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DUP councillor admits drink-driving offence and is disqualified for 12 months

Ex-DUP Mayor of Newtownabbey Thomas Hogg arriving home yesterday after he was banned from driving at Belfast's Magistrates Court. Picture by Alan Lewis
Ex-DUP Mayor of Newtownabbey Thomas Hogg arriving home yesterday after he was banned from driving at Belfast's Magistrates Court. Picture by Alan Lewis Ex-DUP Mayor of Newtownabbey Thomas Hogg arriving home yesterday after he was banned from driving at Belfast's Magistrates Court. Picture by Alan Lewis

A DUP councillor has admitted drink-driving and been disqualified for 12 months.

Former Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey Thomas Hogg got behind the wheel in an "act of kindness" to help a stranded friend, his lawyer said.

Councillor Hogg was also fined £250 after pleading guilty to driving with excess alcohol at his first appearance before Belfast Magistrates' Court yesterday.

The 30-year-old was stopped by police on the city's Crumlin Road on April 29 this year.

A prosecution lawyer said officers had noticed his car weaving over the road. A breath sample showed he was more than two times over the legal limit.

Dressed in a suit, the DUP representative, of Brae Hill Park in Belfast, stood head bowed in the dock as the charge was accepted.

Defence solicitor Keith Gamble said his client feels "shame and remorse" over his actions.

Mr Gamble told the court Hogg had been drinking at a barbeque before going to bed.

"A few hours later he got a phone call from a friend in some level of distress, saying they were stranded in town, couldn't get a taxi and were concerned about their safety," the lawyer said.

Hogg then decided to get into his car to pick his friend up, with the court told he initially felt groggy from sleep.

Mr Gamble contend that "what had otherwise been an act of kindness" ended with the drink driving charge.

He stressed the defendant had not travelled far before coming to police attention.

Elected as a DUP councillor in 2011, Hogg served as Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey for two consecutive years from 2014.

In 2016 he was awarded an MBE for services to local government.

Mr Gamble acknowledged: "He's had to face up to this in another arena than this court.

"This is not in any way within the normal scope of his character.

"He's a gentleman one would have expected to have gone through life completely unfamiliar with the court process."

Following submissions District Judge Fiona Bagnall imposed the 12-month driving ban, fine and a £15 offender levy.

Meanwhile, another DUP councillor, Luke Poots is set to contest a charge of dangerous driving.

Mr Poots of Gardners Road in Lisburn, is accused over an incident on December 7, 2017.

The 28-year-old son of former DUP health minister Edwin Poots, an MLA for Lagan Valley, is charged with driving a vehicle dangerously on Belfast's Grosvenor Road.

He did not appear as the case was mentioned at the city's Magistrates Court yesterday.