Man has licence revoked without driving conviction
A Nova Scotia man who has had his driver's licence revoked — even though he doesn't have a medical condition or a driving conviction — says the people in charge of the Registry of Motor Vehicles have too much unchecked power.
Lee Wilbur, of East Uniacke, said a woman talking on her cell phone cut him off while he was driving last summer. Wilbur admitted he tailgated her and shined his high beams into her rear-view mirror.
He said she left her car and cursed at him.
"'What do you f-ing think you're doing?' And I laughed at her and said, 'I guess you shouldn't have gone through the intersection in the right hand turn lane talking on your cell phone,'" Wilbur told CBC News on Wednesday.
"I backed up my truck, I went around her — very slowly — and I went home."
Four months later, Wilbur was issued a ticket for failing to remain at the scene of an accident. His driver's licence was revoked.
Wilbur was never convicted. His case was dismissed, but he still can't get his licence back. He said he's been given various reasons by people at the registry about why it can't be returned to him, but is particularly upset about one explanation.
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(CBC) A Nova Scotia man who has had his driver's licence revoked — even though he doesn't have a medical condition or a driving conviction — says the people in charge of the Registry of Motor Vehicles have too much unchecked power.