.
"We don't have police officers who observed the offence, and we don't have lasers and radars that have the speeds," Gaumont said. "We have to really depend on third-party individuals who had called in."
Gaumont said if he gets the evidence he needs, he will pursue more serious charges and try to seize the vehicles permanently
One of the drivers did not have a B.C. licence, and was using a foreign licence, Gaumont said. Just one driver was the registered owner of the vehicle he was driving, and one of the cars had fewer than 200 kilometres on the odometer, police said.
Last fall, a $235,000 Ferrari impounded after a street race that reached speeds of 200 km/h was forfeited under the Civil Forfeiture Act. The act gives the province authority to seize vehicles and sell them if a civil court rules unlawful activity - such as impaired driving or street racing - could have caused severe injury or death.
BC's equivalent of HTA172 allows temporary impound of vehicles for a period of time but it does not authorize permanent forfeiture.HTA172-equivalent in BC can make you forfeit your car/bike:
BC's equivalent of HTA172 allows temporary impound of vehicles for a period of time but it does not authorize permanent forfeiture.
Forfeiture in BC comes through civil court proceedings under the Civil Forfeiture Act of BC. This is a civil court action separate and apart from the bad act that prompts the application for forfeiture of a vehicle or any other piece of property for a wide variety of reasons.
It can also happen to you in Ontario for a wide variety of reasons, including street racing, dangerous driving, or repeat impaired driving. The law here is called the Civil Remedies Act, and is very similar to BC's Civil Forfeiture Act.
Hk's morals and values are generally more in line with western/Caucasian culture (british influence). There are always exceptions though.The kid with the wifebeater gave it away...just a stereotype thoughlucky sperm club lottery winners right there.how can you tell they were mainlanders and not from hong kong?