Pete317 wrote:
bmwk12 wrote:
Disagree Peter, just because someone is road legal, does not make it acceptable to kill anyone.
Driver error is what kills, this is what needs to be tackled. No matter how small the error.
OK, let's try a hypothetical situation.
You're driving along the motorway when a wasp flies through the window and stings you on the eye. Disoriented with shock and pain, you swerve all over the road, and an HGV, in an attempt to avoid hitting you, loses it, crosses the central reservation and hits a coach, killing 20 people.
You get sent to prison for 10 years and lose your house, your family, everything.
You had absolutely not the remotest intention of harming anybody, but you did - and you are punished very severely. It could happen, similar things have happened. Is this justice?
Regards
Peter
Rather think the wasp sting in the eye would be regarded by courts as unforeseen accident and dealt with accordingly and with some understanding of the mitigating circumstance.
The chap who rear-ended my wife had heart attack behind the wheel of his car - and he died. At the inquest and enquiry - he was absolved from blame as this was unforeseen circumstance. This impacted on our insurance claim from his insurers. My wife's insurance company was unable to reclaim their pay-out for my wife's medical care as result of this. We then faced a stiff legal battle with the insurance company regarding the damages' claims. My wife was very, very seriously injured at the time, and it took us years of legal wrangling to resolve the claim!
Much depends upon whether or not error was reasonably foreseeable in the legal arguments - and circumstances and seriousness of the outcome.
This applies to me every day in my normal work - I make a mistake, do not identify a virus properly, supply wrong blood to a patient - great hullaballo in the papers and I become the murdering careless doc in the dock!

(Wildy is in similar situation - she gets her work wrong, and everybody gets high as kites!

)