The driver of this Land Rover put false plates on his car to hide the fact that he had no insurance. 
A police spokesman said: "Unfortunately for him the plates were already registered on a Toyota Aygo which this clearly isn't."
The vehicle was seized and the driver reported.The driver of this Land Rover put false plates on his car to hide the fact that he had no insurance. 
A police spokesman said: "Unfortunately for him the plates were already registered on a Toyota Aygo which this clearly isn't."
The vehicle was seized and the driver reported.
The driver of this Land Rover put false plates on his car to hide the fact that he had no insurance. A police spokesman said: "Unfortunately for him the plates were already registered on a Toyota Aygo which this clearly isn't." The vehicle was seized and the driver reported.

A Land Rover with identity issues, an Audi with crazy window tints and drivers on drugs: This week on Lancashire's roads

“Put the vehicle through the crusher”.

That was response from several social media users this week, after Lancashire Police’s road team revealed they had caught a Land Rover masquerading as a Toyota Aygo and the driver had no insurance.

And it wasn’t the only blatant road crime this week – in Preston, an off duty police officer saw a Honda driver smoking cannabis – and he carried on when uniformed officers pulled him over.

Several other drivers have failed roadside drug tests and have been arrested – though in one case, it was a passenger who was found with drugs. The driver of that car was also issued with a Traffic Offence Report (TOR) after the tints on his front windows only let through 28 and 29 per cent light when the legal limit is 70 per cent.

For more on what’s been happening on our roads, click the pages below.

Several other drivers have failed roadside drug tests and have been arrested – though in one case, it was a passenger who was found with drugs. The driver of that car was also issued with a Traffic Offence Report (TOR) after the tints on his front windows only let through 28 and 29 per cent light when the legal limit is 70 per cent.