The Commons Transport Select Committee - chaired by Gwyneth Dunwoody calls for police to treat road deaths and serious injuries as seriously as manslaughter or GBH. It also rejects the prpoposals to reduce penalties for speeding (Surprised?)
Ms Dunwoody is calling for the charge of "careless driving" to be replaced by "causing death or serious injury by negligent driving - and this would give the courts a wider choice of options regarding sentences.
She also wants the police to make charge drivers with perverting the course of justice in addition to the failure to report charge - which we already have under s170 of the Road Traffic Act of 1988.
Now in the present - sentences take account of the accidental nature of the death - which is - in my opinion - the correct way of dealing with most cases.
We have a lot of provisions already - and the accidental v manslaughter are covered thus under present system.
Personally - I think it is adequate - the problem is down to the actual sentencing provision and political correctness on the part of judiciary once a guilty verdict has been returned.
Under s3 of the RTA Act of 1988 - we can bring a charge of driving without due consideration.
To make this stick - we have to prove the accused has fallen below the standard of a reasonable, prudent and competent driver in the cirumstances
and to have done so without due consideration for others. We would also have to prove that another road user was inconvenienced as well - such as forcing them to swerve, brake, move over. Basingwerk - this also applies to you over the tailgating post
If I see you flashing your lights to force someone to move out of your way (and car does not have BiB, complete with blue lights and whoo- whoos) - I can do you!
Misuse of lane, unnecessarily hogging an overtaking lane, braking without good cause (ie to teach a tailgater a lesson), driving unnecessarily
slowly like 10 mph below the posted limit

- I can have you - and in the light of a thread on the PH site (as reported to me by the Mad Cats) - driving through a puddle and splashing any person - though it helps if you are a BiB
Dangerous driving )S2 of above Act) - driving falls
far -far- far below that expected of a comptent driver - repeated disregard of traffic rules, deliberate disregard of traffic rules and signs, racing,
inappropriate speed for the prevailing road and conditions, aggressive and intimidating driving style - sudden lane changes, cutting up, tailgating, disregard of traffic lights, forcing a BiB to jump out of the way, anything which is not a monemtary blip, and a disproprtionate load.
Causing death whilst under the influence = undue care, driving has to have caused the death or injury of another and illegal substance has to be proven to have impaired the driver's skill and control.
Also the driver's driving must have been found to be a cause of the death - but not necessarily the sole cause of the death or injury
Similarly to get a charge of "causing death by dangerous driving" - element of above must be proven and again the dangerous driving must have been a contributory factor in the death. That is why we chould charge the driver who caused the sequence of events which led to mahali's child being killed with causin death by dangerous driving.
manslaughter - contrary to common law
There we have the very fine line....
Manslaughter is committed when the driver, in breach of a duty of care, is
criminally negligent as opposed to accidentally negligent and causes a death.
The offence at present is only triable on indictment. To charge driver with manslaughter under current legislation - CPS and ourselves (BiB) must be able to prove that driver has
1. been disqualified for two years or have 3-11 points on licence
2. Driver must be shown to have been in breach of a duty of care towards the person who died. (This is where there is a very grey area and why we go for lesser charges - burden of proof has to be greater because mandatory sentence is heavier than dangerous driving.)
3. CPS and BiB would have to
prove that the accused imperilled the lives of others by
* driving in manner which fell extremely far below the accepted standard
involved a significant risk of death as opposed to accidental risk which is norm each time we drive....
* driving in such an appalling way in all circumstances that the driving would constitute a crime in the opinion of the jury (R v Adomako 1994 - case which set precedent)
* if the vehicle has been used as means to initmidate, deliberately as instrument of attack.
We would very rarely bring a charge of manslaughter because we have so many others as listed above.
In the case of hit and run in a throwaway, recidivist bad driver, unlicenced, untaxed, uninsured who runs .....then - yes - sentences and charges should reflect the seriousness of the offence - and be higher But this assumes we manage to catch them....
Fixed Speed cams not very good at that ... which is why a policy of over reliance (as occurring elsewhere) does not work that well....
