I posted up this sad tale when it was first reported. Number of nationals carried the the story today. Verdict now reached and raises some issues.
Manchester Evening News wrote:
Teacher guilty in baby horror
Dean Kirby
25/ 1/2008
A TEACHER has been found guilty of dangerous parking after she stopped her car on a busy bend where minutes later an eight-month-old baby was killed in a horror smash.
Primary school teacher Lynda Owen, 53, stopped her Ford Ka and crossed the road to chat to a childminder friend.
Another driver lost control minutes later, hit the kerb and veered across the road, mounting the pavement and hitting the childminder's double buggy.
The impact `wrenched' the buggy from her hands and hurled it over a garden wall.
Eight-month-old Niamh Critchley suffered fatal injuries.
But childminder Louise Pritchard's own 22-month-old son, Joseph, escaped with hardly a scratch.
Mrs Owen was given three points on her licence, fined £250 and ordered to pay £650 costs when she was sentenced by Wigan Magistrates yesterday. She had pleaded not guilty to leaving a vehicle in a dangerous position. It was parked more than half a metre from the kerb on a bend.
The magistrates had heard that while Mrs Owen's actions did not cause the accident on Upholland Road in Billinge, Wigan, last February, they were a key factor.
Mrs Owen had consistently refused to accept any responsibility for the accident and blamed the other driver. The court had been told that the driver, Anthony Smith, had been prosecuted at an earlier appearance.
Bernard Phelan, defending, said any suggestion that she caused the child's death was `distorting the facts.'
Chairman of the magistrates Robert Farmer expressed his sympathies for Niamh's family, but added that Mrs Owen's offence was a traffic offence to be taken in isolation.
Mrs Owen wept in court after the verdict was announced.
The other driver received a 12 month ban and a £500 fine.
I will ask family - Ju-Ju has a pal who lives around the Billinge area. Another teacher.
Per the investigating police officer and a driving instructor who testified that the car was left in a very dangerous position on the bend.. it seems that the on-coming traffic were duped into a sort of "trompe l'oeil" in that the car appeared to be moving on their approach.
police officer in yesterday's Manchester wrote:
Drivers approaching this vehicle would have initially thought the car was moving normally .. and by the time they registered that it wasn't - it did not give them much time to react safely
The guy who lost control when he realised - probably to his horror - that the car was actually parked and could well have nightmare flashbacks to this incident - and who pleaded guilty to careless driving in court and was reported as being "shaken and horrified at this incident which killed a baby girl in her pram" - received a 12 month driving ban and a £500 fine.
Given this verdict .. that she was the catalyst and had she used common sense when she spotted the childminder pal and parked closer to the kerb and away from what I understand to be a rather tight bend from Ju-Ju (but have asked for a photo.. ) - then one has to wonder whether or not the other driver can appeal against the length of his ban under this circumstance
The other issue which this verdict raises is that of a charge of "dangeroous parking".
I have not heard of this one before and Jazz. I think common sense and a desire not to have anything collide with our "gleaming pride and joys" prevails for most of us "seasoned lovers of motors"
But stopping on a blind bend.. within 10 metres of a junction (rule 239 and 243 of NEW Highway Code

are the key issues .. but the set from 238-252 and rule 70 for cyclists

make sense to me anyway. Have no problems with these.

)
But the point for discussion just has to be
How far does contravening these rules back up a charge of dangerous parking - and does this charge only occur if an accident ... a tragic accident .. occurs as a result. Also what would be the burden of proof?
In this case.. clear cut because of the particular road lay-out .. and the fact she was way out into the carriageway when she "abandoned" the car?

I think a fair conviction.. but given what happened as a result and the severity of sentence handed down to the driver who collided with the pram as a result.. I think she has got off very lightly really. But is this because there are no guidelines as to how to punish such crass carelessness?
I think that's what I am getting at when I say this case opens up a can of worms to "debait" over....

(Could not resist the corny joke... getmecoat..

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