A driver has told how an airport Meet and Greet worker played boy racer in her car, breaking six speed limits.

Aimee Buxton, 18, from Witham, left her car in the £87.50 per week Stansted Airport Meet and Greet service while she went on a week-long holiday in Malaga.

When the Royal Artillery soldier dropped off her £9,000 car on August 5, she warned staff that a black box was fitted and they should drive carefully.

Despite the warnings Miss Buxton later learned the company had ignored her when her insurance company sent updates via their app informing her she had broken four speed limits in ten minutes.

But when Aimee complained to the airport service, they refused to refund her despite breaking the law.

She said: “I couldn’t believe it. The least they could do is refund my parking costs.

“'Their employee broke the law when he drove my car and he could have lost me my car insurance.

“"There's even a sign on the back of my grey Citroen DS3 which reads: ‘My black box may annoy you but not as much as it annoys me.’

“I saw what had happened and I was horrified. I was wound up because you feel like you can drop the car off and they’ll look after it for you. Instead he drove my car like a maniac.”

Braintree and Witham Times:

(Photo: SWNS)

When Miss Buxton returned to the airport on August 14, the company’s driver again broke the speed limit as he raced to deliver her car, this time speeding through a 60mph zone at 85mph.

She immediately worried that his dangerous driving would lose her insurance.

She added: “I have a black box fitted in my car because it makes my insurance so much cheaper.

“It is £1,500 a year and otherwise I’d have to pay over £3,000.

“I was worried that his driving would cost me my insurance. On the Woop policy, it says if you speed a certain number of times, you’ll lose your insurance.”

Braintree and Witham Times:

(Photo: SWNS)

Miss Buxton spent her family holiday emailing and calling Stansted Meet and Greet Parking and eventually they confirmed to Woop their employee was responsible.

A spokesman for the independent company, which has been at Stansted for 11 years, said: "An investigation has been launched to confirm if our driver broke the speed limit.

"The service paid for is the service we provided.

''We stored her vehicle while she was away and the vehicle has been collected and delivered to her.

''We don't condone the actions of the driver, but obviously we cannot be there sitting next to a driver every time they drive a car.

"The driver we believe was responsible, from the description we have been given, has been away on holiday and has not been back.

''He is back in Poland. We haven't had any complaints of this nature before."