An icon of a desk calendar. An icon of a circle with a diagonal line across. An icon of a block arrow pointing to the right. An icon of a paper envelope. An icon of the Facebook "f" mark. An icon of the Google "G" mark. An icon of the Linked In "in" mark. An icon representing logout. An icon that resembles human head and shoulders. An icon of a traditional telephone receiver. An icon of a tick mark. An icon of a human eye and eyelashes. An icon of a human eye and eyelashes with a diagonal line through it. A two-lined pause icon for stopping interactions. A opening quote mark. A closing quote mark. An icon of an arrow. An icon of a paper folder. An icon of an exclamation mark on a circular background. An icon of a digital camera. An icon of a caret arrow. An icon of a clock face. An icon of the an X shape. An icon used to represent where to interact to collapse or dismiss a component An icon of a speech bubble. An icon of a speech bubble, denoting user comments. An icon of a speech bubble, denoting user comments. An icon of 3 horizontal dots. An icon of a paper envelope. An icon of a facebook f logo. An icon of a digital camera. An icon of a house. An icon of the Instagram logo. An icon of the LinkedIn logo. An icon of a magnifying glass. A magnifying glass icon that is used to represent the function of searching. An icon of 3 horizontal lines. An icon used to represent a collapsed menu. An icon of an arrow pointing to the right. An explanation mark centred inside a circle. An icon of an arrow pointing to the left. An icon of a star. An icon of a tag. An icon of the Twitter logo. An icon of a video camera shape. A icon displaying a speech bubble An icon of the WhatsApp logo. An icon of an information logo. A mathematical 'plus' symbol. An icon indicating Time. An icon of a green tick. An icon of a greyed out success tick. An icon of a loading spinner. An icon of the facebook messenger app logo. An icon of a facebook f logo. An icon of the Twitter app logo. An icon of the LinkedIn logo. An icon of the Whatsapp messenger app logo. An icon of an mail envelope. A decentered black square over a white square.

Perth crash driver had 10 different drugs in his system

Supermarket staff reported Tomasz Kolkowski to police after they saw him getting into his car while visibly under the influence.

Drug driver Tomasz Kolkowski appeared at Perth Sheriff Court
Drug driver Tomasz Kolkowski appeared at Perth Sheriff Court

An under-the-influence driver who smashed into another car at a busy Perth junction had 10 different types of drugs in his system.

Tomasz Kolkowski was found with white powder around his mouth and nose after he failed to stop for traffic lights in the city’s Newhouse Road and rammed into a waiting Renault Megane.

The mother and daughter in the other vehicle were unharmed.

Police were already looking for the 43-year-old’s Saab Vector after shocked supermarket staff raised concerns about his condition earlier that evening.

Perth Sheriff Court heard that a blood sample revealed Kolkowski had got behind the wheel after taking a cocktail of depressants, antidepressants, Valium, benzos, opiates, stimulants and meth.

He pled guilty to driving while unfit with drink or drugs on April 23 last year.

Originally charged with dangerous driving, Kolkowski admitted an amended charge of driving without due care or attention.

Car never slowed down

The court heard that around 3.30pm, staff at Tesco on Crieff Road noticed Kolkowski shuffling about in the aisles.

“He appeared to be under the influence, so they kept an eye on him,” the fiscal depute said.

“They opened a checkout especially to serve the accused.”

A sales assistant asked Kolkowski if he was driving, but he denied he was.

Tomasz Kolkowski appeared at Perth Sheriff Court

Staff then watched him walk out of the store and into his Saab parked out front.

Details of the vehicle were passed onto the police.

Around the same time, a mother and her daughter who were driving through Perth stopped at a red light on the Newhouse Road and Struan Road junction.

The woman saw Kolkowksi’s car coming towards her vehicle.

“It failed to slow down and collided with the car, causing damage,” the prosecutor said.

Both vehicles pulled into a nearby car park, where they were found by police.

“The accused was the sole occupant of the vehicle,” the court heard.

“Police noted he had white residue on his face, around his lips and month.

“His speech was slurred and he was unsteady on his feet.

“Officers formed the opinion he was impacted through drink or drugs.”

‘Clearly an issue’

The court heard Kolkowski was taken to Perth Royal Infirmary as a precaution.

Later, a blood sample revealed the level of drugs in his system.

These including etizolam, diazepam, codeine, amphetamine and methylampetamine.

Solicitor David Holmes, defending, said his client had been self-medicating after he had been attacked.

“This is a person who realises he has done wrong,” he said.

Police were called to Newhouse Road in Perth.
Newhouse Road in Perth. Image: Google Street View.

“He may benefit from some kind of supervision.”

Sheriff Mark O’Hanlon was told Kolkowski, of Balgowan Road, Perth, had received five penalty points from a previous traffic conviction.

The sheriff said: “As identified in the social work report, there is clearly an issue here.”

He ordered Kolkowski to undertake 160 hours of unpaid work and placed him under supervision for a year.

He was further banned from driving for 15 months.

For more local court content visit our dedicated page or join us on Facebook.