Table of Contents
High-Speed Motorcycle Impound on Highway 99 Near Furry Creek
On the morning of July 11, 2026, a BC Highway Patrol officer clocked a red motorcycle travelling at an extreme speed on Highway 99 near Furry Creek, British Columbia. The radar reading showed the bike moving at 177 km/h in a posted 80 km/h zone, leading to the motorcycle being immediately impounded.
The rider, a 22-year-old woman from Vancouver, was found to be operating the motorcycle with only learner-level licences for both passenger vehicles and motorcycles. This incident occurred exactly one week after a separate, deadly motorcycle crash on the same Sea to Sky corridor, underscoring ongoing concerns about high-risk riding behaviour on this route.
Official Incident Details
According to BC Highway Patrol, the excessive speed violation occurred at approximately 7:43 a.m. on July 11, 2026, on Highway 99 near Furry Creek. An officer observed and recorded a red sport motorcycle travelling at more than double the legal speed limit. A subsequent licence check confirmed the motorcyclist held a Class 7 (learner, passenger vehicle) and a Class 8 (learner, motorcycle) licence, indicating a limited level of driving experience.
Police emphasized that travelling nearly 100 km/h over the limit on this section of highway could easily have resulted in another serious or fatal collision, particularly given the recent deadly crash on the same route just seven days earlier. The enforcement action taken in this case reflects the combination of extreme speed and the rider’s novice status.
As a result of the stop, the motorcyclist received the following sanctions and penalties:
- Seven-day vehicle impound: The red sport motorcycle was seized for a seven-day period due to excessive speeding. Towing and storage fees are payable by the vehicle owner.
- Excessive speed violation ticket: The rider was issued a ticket for driving more than 60 km/h over the posted limit, under section 148(1) of the BC Motor Vehicle Act, carrying a fine of $483.
- High-risk driver insurance costs: The incident triggers at least three years of high-risk driver premiums and escalating insurance costs, bringing the estimated financial impact to just under $2,500 when all fees and penalties are included.
Given the extreme nature of the speeding and the limited experience of the rider, BC Highway Patrol is also recommending that the BC Superintendent of Motor Vehicles undertake a formal high-risk driving review of the individual’s driving record. Such a review can result in additional measures, including possible driving prohibitions or further licensing restrictions.
While this incident occurred on the Sea to Sky corridor, high-risk driving is a concern across British Columbia, from coastal routes to interior communities such as One Hundred Mile House crime and safety data and other regional areas. Monitoring speeding and aggressive driving trends is critical for understanding and reducing serious collisions province-wide.
CrimeCanada.ca Safety Perspective
From the perspective of CrimeCanada.ca, this case illustrates how a single high-speed decision can endanger not only the rider, but everyone else sharing the road. Extreme speeding, particularly by inexperienced riders on powerful motorcycles, significantly increases the likelihood of catastrophic crashes. The fact that this incident occurred just one week after a fatal motorcycle collision on the same highway highlights a persistent risk pattern on major routes like Highway 99.
We encourage riders and drivers across British Columbia to treat posted speed limits as a critical safety boundary, not a suggestion. On scenic and sometimes challenging corridors like the Sea to Sky and in other communities such as 105 Mile Post 2 crime and safety statistics, maintaining safe speeds, respecting learner licence restrictions, and avoiding aggressive maneuvers are key steps to preventing further tragedies. Community awareness, responsible riding, and ongoing enforcement all play a role in making roads safer for everyone.
Official Source & Community Safety
This safety alert is based on an official release from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). CrimeCanada.ca aggregates and analyzes this data to keep the british-columbia community informed, aware, and safe. We are an independent safety data aggregator and not the original creators of the underlying incident report.
Read the full official release here: RCMP Official Statement.

