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Daytona Pics

Daytona Beach

Myrtle Beach
Motorcyclist Arrested For Driving 205
MPH Sep 21, 2004 7:58 am
US/Central Wabasha,
Minn. (AP) With a State Patrol airplane overhead, a Stillwater
motorcyclist hit the throttle and possibly set the informal record
for the fastest speeding ticket in Minnesota history: 205 mph.
On Saturday afternoon, State Patrol pilot Al Loney was
flying near Wabasha, in southeastern Minnesota on the Wisconsin
border, watching two motorcyclists racing along U.S. Highway 61.
When one of the riders shot forward, Loney was ready with
his stopwatch. He clicked it once when the motorcycle reached a
white marker on the road and again a quarter-mile later. The watch
read 4.39 seconds, which Loney calculated to be 205 mph.
"I
was in total disbelief," Loney told the St. Paul Pioneer Press for
Tuesday's editions. "I had to double-check my watch because in 27
years I'd never seen anything move that fast."
Several law
enforcement sources told the newspaper that, although no official
records are kept, it was probably the fastest ticket ever written in
the state.
After about three-quarters of a mile, the biker
slowed to about 100 mph and let the other cycle catch up. By then
Loney had radioed ahead to another state trooper, who pulled the two
over soon afterward.
The State Patrol officer arrested the
faster rider, 20-year-old Stillwater resident Samuel Armstrong
Tilley, for reckless driving, driving without a motorcycle license
-- and driving 140 miles per hour over the posted speed limit of 65
mph.
A search of speeding tickets written by state troopers,
who patrol most of the state's highways, between 1990 and February
2004 shows the next fastest ticket was for 150 mph in 1994 in Lake
of the Woods County.
Tilley did not return calls from the
newspaper to his home Monday. A working number for him could not
immediately be found by The Associated Press on Tuesday.
Only a handful of exotic sports cars can reach 200 mph, but
many high-performance motorcycles can top 175 mph. With minor
modifications, they can hit 200 mph. Tilley was riding a Honda 1000,
Loney said.
Kathy Swanson of the state Office of Traffic
Safety said unless Tilley was wearing the kind of protective gear
professional motorcycle racers wear, he was courting death at 200
mph.
"I'm not entirely sure what would happen if you crashed
at 200 miles per hour," Swanson said. "But it wouldn't be pretty,
that's for sure."
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