A Sunshine Coast man has been fined $151 for travelling at the speed limit. Credit:Facebook "And I was like, yeah OK, we all make mistakes, and that was it." In a statement, Queensland Police said it was an administrative error during a mobile camera deployment on May 14. "The analogue camera recorded the details of two vehicles travelling at the legal speed limit while it was being testing by the operator. There was no accuracy issue with the camera," the statement read. "An error occurred during the manual adjudication processes where these records were not identified and rejected as per standard practice and subsequently two notices were issued to the registered owners of the vehicles.

Sunshine Coast man Zac Murray has been fined $151 for travelling at the speed limit. Credit:Facebook "The notices have since been withdrawn and police have made direct contact with the registered owners to apologise for the error." Mr Murray said his social media fame had been followed by a flood of media interviews. "It's been pretty funny, I'm still just amused a lot by it," he said. "My work mates think it's ludicrous...I was in here doing an interview with the ABC and they were trying to yell over the top of me."

The laconic 24-year-old joked about what he'd do with his newfound notoriety. "I'm going to ride it all the way to the top and end up in bed next to Miley Cyrus." EARLIER A Sunshine Coast man has made a tongue-in-cheek apology after being fined for driving at 100km/h in a 100km/h zone. Zac Murray received a $151 speeding fine after being clocked by a speed camera on the Sunshine Motorway at Mooloolaba on May 14.

It shows him being fined for exceeding the speed limit by less than 13 km/h, but clearly lists both his speed and the speed limit as 100km/h. "I found it pretty amusing, I was just like, 'OK, guilty as charged for being a law-abiding citizen,'" he laughed. Mr Murray was driving his father's car at the time, and posted a snapshot of the fine to Facebook, along with a cheeky apology. "I am deeply saddened by my actions and believe I am just as bad as those ingrates who are downloading Dallas Buyers Club and/or Game of Thrones," he wrote. "Clearly I did not think of the children or consider the consequences of my actions as I drove at an alleged speed of 100km in a 100km zone.

"I hope you can all forgive me. But most importantly I hope I can forgive myself for the monster I have become." The 24-year-old said he was unprepared for the post to take on a social media life of its own. A high school friend shared Mr Murray's post with the Facebook motoring group Downshift and it has attracted nearly 1500 likes and been shared almost 300 times in less than 12 hours. He said he and his father are off to a Justice of the Peace to have the fine transferred into his name and then to the Department of Main Roads and Transport to hopefully have it cancelled. But the easygoing labourer said he could see nothing but humour in the fine.