Unfortunately press reports are not the best of things to go on, but it appears to me that this woman was not up to the standard of driving required full stop.
However, from the few cases I have seen, I don't really care much for this Dangerous Driving law which Fisherman defined for us as:
Quote:
"driving which falls far below the standard expected of a careful and competent driver AND it would be obvious to a careful and competent driver that driving in that way would be dangerous".
Her crime in that case would appear to be one of
"Not being a careful and competent driver".This is the sort of driving error which might be shown up by re-testing elderly drivers more frequently, and ALL drivers less so.
Old age is a terrible thing - the problems accelerate too quickly for the normal checks of doctors etc. to identify and catch.
In a recent case in Cumbria the coroner found a driver who died had been told by his doctor to have his eyes tested - but failed to do so, and went on to pull out in front of a car
18 months later!Remember she could have passed her test any time after 1955!! Could she be reasonably expected to keep up to date with modern driving conditions? Of course SOME drivers do, and are still competent at 71. MY father is 81 and more than just competent. My Father-in-law is also 81, and has not been safe in a car for the last 3 - 4 years, but keeps passing his annual test despite our tipping them off!
Reason? NOBODY actually sits in the car with him - they rely on reports from his doctor!
Using Fisherman's definition, many more drivers should be charged with dangerous driving - but are not, simply because they have not had an accident yet.
I don't anticipate anyone ever driving while thinking "I'm dangerous, so I think I'll pull over in case I get sent to jail", so this sort of incident is NEVER going to decrease despite all the prison sentences.
A tired driver who falls asleep at the wheel loses
ALL control over the vehicle, while a driver who has decided to drive home despite having had too much to drink is merely impaired - and still retains
SOME control over the vehicle. Do we have differing degrees of dangerous? No just a blunt "one size fits all" jail term!
