Dangerous driver from Leeds caught after high-speed police chase around blind bends in Middleton
A dangerous driver from Leeds raced around blind bends and zoomed down the wrong side of the road on a high-speed police chase through Middleton. Watch more of our videos on Shots! and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now[1]Nicholas Kaye was spotted driving in a loop in a Citroen Berlingo van on May 15, prompting officers[2] to flash their lights at him to stop. But the 35-year-old, of Haigh View, Rothwell[3], failed to pull over and instead accelerated.
What followed was a 15-minute pursuit, which saw him driving at speeds of up to 80mph in 30mph zones, swerving around blind bends on the wrong side of the road and mounting kerbs.


Photo: Jonathan Gawthorpe.
Kaye also cut a red light and drove the wrong way down a one-way street. His van eventually crashed into railings when police deployed two stingers. And despite a brief attempt to escape on foot, Kaye was arrested.
He had a bag of cannabis in his jacket pocket, but later failed to attend an appointment for a drug assessment. Kaye pleaded guilty to dangerous driving, possession of cannabis, driving while disqualified and a charge relating to his failure to attend the appointment. Emily Hassell, mitigating, said that Kaye had a mental health crisis and was hospitalised for this last year.
Judge Tahir Khan KC said: "It's difficult to understand how somebody in your position, never having gotten into bother before, becomes embroiled in criminality.
The only rational explanation I think for this spell of offending in a relatively short space of time is that you were mentally unwell."
Kaye was sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment, suspended for two years.