 Caster Semenya arrested. Speed might be two-time Olympic 800m champion Caster Semenya's ally on the track but, it appears, not so on the road. Semenya appeared in the Pretoria Magistrates Court on Thursday last week, to answer charges related to speeding. Luka Mohanjana, who speaks for the National Prosecuting Authority, and PA, in Chuanay, on Tuesday confirmed as much to the citizen. Semenya was reportedly nabbed on the N-14 highway, in Centurion, a day earlier but Mahajane said she was not held in custody. Instead, as is common practice in cases involving more minor offenses, she was granted bail of R-500 at the Wade Abrog police station and summoned to appear in court. Indeed she appeared at Pretoria Magistrates Court on the May 6, 2021 for speeding, Mahajane said. Adding the matter was postponed so a report from the South African National Institute for Crime Prevention and the reintegration of offenders, NECRO, could be compiled. C-menya's attorney, Greg Knott, yesterday declined to comment on the case but NECRO works to facilitate alternatives to prison for some child and first-time offenders, including diversion programs. If found guilty by a court of law, C-menya would end up with a criminal record. Because of the nature of the offense, she would likely be able to get it expunged eventually. But in terms of the laws around expungement, she would only be eligible to lodge an application after ten years had elapsed. And until then, a record could throw a spanner in the works of any plans she had to, for example, travel overseas to compete. Were she instead to be enrolled in a diversion program, though, she could escape without a criminal record. The case is due back in court in August. In the meantime, C-menya is still busy fighting World Athletics rules for women with differences of SE Sewell development, DST, barring them from competing at certain distances, including C-menya's Forte, the 800M, unless they take medication to lower their testosterone levels. In 2019, the Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld the rules and last year, so did the Swiss Federal Supreme Court. Now, though, C-menya has approached the European Court of Human Rights.