News release
Dangerous motorcycle caught on video on Highway #1 leads to over $1,700 in tickets
July 16, 2026
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Surrey, British Columbia
From: BC Highway Patrol
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A reminder to all motorists: High-definition video is everywhere, and BC Highway Patrol is following up with enforcement against dangerous drivers.
A Surrey man has learned an expensive lesson after a motorcycle was captured on video by a witness driving on Highway #1 near 176th Street, Surrey, on July 3, 2026. The witness was passed by a motorcycle that was weaving in traffic and travelling at excessive speed. The motorcycle, the motorcycle rider, and the licence plate were clearly visible on the witnesses’ high-definition dash camera. Four days after the incident, BC Highway Patrol tracked down the motorcycle’s owner.
Transcript
Video description: A forward-facing dash-camera captures heavy traffic on Highway #1 near 176th Street, Surrey. The vehicle with the dash-camera is in one of the middle of four lanes of traffic when a motorcycle passes dangerously close to the front of the vehicle, then weaves through multiple lanes, without signalling, until it disappears into the distance.
[unintelligible radio in background, followed by the sound of a high-revving motorcycle engine]
“When the video quality is high-quality, and we have a witness ready to testify in court, we can and do follow up with over-the-top driving violations,” says Corporal Michael McLaughlin with BC Highway Patrol. “It’s not hard to imagine how the speed and unsafe driving behaviour in this video could have easily led to the motorcyclist’s death.”
The 23-year-old Surrey man who was the owner of the motorcycle was issued $1,769 in tickets:
- Drive without consideration, section 144(1)(b) of the BC Motor Vehicle Act (MVA) for a fine of $196,
- Excessive speed (more than 60 km/h over the limit), section 148(1) of the BC MVA ($483),
- Unsafe lane change, section 151(a) of the BC MVA ($109 x 5),
- Lane change without signal, section 151(c) of the BC MVA ($109 x 4),
- Fail in duty to supply information, section 84(2) of the BC MVA ($109).
“We understand how much bad driving not only makes our highways unacceptably unsafe, it also annoys safe drivers,” says Corporal McLaughlin. “We’re enforcing these laws to improve people’s behaviour by delivering real consequences.”
Contacts
Media Relations Officer
BC Highway Patrol
bchp_media@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
778-290-5844