SafeSpeed wrote:
Yeah. I'm really worried about the daft thinking behind these proposals.
Drivers won't ever think "I have to pay proper attention so I won't get banged up". So extra penalties in the lower and middle range of responsibility won't improve crash statistics.
However if they kill through recklessness then I'm perfectly happy for harsh sentences to apply. But they do already.
I can to some extent understand the thinking behind this idea. Currently, there is a very large gulf between "causing death by dangerous driving", which carries a maximum prison sentence of 14 years, and "careless driving", which carries a maximum sentence of a £2,500 fine, 9 penalty points and discretionary disqualification.
There are some cases where someone has obviously been driving in a fairly irresponsible manner, but for whatever reason they authorities have not been able to make a CDBDD charge stick, which gives the impression of something of a miscarriage of justice.
I would say there are three grades of seriousness in such cases:
(i) where the driver's behaviour has been blatantly reckless and dangerous,
(ii) where the driver has behaved in a way that he should have known was wrong and risky, but it is of a more minor nature and/or an isolated one-off, and
(iii) where the driver has simply made a mistake or committed an error of judgment
Perhaps a case can be made for the possibility of more severe sentences (perhaps similar to those for drink-driving) for offences in category (ii).
However, I would expect the result would be that a number of cases where CDBDD is currently used would end up in the intermediate category - for example the guy who was convicted of this offence after he supposedly took his eyes off the road for a couple of seconds to try to find a packet of mints. Also (dare I say it) Gary Hart.
The worry of course would be, as I have said earlier, that a more serious charge would simply be used for people in category (iii) where it would be simply retribution and there would be no deterrent effect. You can't deter people from making mistakes.
A couple of years ago there was an interesting discussion on uk.transport about a case where a cyclist had died in a collision with a car that had been overtaking them at what was generally felt to be an unsuitable location. It was a moot point whether the driver had passed too close or whether the cyclist had been startled and veered into the car's path. The driver was convicted of careless driving, given six penalty points but not disqualified. Several people thought that in such cases as a minimum there should be a period of disqualification.