I got a £500 fine after my wife reached for the sun visor – but the upskirt photo ‘proof’ council sent left me furious
A DRIVER is fuming after traffic enforcers sent him an “invasive” photo of his wife and a hefty fine – for allegedly reaching for the sun visor during a journey.
Richard Arnold was driving with his wife Anh Nyugen in December when Anh reached over to adjust the passenger visor.
The couple didn’t think anything of the brief moment until they received two photos from their local council in Gold Coast, Australia – along with a £500 traffic fine.
Two photos included in the citation showed Anh reaching to adjust the visor – but revealed more than just her arm slipping out of the seatbelt.
The photos revealed an up-skirt shot of Anh’s underwear – outraging the couple, who are now demanding an apology.
Richard told 9News: “She’d leaned up to adjust her sun visor and put her arm through the shoulder strap to do that.”


Anh is only five feet tall, and had placed her leg on the vehicle’s dashboard when the inappropriate photo was taken by traffic cameras.
In addition to the photo, Richard was shocked to receive a fine over the incident which lasted less than five seconds.
He told local news: “I don’t think it’s reasonable.
“If you’re driving your car you can’t be checking your passengers all the time to see if their seatbelt is correctly adjusted.”
The couple was driving on the M1 in Coomera, Gold Coast, on December 19 when the photos were snapped.
Richard wants the Queensland government to reach out and apologise: “You don’t expect to be sent pictures of your wife’s underwear, I have to say.
“It’s actually illegal I think to photograph up a skirt. Covert photographic surveillance should not be used in such an insensitive and disrespectful manner.”
The situation has been made worse by the fine, as Richard is a retired aviation worker living on a fixed pension.
Last year, an average of 70 fines were issued per day for seatbelt offences recorded on traffic cameras in Queensland.
Most of the fines were for seatbelt offences committed by passengers, not drivers.
Queensland’s Department of Transport and Main Roads said photographs taken by traffic cameras are encrypted and used only for “enforcement purposes”.
They also said the images aren’t altered in any way before being sent out with the infringement notice.
A woman in Greece was floored last year after receiving a £5million parking fine.
The woman initially read the amount as £5846, but was sent into a panic when she realised the number read as £5846570.


The panicked motorist rushed to the local municipality’s office to challenge the fine, adamant that there must have been a mix-up.
The bemused worker then reassure the woman the hefty fine had been administered in error.
Denial of responsibility! Planetconcerns is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.