Login
My Garage
New hero

Frank Lampard escapes mobile phone driving charge ‘scot-free’

By Stephen Turvil | January 24, 2022

Share

Why not leave a comment?

See all | Add a comment

Frank Lampard faces no further legal action having been filmed allegedly using a mobile phone while driving.

Ex-footballer Frank Lampard got off ‘scot-free’ for allegedly using a phone while driving as the case was dropped due to lack of evidence, the safety campaigner who filmed him claimed. In April 2021, Mike Van Erp – who is known as CyclingMikey on YouTube – was passing a row of stationary traffic in South Kensington, west London, when he saw Frank Lampard in a black Mercedes-Benz G Wagon.

‘I was cycling southbound on Gloucester Road and caught up to queuing traffic by the Gloucester Arms’, Mr Van Erp claimed. ‘I noticed the driver of a Mercedes-Benz 4x4 holding a coffee in his right hand, and a phone in his left. I could see him talking on the phone whilst resting his right inside wrist on the steering wheel.’

Mr Lampard was later charged with ‘using a handheld mobile phone/device while driving a motor vehicle on a road.’ He denied the charge and was due to appear in court during January 2022. However, despite the video the case was dropped before the trial due to a lack of evidence. Mr Lampard’s lawyer, Nick Freeman, said:

The Crown Prosecution Service ‘would have had to prove he was driving, he was using a mobile phone, and he was using it for an interactive purpose. All that would have needed to have been beyond reasonable doubt’. Mr Lampard ‘pleaded not guilty and they dropped the case – so he has been found not guilty’, Mr Freeman emphasised.

Safety campaigner displeased

Mike Van Erp, the safety campaigner who filmed Mr Lampard in his Mercedes-Benz, was due to appear in court as a witness. He is unhappy the case was dropped. ‘I think he has gotten off scot-free’, he stated. He also claimed that many such cases are not heard as the courts struggle to cope. ‘A couple of coppers have said the justice system is broken and they are binning cases left and right to reduce the massive backlog’, the campaigner suggested. 

Safety experts urge caution

The London Road Safety Council added that every motorist should follow the rules of the road to minimise the risk of collision. 

'All road users should take the greatest care for their own safety and the safety of others’, the spokesperson said. ‘Road users who allow themselves to become distracted can be responsible for causing grief and misery to others. Everyone, whoever they are, should set themselves the highest possible standards on the roads.'

Related Articles

Could the Justy make a comeback? Subaru plots small electric rival to Renault 5
Subaru might bring back the Justy as an all-electric hatch to rival the Renault 5. Here's what we know so far.
Jul 25, 2025
EVs to lose exemption as London Congestion Charge rises in 2026
EV drivers in London will soon have to pay the Congestion Charge, with changes set to make TfL £75 million a year.
Jul 25, 2025
UK vehicle manufacturing down almost 12% in 2025 so far
UK car output plunges to a 72-year low, with production levels not seen since 1953.
Jul 25, 2025
Fuel Me Once: The True Cost of the Taxi of Mum & Dad
Motorway found that UK parents drive over 3,000 miles a year ferrying family - enough to reach Greece and back - spending an average of...
Jul 24, 2025