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Edmonton driver with ‘F-k Harper’ sign convicted of stunting

WARNING: This story contains profanity. Discretion is advised. 

A judge in Alberta has convicted a man of stunting after he was pulled over by police for driving his car with a sign with an expletive aimed at former prime minister Stephen Harper.

Robert Wells of Edmonton was driving home from British Columbia when he was pulled over in August 2015 by an RCMP officer near Ponoka, Alta., and told to remove the sign.

Rob Wells stands with his Steven Harper sign he put in his vehicle’s rear window in Edmonton Alta, on Wednesday Aug 19, 2015. An Edmonton man who was issued a $543 fine for putting a sign in his car window with an expletive aimed at former prime minister Stephen Harper says his case is being bumped up to provincial court.
Rob Wells stands with his Steven Harper sign he put in his vehicle’s rear window in Edmonton Alta, on Wednesday Aug 19, 2015. An Edmonton man who was issued a $543 fine for putting a sign in his car window with an expletive aimed at former prime minister Stephen Harper says his case is being bumped up to provincial court. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

He refused, saying it was a political statement and he had a right to have it in his window.

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Judge B.D. Rosborough wrote in his ruling that the handmade “F–k Harper” sign didn’t amount to stunting itself, stating that it didn’t amount to a dangerous trick or manoeuvre.

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But Rosborough said he believed testimony that Wells was deliberately slowing down and cutting in front of traffic on Highway 2 so that people would see his sign.

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The judge said Wells was interfering with the orderly progress of other vehicles on the highway, which he said met the criteria for stunting.

“Display of a sign in the rear window of a vehicle was hardly a notable or impressive act of skill or daring,” Wells wrote in his ruling. “Likewise, it could not amount to an exciting or dangerous trick or manoeuvre,” he continued.

“On the evidence that I do accept, I am satisfied that Wells was intentionally interfering with other traffic in order to advertise his ‘anti-Harper’ sentiment.”

Wells, who represented himself when the case was heard earlier this year, said he knew he had to challenge the ticket because it suppressed his right to freedom of expression.

READ MORE: Alberta man issued fine for ‘F-k Harper’ sign going to higher court

The Crown argued there are other ways to express oneself and a busy highway is not the right place for such political discourse.

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Wells was also pulled over by Edmonton police 15 years ago, after he displayed a bumper sticker with the same expletive aimed at former premier Ralph Klein to protest his government’s push for private health care.

READ MORE: Alberta man gets $543 ticket for ‘F-k Harper’ sign

He said he wasn’t charged because police determined he wasn’t doing anything illegal.

A car with ‘F– Harper’ sign in the back window was parked on 109 Street in Edmonton on Thursday, August 20, 2015. Global News

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