Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Another pathetic outcome from death caused by a driver

https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/hit...

For a change a pedestrian.
“One of her dipped headlights was not working on the day of the incident and there’s evidence to suggest that it had not been working for about three weeks,''

"stood trial accused of causing death by careless driving with prosecutors accusing her of being 'distracted' by the phone call.

But she was cleared of the charge, having earlier admitted failing to stop or report an accident. Her licence was endorsed with eight penalty points but she was spared a driving ban."

I suppose it was the Dr Helen Measures defence
"It wasn't my fault he fell over".

If you're new please join in and if you have questions pop them below and the forum regulars will answer as best we can.

Add new comment

29 comments

Avatar
MariaMartinez | 6 years ago
0 likes

fine of £500, are you joking. I got exactly the same fine for driving 34 in a 30. I am not kidding. exactly the same.

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet replied to MariaMartinez | 6 years ago
0 likes

MariaMartinez wrote:

fine of £500, are you joking. I got exactly the same fine for driving 34 in a 30. I am not kidding. exactly the same.

You must be kidding considering the standard speeding fine for that range over the limit is £100 and 3 points or one of those 'educational' courses.

Sure you didn't do 64 in a 30?

This from the horse's mouth

Getting a Fixed Penalty Notice

If you get an FPN you can choose to plead guilty or not guilty.

If you plead guilty

You’ll have to pay a £100 fine and have 3 points added to your licence, unless you’re given the option to attend a speed awareness course.

Avatar
Shades | 6 years ago
0 likes

This made me think about my change in behaviour at zebra crossings.  For years I used to cross and assume that cars had seen me (when traffic was light).  After some 'close calls' I've started waiting until cars slow, or stop, before I cross.  People just don't pay attention and then look at you accusingly when they've had to stop in a hurry.

Avatar
kil0ran replied to Shades | 6 years ago
0 likes

Shades wrote:

This made me think about my change in behaviour at zebra crossings.  For years I used to cross and assume that cars had seen me (when traffic was light).  After some 'close calls' I've started waiting until cars slow, or stop, before I cross.  People just don't pay attention and then look at you accusingly when they've had to stop in a hurry.

I use the same approach as I do on the bike - make eye contact and maintain it. Positive body language goes a long way. We've got two zebra crossings in the town and people run them all the time. Got yelled at by a Porsche 911 driver for making her stop recently, apparantly I should have waited for her to clear the crossing before stepping off the kerb

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to kil0ran | 6 years ago
1 like

kil0ran wrote:

Shades wrote:

This made me think about my change in behaviour at zebra crossings.  For years I used to cross and assume that cars had seen me (when traffic was light).  After some 'close calls' I've started waiting until cars slow, or stop, before I cross.  People just don't pay attention and then look at you accusingly when they've had to stop in a hurry.

I use the same approach as I do on the bike - make eye contact and maintain it. Positive body language goes a long way. We've got two zebra crossings in the town and people run them all the time. Got yelled at by a Porsche 911 driver for making her stop recently, apparantly I should have waited for her to clear the crossing before stepping off the kerb

The problem with Zebra crossings is that there seems to be confusion about the rules.

The Highway Code states:

Rule 195 wrote:

Zebra crossings. As you approach a zebra crossing

  • look out for pedestrians waiting to cross and be ready to slow down or stop to let them cross
  • you MUST give way when a pedestrian has moved onto a crossing
  • allow more time for stopping on wet or icy roads
  • do not wave or use your horn to invite pedestrians across; this could be dangerous if another vehicle is approaching
  • be aware of pedestrians approaching from the side of the crossing.

A zebra crossing with a central island is two separate crossings (see ‘Crossings’).

So, cars only HAVE to stop if you actually step out onto the crossing, otherwise it's optional. It seems wrong, but as a pedestrian the onus is for you to step out in front of moving vehicles. However, if they hit you, then it would be their mistake.

