Weekly round up of hearings at Wycombe Magistrates’ Court

October 11:

BRIAN WHITEHEAD, 47, of Freer Crescent, High Wycombe, admitted speeding on the A40 London Road, High Wycombe, on November 27, 2021. Found to be travelling at 58mph on the 30mph zone. Fined £120. Also ordered to pay £34 victim surcharge and £90 court costs. Disqualified from driving for 35 days.

ELFAT GECI, 27, of Langdale Lodge, Loudwater, admitted using a motor vehicle in a public place, namely along the A355 Farnham Road, without the correct insurance on November 28, 2021. Fined £576. Also ordered to pay £58 victim surcharge and £90 court costs. Disqualified from driving for six months due to repeat offending.

TAMSYN JOEL, 27, The Chase, in Tylers Green, convicted of failing to give information relation to the identity of a drive when asked by police on Banbury between June 10, 2021, and July 8, 2021. Fined £120. Also ordered to pay £34 victim surcharge and £90 court costs. Disqualified from driving for 28 days.

October 12:

DANIEL BAUGHAN, 34, of Cox Hill Way, Aylesbury, admitted failing to comply with requirements of a community order by not attending supervision appointments and did not attend unpaid work appointments on April 24, 2022. Community order varied to include 10 hours unpaid work requirements. Also ordered to pay £60 court costs.

JO-ANN LLOYD, 41, of Bramble Crescent, in Holmer Green, admitted failing to comply with requirements of a community order by not attending appointments on September 1, and September 8. Fined £20 and ordered to pay £50 court costs.

ADRIAN ASOKAN, 34, of Cedar Close, Burnham, convicted of speeding on Buckingham Avenue in Slough on May 15, 2022. found to be travelling at 70mph on a 30mph road. Fined £666. Also ordered to pay £66 victim surcharge and £90 court costs. Disqualified from driving for 28 days.

It is established in the UK that court cases should be heard in public. This principle of open justice is acclaimed on a number of grounds: as a safeguard against judicial error and as a deterrent to perjury, to assist the deterrent function of trials and to permit the revelation of matters of public interest Costs include victim surcharge and courts charges.