To clarify what has been said in bits and pieces so far:
1. Your friend will not be offered a fixed penalty (the upper limit for a fixed penalty is 96mph. If he is, by any chance, offered a fixed penalty he should bite their hands off!).
2. He will be summonsed to appear in Court. This could take up to the time limit of six months.
3. Leaving aside his previous points for the moment, for this latest offence alone he will either be awarded 6 points or he will receive a short ban (up to 56 days). (Note: not both. You cannot receive points and be disqualified for a single offence). In addition he will receive a fine and be ordered to pay prosecution costs and a �15 �Victim Surcharge�. The exact penalty is at the discretion of the Bench when they have heard all the facts.
Anything less than the above and he can count himself extremely fortunate because this is what the magistrates� Sentencing Guidelines say.
4. If he receives a short ban any points he has remain on his licence after the ban and until their expiry (three years from the date of the offence).
5. If he receives six points it will make him a �totter� (12 points within three years) and he will receive a minimum disqualification of six months.
6. In either event he will be offered the chance to tell the Court why he should not be banned, but his application will be on different grounds for each scenario.
7. If he is banned for this offence alone his request will be based upon the offence itself. He will have to show that there were �special reasons� relating to the offence which means he should not be disqualified (e.g. being chased and fearing for his safety). This is not an easy thing to prove and is rarely successful without strong supporting evidence.
8. If he is banned as a �totter� he will have to prove that the ban will result in �exceptional hardship�. Loss of employment or general inconvenience alone is not usually successful in