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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
National
Peter Hennessy

Serial Nottingham offender who has 84 previous convictions back behind bars

A serial offender who has 84 previous convictions for 250 offences has found himself behind bars once again. James Hutchinson, 52, of no fixed abode, pleaded guilty to dangerous driving and driving whilst disqualified at Nottingham Crown Court on Thursday, August 11.

On March 1, the owner of a Vauxhall van reported it missing, only for it to be spotted later that day at around 5pm by the owner's son, the court was told. It was seen on Rodwell Close but displaying false plates and, after it was followed, eventually made its way into Clifton.

Hutchinson was travelling at speeds of 50mph as he left Clifton, at which point he was being followed by police. He eventually reached a driver who was completing a manoeuvre in the road, meaning Hutchinson mounted the pavement at high speed to carry on driving, the court heard.

Judge calls teenager 'almost a lost cause' after 90mph chase through streets - read more here.

When the van was eventually stopped by police, they discovered Hutchinson in the driver's seat and a background check uncovered that he was disqualified from driving. Tom Heath, prosecuting, told Nottingham Crown Court that Hutchinson had 84 previous convictions for 250 offences, including driving matters such as dangerous driving.

The court heard in mitigation that Hutchinson's offending started at 11 years old, with a great deal of it occurring before he was 21 - he had problems with drug misuse but was engaging with programmes in custody.

Hutchinson was sentenced to a total of 64 weeks in prison and was disqualified from driving for 60 weeks. He must complete an extended driving retest before he is allowed to drive again - Hutchinson was also ordered to pay a victim surcharge.

Judge Rupert Mayo QC told Hutchinson: "You drove with false plates and through the streets of Nottingham at speeds of between 40 and 50mph on 30mph roads. No pedestrians were in peril, but it certainly passes the custodial threshold."

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