Nevada Trooper Stops Jamaican Man Driving 132 MPH

Paul Anthony Francis was born in Jamaica, where a 2019 survey commissioned by Jamaica Observer found that 30% of respondents admitted to having bribed a cop to avoid a ticket.

Unfortunately for Mr. Francis, Trooper Sandoval of the Nevada Highway Patrol was having none of that “Can I pay it right now?” business. As a wedding gift, Trooper Sandoval handed Mr. Francis a $605 citation. For driving 132 in a 75.

Unlike almost every other high-speed speeding ticket we have seen in Nevada, Francis’ citation — fifth place on the 2019 Nevada Highway Patrol leaderboard — was not amended to a parking ticket. Francis paid the fine in full and moved on.

Notably, the only other person we have met to-date who has done the same is Mohamed Basiouny — who was also visiting from overseas; in his case from the UAE.

The ten fastest speeding tickets issued by Nevada Highway Patrol in 2019 were:

#1 – 155 MPH, to Aaron Snyder and his Charger
#2 – 142 MPH, to Michael Alexander and his Corvette
#3 – 134 MPH, to the off-duty cop from LA
#4 – 133 MPH, to the hairdresser on his way to Salt Lake
#5 – 132 MPH, to Paul Anthony Francis
#6 – 129 MPH, to Mohammed Basiouny, visiting from the UAE
#7 – 129 MPH, someone you haven’t yet met
#8 – 127 MPH, to Justin Cole Jance
#9 – 127 MPH, to someone you haven’t met yet
#10 – 127 MPH, see above

Also, it’s not quite clear where Sandoval got “48 over” from. Last we checked, 132 – 75 = 57. Close enough?

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40 thoughts on “Nevada Trooper Stops Jamaican Man Driving 132 MPH

  1. "Paul Anthony Francis was born in Jamaica, where a 2019 survey commissioned by Jamaica Observer found that 30% of respondents admitted to having bribed a cop to avoid a ticket." What is the point of this? He was clearly not trying to bribe the officer…

  2. Some of the questions the officer asked were irrelevant to this stop. Nevertheless, this guy got off good. He should’ve been arrested and car impounded.

  3. The cop showed him grace, he could've taken him to jail. Your attitude towards an officer means alot. A cop can be reasonable if your attitude is good.

  4. Wow! That's pretty heavy. I only remember hitting 121 after my wedding. She must be a real firecracker. Couldn't get away from her fast enough.

  5. That’s how u should conduct yourself during a stop. Arguing does not help. I think the Cop could have been more mindful of his cooperation and reduce the speed so he paid less. But that is how a cop and a civilian should handle a traffic stop.

  6. $600 !
    Is that all ?
    Here in Australia you'd get at least double that AND lose your licence immediately.
    If you'd done it before you'd also lose your car, it'd be towed on the spot.

  7. My dad was a mechanic and called to testify about a vehicle. A women was clocked doing 124 mph in a 60 mph zone and told the police that her speedometer wasn't woking. The fun judge that we had told her "Lady when the telephone poles look like a picket fence. You know you are going too damn fast."

  8. I can't believe he didn't arrested…… No divers license and registration. I guess the cop didn't want to do the paperwork and wait for the tow.

  9. Whilst not as extreme, after pulling over, the cop asked me, "Doing a bit of low level flying, are we?"

    I responded, "Just keeping up with the flow of traffic."

    Cop's retort, "YOU WERE the flow of traffic."

    After a bit of a tongue lashing from the cop (explaining to me the finer points of road safety), he reduced my recorded speed to just below the limit of having my licence suspended (instead of 142km/hr in a 110 zone, reduced to 139km/hr – 30 or more over the limit is a licence suspension). Was still hit with a huge fine but kept my licence. Be courteous. Be apologetic. Be understanding. Be polite. When you make a mistake, own it and learn from it.

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