![]() How To Spot Fake Ontario Drivers License driver#It's pretty hard to imagine this ever working, and yet, this driver still looked at the plate, probably said to themselves "hmmm, this works," then proceeded to hit the streets with their masterpiece. This knob had to draw it in pencil first just to make sure it looks authentic before he does it in marker Someone even noted how the dunce Da Vinci took the care to trace out the design in pencil before committing to marker. You did a great job, and this should go on the fridge.ĭid he’s 5 year old draw that? If so it’s fabulous, if not give the man a ruler □ In the unlikely event that's the case here, then kudos, kid. If this was, in fact, drawn by a child, then maybe we're all being a bit too harsh. It took all the training to spot this one It was on the front of his car, painstakingly crafted to match the stolen plate on the rear.Ĭould you have spotted this uncanny forgery?Īpparently, you need a keen, well-trained set of eyes to spot such "convincing" copies. The better news? This artistic masterpiece was ours to discover. ![]() Luckily, the driver was not impaired at the time, despite his scribbled handiwork suggesting otherwise. ![]() It turns out that the male driver of the vehicle was breaking a curfew, in violation of a bail condition. enforcement last night near a popular #Vaughan club, they found a driver breaking his curfew, a condition of his release. They say artists create their best work when faced with tough circumstances. The driver was stopped by York Regional Police at a RIDE program check near a popular nightclub in Vaughan, officers noticing the obviously faked front plate, drawn to match a stolen rear plate in an attempt at creativity that looks more like a grade-school art project than a serious bid to confound law enforcement. The latest inductee to Ontario's unofficial criminal hall of shame found their way into the annals of police lore with a daring attempt to thwart officers using a hand-drawn licence plate.īut there was one problem with his dastardly scheme. Indeed, licence plate fraud has been making more headlines in recent months as well, though this could simply be due to police Twitter accounts sharing more interesting busts.For every bonafide criminal mastermind in the world, there are countless others who think they fit the bill, often resulting in blunderously botched crimes that make for some hilarious headlines. "I had to use my plates to drive to DMV once! Got pulled over, the officer as a major B!. She ruined my life because of two minutes. "My neighbors were using one set of plates on three cars, never got caught," yet another Ontario resident complained. "A lot of people are pouring paint remover on their plates to erase numbers and letters so they can't be identified," noted another. ![]() "I know of a vehicle that has had plate made out of vinyl for at least 10 years and never been caught even though many cops have seen it but didn't realize because it's so good," wrote one Twitter user in the diaper plates thread. Some are actually pretty well done, and look genuine until you get super close. I’m seeing this more and more often on our roads at least a couple times a month. The OPP has not revealed which if any charges the driver of the diaper plates will face, though there are several offences that would apply in this situation that don't have set fines, such as "alter plate," "deface plate" and "use defaced plate."Īnd apparently this isn't as rare an occurence as you might assume it is. Under the Ontario Highway Traffic Act, a driver can be fined $85 each for operating a motor vehicle with no plates, without two plates, with improperly displayed plates, without a validation sticker, with an improperly displayed validation sticker, with an obstructed plate and even a dirty plate. ![]()
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