Cunning but Caught

This is the second driving story for today's article, with this one concerning the Low Emission Zone (ZEB) in the centre of Granada.

Two weeks ago, the Policia Local stopped a woman who attempted to obscure her numberplate using duct tape. She said that she had done this because she wasn’t sure whether she was allowed to drive in the ZEB.

Yet this sneaky trick was outmatched more recently when the driver used mud to partially obscure both number plates, front and back.

Well, having lumps of mud over precisely the same letters and numbers on both plates is a little far fetched to be passed off as a coincidence. So the driver, a young university student, received a fine of 6,000 euros and lost six points from his driving licence.

Furthermore, the ‘mud’ wasn’t mud, but clay, which you don’t find on most road surfaces, so if he is studying Mathematics, he had better brush up on the Probability Theory.

(News: City & Metropolitan Area, Granada, Andalucia)

Keywords: Car Numberplates, Obscuring Letters, Fined, Limited Access, Low Emissions Zone

news, andalucia, granada, city & metropolitan area, car numberplates, obscuring letters, fined, limited access, low emissions zone

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *