A SOUTH Yorkshire Police driving instructor responsible for teaching fellow officers to drive safely is to appear in court charged with speeding at 112mph on the motorway.
PC Colin Yates, who worked for the driver training department based at Ecclesfield Police Station before the incident, is charged with driving at 110-112mph in a 70mph zone on the M1 northbound.
He was off duty at the time he was said to have been clocked breaking the speed limit.
PC Yates, who is currently on sick leave, has been given a new role involved in the training of probationary police officers since he was charged.
His previous position will be reviewed at the end of the case, which is due to be heard at Loughborough Magistrates' Court on Monday.
The offence has been reported to the Professional Standards Department which monitors and investigates officers' conduct.
A South Yorkshire Police spokesman said: "An officer is to appear in court in Leicestershire to answer an offence of speeding alleged to have been committed while he was off duty.
"This was correctly reported through internal procedures.
"The situation will be assessed following the completion of court procedures."
News of the case comes just a week after Derbyshire police officer Pc Daniel Swain appeared in court for allegedly driving at 90mph in a 30mph zone.
Pc Swain, aged 30, was alleged to have been caught speeding in Shuttleworth, near Bolsover, when his Vauxhall Astra police patrol car smashed into another vehicle and ploughed into a house as he responded to an emergency call.
When the case was heard at Derby Crown Court it emerged that his colleagues discovered his speed when they looked at his car's data recorder - similar to the black boxes found in aeroplanes. But the case collapsed when the judge said the Crown Prosecution Service had submitted vital evidence at too late a stage for the defence team to contest.
Last month another police officer - Mark Milton, from Telford, Shropshire - was cleared of dangerous driving after a court accepted his explanation that he had been driving at speeds of up to 159mph because he was testing out a police car.
Under information supplied under the Freedom of Information Act it has emerged that Derbyshire Police allowed 59 of its police officers to escape prosecution for speeding.
The force admits that despite issuing 59 officers with court summons after being caught by speed cameras they never had to appear in court after each one of them successfully appealed against the summons to force chiefs.
http://www.sheffieldtoday.net/ViewArtic ... ID=1045639
Apologies if this has already been posted, been 'absent' for a while.