Popular Articles
HONDA

The Astra is getting...

The Astra is getting in the family way ò€“and weò€™ve got the pictures to prove it!



Irate villagers have...

Irate villagers have created merry "L" after complaining that learner drivers are causing traffic chaos. Motoring schools around Llangunnor, Carmarthen, are being asked by councillors not to use the community"s narrow roads for practice. Driving instructors pointed out that they can"t actually be banned from the village, but agreed to comply.


News of the day
Brawn GPð€™s Jenson...

Brawn GPð€™s Jenson Button reigned supreme in Spain, taking his fourth victory in five races. The Briton dominated at the Barcelona circuit, taking a well-deserved win ahead of team mate Rubens Barrichello and Red Bullð€™s Mark Webber.

Autotuning

An anti-fraud team has...

An anti-fraud team has closed an online shop selling replacement licences, MoTs and tax discs - but not before Auto Express had a look. It attracted punters with an address similar to the official DVLA one; the offending site was at www.dvla-gov.org.uk while the genuine location is www.dvla.gov.uk. The letter A, which officially stands for Agency, stood for Acquisitions in the fake firm.

"The authorities were made aware of the content of the false site and the products on offer, and have taken appropriate action," said a DVLA spokesman. So who was behind the firm? Our investigation revealed the site was registered to Scotweb Ltd, which also has another Internet page. We"re not publishing its details, and while there"s nothing in the visible pages about fake paperwork, text hidden in the computer coding claims it sells driving licences.

We tried calling Stephen Brian Else, company secretary of Scotweb, at the number listed on the global website register. But the woman who answered said nobody of that name lived there. Records at Companies House show him living in Alicante, Spain.




Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):