Road danger as motorists hunt for Pokemon

Posted on Friday 1 January 2010

Motorists hunting for Pokemon in their cars are putting themselves and other road users at risk, warns a road safety education organisation.

The TTC Group, a national training company, went on the trail of the mobile phone game craze now sweeping the world after being alerted to incidents involving people in cars on 'Pokemon Go' hunts.

But they didn't have to go far. Within 30 seconds of driving out of the car park of their HQ in Telford, a mobile phone in the safe hands of a member of the TTC team in the passenger seat, alerted them that the Charmander character was in a hedge around a corner.

"Our driver kept her eyes on the road but to our amazement another car being driven slowly with two men in the front were also playing the game, and told us they were hunting for the Pokemon characters," said TTC Group director Alan Prosser, a national road safety advisor.

"We drove less than 100 metres before finding a motorist on the Pokemon hunt. My concern is there must be many, many more doing the same across the UK. It's a dangerous game to play in the car as drivers will be driving deliberately slowly, stopping without warning, be distracted and not paying full attention to the road. You must give driving your full attention at all times."

Over the past few days, a Pokemon Go player crashed his car straight into the back of a parked police car in Baltimore while looking at his phone for one of the animated screen characters portrayed amid actual surroundings. The driver told police: "That's what I get for playing this dumb game."

In Sydney two 17 year olds were fined $325 when caught by police driving dangerously at low speed near a pedestrian crossing playing Pokemon Go.

And in northern France a teenage driver crashed her car into the back of another vehicle while playing the game.

There are reported to be 30 million people worldwide playing the mobile game to "catch ‘em all."

The TTC Group has been educating road users to reduce casualties for more than 20 years and works with the corporate sector to manage workplace road safety.

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