Footballer Carlos Tevez has been fined and ordered to complete 250 hours of community support after pleading guilty to driving while disqualified and without insurance. The Manchester City striker admitted the offences in his indigenous Spanish with aid from an interpreter as he stood in the dock at Macclesfield Magistrates' Court. The court heard the gamer had experienced a experience and aA"salutary lesson" after being taken into custody and caught by police last month. Tevez, who gets A200,000 a week, received town order for driving while disqualified, was banned for six months, and fined A60. For having no insurance, he was fined A1,000 and was ordered told to pay A85 in costs. The most penalty for driving while disqualified is six months in prison. Revealing from court, Sky's Becky Johnson said: "He (Tevez) carried out an interview today with a probation officer in which he said he was sorry and said he wished to give something back again to the community. "His attorney made it clear his client did recognize how serious the offences are and was impossible to ever do anything like that again." Henry Boliver, the Probation Service official, told the judge so therapy wasn't appropriateAand neither was a curfew order due to the travel associated with his job the footballer had no previous convictions. Mr Boliver added: "He was specific when talking to me it has been a veryAsalutary session. I think the significance and seriousness of this kind ofAoffence, I think the chances of this happening again is very, very slender. A chance would be welcomed by "mr Tevez to put something back into the community.AClearly, he's fit for unpaid work." Driving word, chair of the table Elizabeth Depares told the defendant: "Mr Tevez, you must know you are a job model to thousands, if not millions, of fans but no body is above the law.AYou should not have been operating. "We have heard that you're sorry and it is now up to you to make certain you'll maybe not be brought back to court again." The court heard the Argentinian player hasn't yet got a driving licence, partly because he has fought to pass the theory test that will be conducted in English. Tevez's responsible request followed his arrest near his home in Alderley Edge, Cheshire, last month. The 29-year-old player was stopped as he left a driver in a Cayenne on March 7 after an tip-off to police. In January, he was banned from driving for six months after admitting two counts of failing continually to provide data concerning situations in which his Hummer automobile was clocked racing. Tevez did not attend that hearing at Manchester Magistrates' Court. He was represented by his lawyer who told the judge the footballer failed to react to documents while he did not understand the phrase "constabulary."
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