He was fined for 190 km/h, but he would have reached 220
In this story we can see nothing but Henry van Loon in a tracksuit bluffing ‘thirty-two’ through the window of a decrepit Opel Kadett. If you are not familiar with this classic advertisement, check it out at the bottom of the page. Last weekend, a driver wanted to convince the police that his old Audi A4 was really driving faster than the police claimed. He even showed a video as evidence to the police.
According to the police, the driver was driving 190 km/h on the A16 motorway. After the corrections, a speed of 173 km/h remained. The Audi driver was sidelined in Dordrecht, but felt that he was being short-changed. “The driver stated that he had driven much faster, namely 189 km/h,” the police said. It is quite correct, if you look at the speed before the correction. But according to the driver, the car could go even faster, the police said: ‘He showed a video of 220 km/h.’
Whether the driver was fined for the speed of 220 km/h? There wasn’t enough evidence for that. “We were unable to determine whether he had driven this himself,” said the police. Cherry on the cake for this special story? The driver was found not to have a driver’s license, could not show identification and was driving under the influence of drugs. The police lists: ‘The car has been seized and an official report is being drawn up for speeding, driving without a license, driving under the influence of drugs and driving a vehicle without a valid registration.’
The commercial with Henry van Loon
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