Avatar
kil0ran replied to hawkinspeter | 6 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

kil0ran wrote:

Shades wrote:

This made me think about my change in behaviour at zebra crossings.  For years I used to cross and assume that cars had seen me (when traffic was light).  After some 'close calls' I've started waiting until cars slow, or stop, before I cross.  People just don't pay attention and then look at you accusingly when they've had to stop in a hurry.

I use the same approach as I do on the bike - make eye contact and maintain it. Positive body language goes a long way. We've got two zebra crossings in the town and people run them all the time. Got yelled at by a Porsche 911 driver for making her stop recently, apparantly I should have waited for her to clear the crossing before stepping off the kerb

The problem with Zebra crossings is that there seems to be confusion about the rules.

The Highway Code states:

Rule 195 wrote:

Zebra crossings. As you approach a zebra crossing

  • look out for pedestrians waiting to cross and be ready to slow down or stop to let them cross
  • you MUST give way when a pedestrian has moved onto a crossing
  • allow more time for stopping on wet or icy roads
  • do not wave or use your horn to invite pedestrians across; this could be dangerous if another vehicle is approaching
  • be aware of pedestrians approaching from the side of the crossing.

A zebra crossing with a central island is two separate crossings (see ‘Crossings’).

So, cars only HAVE to stop if you actually step out onto the crossing, otherwise it's optional. It seems wrong, but as a pedestrian the onus is for you to step out in front of moving vehicles. However, if they hit you, then it would be their mistake.

Poor road design is behind a bunch of conflict in my town - we have a zebra on a bend where the pavement narrows on one side of the road. Parking regs aren't enforced so invariably there are parked cars (not actually on the zig zag markings) that you need to overtake without knowing what's coming. So drivers accelerate because they see oncoming vehicles and then fail to process that there's a zebra coming up which they then have to brake for. One fatality and a couple of serious injuries as a result in the last ten years...

https://goo.gl/maps/E1fVx432sSm

 

Avatar
brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 6 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

kil0ran wrote:

Shades wrote:

This made me think about my change in behaviour at zebra crossings.  For years I used to cross and assume that cars had seen me (when traffic was light).  After some 'close calls' I've started waiting until cars slow, or stop, before I cross.  People just don't pay attention and then look at you accusingly when they've had to stop in a hurry.

I use the same approach as I do on the bike - make eye contact and maintain it. Positive body language goes a long way. We've got two zebra crossings in the town and people run them all the time. Got yelled at by a Porsche 911 driver for making her stop recently, apparantly I should have waited for her to clear the crossing before stepping off the kerb

The problem with Zebra crossings is that there seems to be confusion about the rules.

The Highway Code states:

Rule 195 wrote:

Zebra crossings. As you approach a zebra crossing

  • look out for pedestrians waiting to cross and be ready to slow down or stop to let them cross
  • you MUST give way when a pedestrian has moved onto a crossing
  • allow more time for stopping on wet or icy roads
  • do not wave or use your horn to invite pedestrians across; this could be dangerous if another vehicle is approaching
  • be aware of pedestrians approaching from the side of the crossing.

A zebra crossing with a central island is two separate crossings (see ‘Crossings’).

So, cars only HAVE to stop if you actually step out onto the crossing, otherwise it's optional. It seems wrong, but as a pedestrian the onus is for you to step out in front of moving vehicles. However, if they hit you, then it would be their mistake.

Do you remember the days when motorists would wait until a pedestrian was all the way across and off the crossing, too, before they carried on with their Ever So Important Journey?

(And the Trigger Happy TV sketch with the bloke dressed as a snail crossing a zebra crossing...? - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-v7w5CL6EU )

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

Do you remember the days when motorists would wait until a pedestrian was all the way across and off the crossing, too, before they carried on with their Ever So Important Journey?

(And the Trigger Happy TV sketch with the bloke dressed as a snail crossing a zebra crossing...? - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-v7w5CL6EU )

Ah yes, the days when Dom Joly was funny.

To be fair, a lot of drivers are very patient and considerate around crossings - probably a lot more patient than I am on my bike (I will often go behind a pedestrian when they have mostly crossed). It's the problematic 5% that aren't paying attention or are too self-absorbed to stop.

