By Daily Mail Reporter
This is the moment when a Jaguar driver, furious after being given a £60 fine, knocked down a supermarket parking warden.
Martin Takle has been jailed for six months after his moment of road rage, which was captured on the store's CCTV.
The incident occurred after Takle was fined for illegally using a parking space reserved for parents with small children.
Ouch! This is the moment that Martin Takle knocked over parking attendant Jackie Smith
Takle, 36, was angry when Asda car park attendant Jackie Smith gave him a £60 fixed penalty notice for using the bay without any children in his car.
He then reversed out of the space and veered sharply - catching her legs with his front wing and knocking her to the ground.
The incident was filmed on the store's CCTV cameras and Takle, from Hartcliffe, Bristol, later pleaded guilty to dangerous driving at Bristol Crown Court.
Judge Mark Horton was shown the footage, which showed him remonstrating with the attendant during the incident in January.
Ticket: Takle was furious after being given a £60 fixed penalty fine
Ms Smith can be seen approaching the car, stooping down to talk to him and handing over the ticket. Takle then slams the door of his Jaguar XJ and turns sharply while reversing out, catching Ms Smith's legs. She was knocked over but was otherwise uninjured.
Ms Smith was working on behalf of the supermarket for private enforcement company Town and City Parking when the offence took place.
David Chidgey, mitigating, said: 'It is difficult not to be shocked by the driving, I have to accept that.
'It is only by good fortune there wasn't greater injury than there was. It was a very reckless piece of driving in a busy car park and he knows he will be punished for that.'
Illegal: The incident started when Takle parked his Jaguar in a 'parent and child' bay, as pictured here
The court heard that Takle, of Hartcliffe, Bristol, had a number of previous convictions but they were not for similar offences.
Mr Chidgey explained he had worked in driving jobs since he was aged 17 and was aware he would not be able to drive for at least a year due to the conviction.
His children, aged 14 and six, would have to be supported by his partner, who works as a care worker, while he was incarcerated.
But Judge Horton still imposed the custodial sentence, also banning him from driving for 15 months and ordering him to pass an extended driving test before returning to the road.
He said: 'There is nothing in your history that reflects or aggravates the offence which you appear before this court in respect of.
'The difficulty is that this was an extremely dangerous piece of driving at a time when you completely and utterly lost reason, which I accept was out of character.'
source;dailymail
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