YouTube justice for road rage victims

Bike blog : Helmet camera
Helmet cam footage has helped convict dangerous drivers. Photograph: David Hartley/Rex Features

We all have those moments where something happens and we wish we had a camera. This is as true on the road as anywhere else. Many cyclists now use helmet cams to record their journeys, good and bad, and in the past month several have even helped convict dangerous drivers.

The Birmingham cyclist Rob Styles was riding home in August last year, when a driver pulled up alongside him as he tried to join a right-hand filter lane.

Styles said: “I saw the driver coming along from behind, already shouting. He then pulled up on the inside of me, mounting the pavement and got out of the car, shouting. There was no build-up, no pre-cursor, it just happened.”

Styles added: “The driver’s explanation to the police is that I was ‘in the way, blocking the road’. As the police pointed out to him, that’s not how people should drive.”

Local police approached Styles after seeing the clip on YouTube. All Styles did was “give a statement and hand the police the footage”. The driver pleaded guilty in January to a public order offence. (the YouTube footage was taken down, possibly because of the swearing, but the footage is still online.)
In November 2010, the barrister Martin Porter was cycling to work in south London when a driver unleashed a barrage of abuse, which culminated in the driver threatening to kill him.