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Second driver caught doing insane 149mph alongside the M5

Paiwand Siamand was disqualified from driving for 12 months.

Man sentenced for travelling at 149mph on M5 in moist circumstances

A driver caught on dashcam hurtling down the M5 at a hair-raising 149mph — greater than double the 70mph restrict — in moist, unlit circumstances has been banned from the roads. Paiwand Siamand, 25, of Doncaster Highway, Bristol, pleaded responsible to harmful driving, driving with out insurance coverage and driving in any other case than in accordance together with his licence at Bristol Magistrates’ Court docket on Friday, March 13.

He was disqualified from driving for 12 months, handed a 36-week jail sentence suspended for twenty-four months, ordered to finish 150 hours of unpaid work and pay £272 in courtroom prices. The incident unfolded at round 11.20pm on Saturday, November 8, 2025, on the M5 southbound between junctions 24 and 25.

That is the second an M5 driver was caught dashing at 149mph (Picture: Avon and Somerset Police) The day’s largest headlines in UK and World information and extra Subscribe Invalid e mail

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PC Nick Steele, in an unmarked police automobile finishing up pace checks, watched a gold Volkswagen Golf R blast previous him in lane three. He gave chase and recorded the automobile reaching 149mph on the damp, poorly lit stretch of motorway.

Fearing a critical collision, the officer activated emergency lights and adopted the Golf off the motorway at junction 25 in Taunton, the place the motive force, Siamand, recognized himself and was arrested.

PC Steele mentioned: “Driving at 149mph on a moist, unlit motorway with reasonable site visitors presents an excessive hazard to all highway customers.

“At this pace, with typical response occasions, the car would journey greater than 100 metres earlier than the motive force may even reply to a hazard.

Moist circumstances dramatically improve braking distances, whereas poor lighting reduces visibility. It was lucky no one was critically harmed.”

Siamand was later remanded on conditional bail forward of his courtroom look.

The case is a part of Avon and Somerset Police’s crackdown on the Deadly 5 — the main causes of demise and critical harm on the roads: extra pace, failure to put on a seatbelt, driver distraction, drink and drug driving, and careless driving.

Officers mentioned these committing any of those offences are way more more likely to be concerned in a deadly collision, and the pressure is utilizing enforcement and training to vary behaviour and save lives.

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