Rigpig wrote:
Co-incidence perhaps, but todays Sunday Expres features their campaign to change the law regarding motoring deaths.
In a nutshell they want:
A new criminal offence of "death by driving" to cover the whole spectrum of offences between 'careless' and 'dangerous'
All road death and injury cases are tried in a crown court
Bring pressure on the CPS to treat road deaths as seriously as other killings
The police must investigate death or serious injury on the roads as exhaustively as they investigate other instances
Launch a campaign to educate motorists about the risks of negligent driving
Its honourabe and well intentioned but as PeterE said:
PeterE wrote:
it is also doubtful to what extent sentences in road traffic cases influence driver behaviour, as even the most irresponsible driver does not believe that he is going to kill or maim someone.
Agreed, if such a change in the law would force into the thick skulls of those who habitually drive in a crass and dangerous manner the idea that they may just get banged up as a consequence of their actions, then fine. But will it?
Fear that is the problem mate. As posted on by me on PH - deterrent for the likes of most here ... but for for the hard core?
Local Manchester and Bolton papers were full of a story concerning one now 19 year old who had been banned twice before for dangerous driving - the second ban imposed in April 2003 for 3 years....
He drove his car at such a speed that the engine ripped out of the chassis and his friend (back seat passenger - perhaps not weearing seat belt) catapulted out of the rear window and collided with a lamp post some 40 metres away..... Driver ran off and turned up in hospital with surprisingly minor injuries under a false name. His pal is learning how to talk again and unlikely to either regain use of legs and left arm.
Bolton Crown Court - according to reports sentenced him to 15 months prison and another two year ban. (Which means he could be driving by 2006 ...????)
However I agree with Peter's point of view because we have the "accidental" aspect. Mahali's case is different.... fairly obvious from the evidence of 100 witnesses and those involved that the standard of driving by the person who was catalyst to sequence of events was not "accidental but deliberately reckless" The account leaves few other conclusion - and it is tragic that this person cannot be brought to account.
PeterE wrote:
Let me make it clear that I am wholly supportive of appropriately severe sentences for people who cause death and injury on the roads through reckless driving behaviour.
Riggers wrote:
Absolutely, but of course the other end of the spectrum is seeing inncoent people up in court. What happens if someone steps off the pavement directly in front of a driver proceeding in a perfectly lawful and safe manner? Does that individual have to endure months of hell as the case is brought before the courts? I would like to think that where the incident was cut-and-dried (ie definately not the drivers fault) it would go no further - but they wouldn't get it right every time.
I read the Express account. Overall - agree that we need to have redress in the courts for extreme cases ... but some of the cases in the paper are not necessarily down to sheer recklessness.
The case of the cute three year old - Leonie - for example. My youngest son (proudly reminds us that he is now "six and three quarters") and the our foster son who is just as proud to tell us that he is now four and five sixths!

) Bless....

) Both will tell rest of family how to cross a road ... and will describe the process involved quite accurately. My six year old can even tell me the approximate speed of an approaching car. However, I would not allow either of these boys to cross a road to the ice cream van in the company of the eleven year old foster child (who also demonstrates a good understanding of road sense). So I would certainly not allow a three year old to cross a road - even a residential road - with only another under ten to care for her.
Perhaps my wife and I are old fashioned parents.......
Leonie (3) was in the care of her 9 year old brother. According to the papers little Leonie did see the car and tried to run - but her little legs and her development at that stage of her life were against her . Perhaps a responsible adult may have been able to keep her out of harm's way. I would not have let her cross any road without being present myself.
The parents (Mr and Mrs Bradford) of the 14 year old insist that a case of manslaughter should have been brought against the man who collided with the boy and killed him.
Grief ... anger.... you want revenge. I would dearly have loved to have personally squeezed the life out of the person who nearly ended my wife's life that morning...at the time. But... he could not help suffering a stroke at the wrong moment (from our point of view) and to exact justice from his widow would have been wrong on that basis. She lost her husband ... my wife, really suffered but pulled through - and leads normal life. OK - lucky - could just as easily have not been the case though ... and I think I would still think the same way.
The witnesses say the chap was not speeding and did not go through a red light. He amber gambled and the 14 year old Michael Bradford had decided to cross the road at that point. Perhaps that explains the 6 month ban and the £100 fine - which to a grieving family is only naturally "insult". Similarly - CJ - the driver may not have been insured, may have been an illegal immigrant - but he was not exceeding the speed limit at the time CJ crossed the road on New Year's Day. Harsh as it seems - this is why the sentence for the motoring crime was less than the sentence for being in this country illegally. In short, they held that there was nothing a competent driver could have done to avoid the accident.
So basically - we must have a justice system which tales account of "accidental" death and which also really deters reckless behaviour. Not an easy compromise - especially to those grieving.
I actually find myself agreeing with the Labour MP Andrew Miller who is quoted as saying:
Andrew Miller wrote:
"We must stop talking about road accidents as though n0-one has any responsibility. But we need a legal framework which does recognise the difference between a mistake and something which a comptetent driver could reasonably have avoided."