Avatar
PRSboy replied to kil0ran | 6 years ago
0 likes

kil0ran wrote:

Shades wrote:

This made me think about my change in behaviour at zebra crossings.  For years I used to cross and assume that cars had seen me (when traffic was light).  After some 'close calls' I've started waiting until cars slow, or stop, before I cross.  People just don't pay attention and then look at you accusingly when they've had to stop in a hurry.

I use the same approach as I do on the bike - make eye contact and maintain it. Positive body language goes a long way. We've got two zebra crossings in the town and people run them all the time. Got yelled at by a Porsche 911 driver for making her stop recently, apparantly I should have waited for her to clear the crossing before stepping off the kerb

 

This.  Also, look at vehicles approaching behind the one that's stopped for you, make sure they are also slowing...

Avatar
Argos74 | 6 years ago
2 likes

Judge Bernadette Baxter wrote:

“I understand this has been an extremely stressful time for you and you are genuinely remorseful for not having stopped and reporting the accident. I hope you understand just how dangerous that behaviour was.

Poor dear. Maybe she needs counselling and a cup of tea, not a twenty year driving ban after all.

In any case, a swift Google search reveals this to be a long, long way from being the most eyebrow raising judgement from Judge Baxter.

Avatar
Pushing50 | 6 years ago
4 likes

A similar story here in Hampshire:

https://www.portsmouth.co.uk/news/crime/hampshire-woman-jailed-for-runni...

However the man who was run over in this case did not die and I assume that the driver did not "slink away" from the scene. So the question is; why just the £500 fine and eight points for the first incident where a life is taken, but a jail term, 2 year ban, with extended driving test for the second incident where there is no fatality? Where is the consisteny?

Avatar
vonhelmet | 6 years ago
0 likes

Is it better to see something and fail to act - or be unable to act - or to not see something in the first place because you can't see or weren't looking?  That's the nub of what you're asking.  Neither is really acceptable, whether you're driving a car or riding a bike.

Avatar
CygnusX1 replied to vonhelmet | 6 years ago
0 likes

vonhelmet wrote:

Is it better to see something and fail to act - or be unable to act - or to not see something in the first place because you can't see or weren't looking?  That's the nub of what you're asking.  Neither is really acceptable, whether you're driving a car or riding a bike.

From numerous cases it seems to be that not seeing is far better as far as the courts are concerned (in a motorised vehicle anyway). 

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will | 6 years ago
2 likes

Yeah, but this is all splitting hairs... one was a pressured situation potentially exacerbated by a non-functional front brake (read missing), the other was pure lack of attention... potentially exacerbated by non-functional front light. 

Which you feel is more serious is up to you I guess.

Personally speaking, I believe ignoring / not seeing / reacting to (or any combination of those) someone who is lying in full view for 10 seconds prior to impact is demonstrative of a lower standard of driving than someone not avoiding someone stepping out infront of them. 

Say what you will about attitudes or chosen avoidance tactics, Alliston didn't simply ignore the presence of his victim. 

 

Avatar
davel replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 6 years ago
3 likes

Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

Yeah, but this is all splitting hairs... one was a pressured situation potentially exacerbated by a non-functional front brake (read missing), the other was pure lack of attention... potentially exacerbated by non-functional front light. 

Which you feel is more serious is up to you I guess.

Personally speaking, I believe ignoring / not seeing / reacting to (or any combination of those) someone who is lying in full view for 10 seconds prior to impact is demonstrative of a lower standard of driving than someone not avoiding someone stepping out infront of them. 

Say what you will about attitudes or chosen avoidance tactics, Alliston didn't simply ignore the presence of his victim. 

 

Our sentences, nay, laws, need a hefty dose of objectivity. Judges can't help themselves with their biases. 

Which I feel is more serious is dictated by physics. Daft bint in 1000kg of metal at 28mph vs silly twat on a bike at 10-14mph.

