Bentley driver jailed for 130mph police pursuit while high on cocaine
A drunk driver who tried to escape police in his Bentley at 130mph while he was high on cocaine has been jailed.
Richard Bowser led police on a high-speed pursuit in his 550-horsepower sports car and crashed into a stationary patrol car.
A photographer caught an image of the Bentley Continental GT, with all four wheels off the ground, a split second before impact.
The car, which had a personalised registration plate, carried on after the crash, strewing debris in the road, before Bowser dumped it and fled.
He was jailed on July 12 at Durham Crown Court for 18 months, Durham Police said.
The defendant, 44, of Percy Street, Bishop Auckland, got into the car on May 23 after consuming what police said was a “vast quantity of cocaine”.
He was wanted on suspicion of assault and officers spotted him heading towards Tow Law on the A68, where he crossed into the opposite side of the road to overtake traffic and made off from police at speed.
Between Tow Law and Willington, Bowser reached speeds of up to 130mph and was seen to carry out multiple high-risk manoeuvres, darting past traffic and pedestrians at “terrifying” speeds, the force said.
One of the pursuing officers later described witnessing a young girl watch in horror as the Bentley careered past her.
Showing no signs of stopping, Bowser was finally slowed down on his way out of Willington when he attempted to take a sharp bend at 90mph, mounted the kerb and collided with a stationary police car.
Bowser’s actions were appalling, and his recklessness could so easily have had catastrophic consequences
A police volunteer photographer, who was a passenger in the vehicle, captured the moment that all four of the Bentley’s wheels left the road.
He finally came to a halt half-a-mile away in an industrial estate and was tasered and in handcuffs within seconds.
He admitted dangerous driving, drink-driving and drug-driving, and was jailed for 18 months, disqualified from driving for 45 months, and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £156, the force said.
Outside court, Inspector Ian Leach, of the Roads Policing Unit, said: “Bowser’s actions were appalling, and his recklessness could so easily have had catastrophic consequences.
“He demonstrated a total disregard for the safety of others as soon as he got behind the wheel of his car under the influence of alcohol and cocaine.”
The best videos delivered daily
Watch the stories that matter, right from your inbox