Some quotes from :
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... crash.htmlhere ...There seem to be a lot pf mistakes if the following is truly correct :
At noon in dry good visibility & conditions :
1) Maltby, in her silver Vauxhall Corsa in the L1 of a dual carriageway when she turned right
(to cross a gap in the central reservation).
[NO to carry out a Right Turn, but there is NO mention that she is trying for the slip raod, just 'the gap' so had she missed the slip road altogether too !].
2) then .... Appleby (in car) says that he "narrowly avoided hitting Maltby's car,
as she appeared to start to turn right in front of him.
[implying that - he drove to his right into the right 'slip road section' to give himself space to drive around her.]
3) In Appleby's mirror, he sees the lorry behind him also swerve "around the inside of her car to avoid hitting it."
(Now does he also mean that the lorry also went into the slip road section or "inside" being 'behind her car ? ) I cannot tell, But IF that is true .... then ....
4) Booth who was driving behind (the bike ?) says that he "saw Maltby pull out in front of Sgt Walsham's motorcycle".
[BUT if she was stationery she could not be 'moving' had she stopped ? or Paused ? - How FAR out was the front of her car ... as .....
4a) Booth says "I could see the Vauxhall Corsa heading towards the central reservation. The car was going really slowly at a snail's pace."
[so we 'can' think then that she was at least NOW (after the 2 near misses)
continued towards the 'gap' !!!
5) "The reconstruction (by police) suggested that Sgt Walsham might have been only 50 metres away when Maltby turned in front of him, said Mr Crimp." (Prosecutor)
So we can surmise from this that :
a) Maltby failed to :
see the two near misses with her car,
continues in spite of other traffic about,
IF she HAD paused, actually carries ON, and, STILL failing to observe the 2nd lane, the traffic, the distant slip lane,
continues to fail to observe,
takes NO avoiding action at all,
goes extremely slowly, in spite of the dangers Already going on about her !
She failed to plan ahead (use the 'B' road after in stationery / slow moving traffic,), she ought to have been in L2 and ready to use the slip road.
b) Appleby has failed to :
predict that anyone in the traffic MIGHT try to exit into the nearby junction, especially with slow / stopped traffic,
fails to allow for this possibility, and slow to enable anyone to,
failed to observe her moving, and steering, failed ot observe her looking at the 'opening',
(whether he was also driving closely to the vehicle that he was following - as he had her "appeared to start to turn right in front of him",
he then had NO time to do anything other than avoiding action which worked, so he had some space to consider his actions and allow time for them, albeit last minute.
c) the lorry also had to swerve, and so with his higher up vision, he failed :
to observe properly ahead,
also likely that he too had not left a good gap, and certainly only just enough 'time to react',
again showing that lack of concentration and forethought with the junction to their right,
his failure to observe this potential event is worse as he was further back, and had more time to observe,
d) the motorbike ....
Hummm oh dear
well IF he IS following the lorry and with ALL his massed knowledge what went wrong !
where was his 'gap', his observation, his anticipation, his checks,
what was he thinking of ?
How come he didn't even see the car - he has to have been following the lorry FAR to closely,
he cannot have seen much ..... but we have not been told about skid marks or avoidance manoeuvres or impact speeds ...
MANY people went wrong on this day,
many people made, many fundamental errors,
and the person most likely to have anticipated, and allowed for ALL, of the errors 'of others' failed in his own ability, when he needed all his skill and judgement most !
Perhaps failed in the most basic too - leave a good gap behind the lorry (to enable good visibility), to always have an escape route ... where was his ?
(He helped other motorbiker's and was a trained Police motorbiker, so he had many good training skills behind him to instinctively use).
Everyone involved here,
Failed to Have Good Concentration, Observation or Anticipation,
They coupled this too, with failure to plan for possible predictable behaviours.
There are also probably a host of other local drivers too that have failed to assist her in her 'intentions', helped by leaving a larger gap behind her (enable her indicator to be more visible - no idea if it was or was not on), vehicles in L2 even considering of a L1 intentions into the junction, trying to show courtesy and consideration. Even others seeing her actions and indicating right too may have given L2 traffic a warning.