PeterE wrote:
What's next, I wonder - causing death while having a blown tail light?
The current law is in my view entirely adequate to prosecute people who have caused death while driving in a dangerous manner.
All this change will do is lock people up for making an honest mistake. That, of course, won't deter people from making mistakes in future.
The idea of having an offence of causing death while driving unlicenced interests me. But wouldn't such an action meet the definition of manslaughter?
I do hear about far to many road deaths involving unlicenced or disqualified drivers. These are difficult to address - and we hear about folk who come of out of clink and soon cause a big crash despite disqualification. How on earth do we address these - except perhaps by keeping them in prison for longer?
I also find the following arguments fairly persuasive:
* There's presently too big a gap between careless driving and causing death by dangerous driving.
* Families of victims of negligent driving deserve a sense of justice.
But we do have to draw a careful balance between "an honest mistake" and a "sense of justice". Sometimes victim's families seem to believe that it has to have been a big mistake to cause a death, but that's simply not true.