Take Charlie boy's other brake off, skull tattoo his entire face, inject him with Pol Pot's 'attitude' and have him screaming obscenities that I haven't even heard of - as a ped I'd still rather face him 10 times out of 10.

Avatar
alansmurphy replied to davel | 6 years ago
1 like

davel wrote:

Take Charlie boy's other brake off, skull tattoo his entire face, inject him with Pol Pot's 'attitude' and have him screaming obscenities that I haven't even heard of - as a ped I'd still rather face him 10 times out of 10.

Or put your new version of Charlie in a car, with no brakes, defective tyres, perhaps no insurance, speeding, having a beer... He'd have done less time!

Avatar
vonhelmet | 6 years ago
1 like

He tried to avoid her by swerving, but not by slowing, which was pretty stupid. It’s like when you’re walking towards someone and one of you has to get out of the way and you both go left, then you both go right, then you stop and say sorry and you walk past each other. It was just like that except he was going at 18mph and he didn’t have the means to stop and he didn’t say sorry.

Avatar
Verycroix | 6 years ago
7 likes

So, Charlie Alliston,  riding a fixed wheel bike at 18 mph with no front brake, swerved to avoid a pedestrian who walks back into his path and is killed, jailed for 18 months. Anna Edwards, driving at 28 mph with a faulty front light and on a hands free, fails to see pedestrian lying in road, doesn't swerve and drives over and kills him, fails to stop, fined £500 and 8 points on her licence.  Why don't cyclists use the bag of rubbish defence, or fell from the sky, or as above, the Helen Measures my life is of greater value excuse?

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Verycroix | 6 years ago
0 likes

Verycroix wrote:

So, Charlie Alliston,  riding a fixed wheel bike at 18 mph with no front brake, swerved to avoid a pedestrian who walks back into his path and is killed, jailed for 18 months. Anna Edwards, driving at 28 mph with a faulty front light and on a hands free, fails to see pedestrian lying in road, doesn't swerve and drives over and kills him, fails to stop, fined £500 and 8 points on her licence.  Why don't cyclists use the bag of rubbish defence, or fell from the sky, or as above, the Helen Measures my life is of greater value excuse?

I do agree that cyclists are heavily penalised and motorists seem to be given a pass, but Charlie Alliston's sentence was more to do with his attitude than his lack of a front brake so is not a great example to use.

Her Honour Judge Wendy Joseph QC wrote:

On your own evidence by this stage you weren’t even trying to slow or stop. You expected her to get out of your way. Thus I make it clear that it was not merely the absence of a front brake but your whole manner of riding that caused this accident

https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/sentencing-remarks-h...

Avatar
brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 6 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

Verycroix wrote:

So, Charlie Alliston,  riding a fixed wheel bike at 18 mph with no front brake, swerved to avoid a pedestrian who walks back into his path and is killed, jailed for 18 months. Anna Edwards, driving at 28 mph with a faulty front light and on a hands free, fails to see pedestrian lying in road, doesn't swerve and drives over and kills him, fails to stop, fined £500 and 8 points on her licence.  Why don't cyclists use the bag of rubbish defence, or fell from the sky, or as above, the Helen Measures my life is of greater value excuse?

I do agree that cyclists are heavily penalised and motorists seem to be given a pass, but Charlie Alliston's sentence was more to do with his attitude than his lack of a front brake so is not a great example to use.

Her Honour Judge Wendy Joseph QC wrote:

On your own evidence by this stage you weren’t even trying to slow or stop. You expected her to get out of your way. Thus I make it clear that it was not merely the absence of a front brake but your whole manner of riding that caused this accident

https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/sentencing-remarks-h...

I thought Alliston *had* tried to avoid her, and had shouted to alert her to his presence (presumably equivalent to a motorist blaring their horn), before she stepped back into his way?

