TV comic Phil Jupitus, 56, is fined £300 over hit-and-run smash

TV comic Phill Jupitus, 56, is fined £300 over hit-and-run smash after hitting parked car then driving off without leaving name

  • The star smashed his Volvo XC60 SUV into a Ford Ranger pickup truck in Fife 
  • The 56-year-old was fined £300 over the smash a few miles from his home 
  • Jupitus pleaded guilty on summary complaint to a charge of failing to stop 

Jupitus was not present for the short hearing at Dundee Justice of the Peace court today

TV comic Phill Jupitus was today fined over a hit and run car crash.

The star smashed his Volvo XC60 SUV into a Ford Ranger pickup truck on Main Street, Colinsburgh, Fife, last December.

But he didn’t stop – leaving the Ford motor damaged at the side of the road.

Jupitus was not present for the short hearing at Dundee Justice of the Peace court today. 

He was fined £300 over the smash a few miles from his home in the East Neuk of Fife.

Jupitus, 56, pleaded guilty on summary complaint to a charge of failing to stop at the scene of an accident on Main Street, Colinsburgh, Fife, on December 21 2018.

The charge states that his car collided with the Ford and that he failed to stop and give his name and address to the owner of that motor.

His not guilty plea to a second charge of failing to report the accident to police within 24 hours was accepted by the Crown.


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Fiscal depute Lynne Mannion said Jupitus had no previous convictions and no live points on his driving licence.

Justice of the Peace Sarah Walker fined the TV star £300 and placed five points on his driving licence.

She said: ‘Due to the early plea I will impose a fine of £450, reduced to £300 for the plea.’

Television show Never Mind the Buzzcocks with Phill Jupitus, Rhod Gilbert and Noel Fielding

Last year Jupitus told how he was loving life in Fife having moved there in Septembe 2017.

He said: ‘Once the kids had grown up, there was always a sense I wanted to go somewhere radically different from where I’ve been all my life.

‘I think coming from an island you have a weird connection with the sea. It was always in my head that I wanted to live near the sea.

‘I’d been spending more time gigging in Edinburgh and basically spent about a year on trains or driving to look around for a house.

‘Fife was the closest rural place to Edinburgh. And while we were initially looking for somewhere closer to train lines and things, I actually quite like that where I live now it takes a bit of an effort to get there.’

 

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