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

Verycroix wrote:

So, Charlie Alliston,  riding a fixed wheel bike at 18 mph with no front brake, swerved to avoid a pedestrian who walks back into his path and is killed, jailed for 18 months. Anna Edwards, driving at 28 mph with a faulty front light and on a hands free, fails to see pedestrian lying in road, doesn't swerve and drives over and kills him, fails to stop, fined £500 and 8 points on her licence.  Why don't cyclists use the bag of rubbish defence, or fell from the sky, or as above, the Helen Measures my life is of greater value excuse?

I do agree that cyclists are heavily penalised and motorists seem to be given a pass, but Charlie Alliston's sentence was more to do with his attitude than his lack of a front brake so is not a great example to use.

Her Honour Judge Wendy Joseph QC wrote:

On your own evidence by this stage you weren’t even trying to slow or stop. You expected her to get out of your way. Thus I make it clear that it was not merely the absence of a front brake but your whole manner of riding that caused this accident

https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/sentencing-remarks-h...

I thought Alliston *had* tried to avoid her, and had shouted to alert her to his presence (presumably equivalent to a motorist blaring their horn), before she stepped back into his way?

Here's some more from the Judge's remarks:

Quote:

It was clear to you that she was in danger. It was your responsibility as a road-user to ensure you did not run into her. This must have been obvious to you, and you did indeed swerve and slow to between 10-14 mph as you went through the yellow-box at the junction of Old St and
Charlotte Road. You shouted at her twice to (in your own words) ‘get out of the fucking way’. She reached almost the centre of the road but could not go further because of on-coming traffic. On your own account you did not try to slow any more but, having shouted at her twice, you took the view she should get out of your way.

Avatar
vonhelmet | 6 years ago
4 likes

People don’t take driving seriously, is the problem. You aren’t distracted from driving, driving is a distraction from dicking around on your phone. The sooner we can engineer out the need for driving, the better.

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will | 6 years ago
5 likes

Do you know what, I can almost understand the mentality... I would imagine its simply disbelief, an unwillingness to accept the reality of the situation.

The fact she turned around meant that she knew what she hit, but having done so, I guess she still wasn't ready to accept what she had done.

And this is a societal problem which you see more and more... and arguably, could it be a natural fall-out of the 'nanny-state' world we live in.

There is so much H&S focused initiatives in nearly every aspect of our life that I believe that its all too easy to take our safety for granted. In doing so, it is all too easy to neglect your responsibilities to keep yourself safe, and also to conduct yourself in a way that protects the safety of others.

And do you know what, most of the time, the infrastruture, rules and processes in place to protect our safety work well, but this case shows you just how fragile things are as soon as you move from the status quo.

A man falls into the road, and despite being visible for a full 10 seconds is still run over. Why? Because he shouldn't be there, so she wasn't looking for him... her approach to driving was to commit as little focus as possible and nothing more. Normally, with everyone playing along nicely, this approach works... the sad outcome in this case is the inevitable result of testing it. 

What to me is the big problem here is that the above has been excused, no question to answer, no blame given. That is a sad reflection of the state of our society, and why we will ultimately move to driverless cars... we can not be trusted behind the wheel.

As for this lady, I hope that deep down, she knows what she did, she knows how avoidable that death was, and that moving forward she changes her approach so that there is no repeat. That at least means there is one less idle driver on the roads. 

Avatar
brooksby | 6 years ago
1 like

Quote:

Quote:

Edwards briefly returned to the scene - then drove past slowly before slinking away.

How do you "slink away" while driving a car?  They're not exactly small and subtle...

Avatar
don simon fbpe | 6 years ago
2 likes

Quote:

drove over Mr Croxon as he lay in the road - then carried on driving.

Quote:

Edwards briefly returned to the scene - then drove past slowly before slinking away.

What sort of person does that?

You think that the little chubster is pretty? I know there's enough photos in the MEN to form an opinion, but...

 

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to don simon fbpe | 6 years ago
2 likes

don simon wrote:

Quote:

drove over Mr Croxon as he lay in the road - then carried on driving.

Quote:

Edwards briefly returned to the scene - then drove past slowly before slinking away.

What sort of person does that?

A psychopath?

  • Lack of guilt/remorse
  • Lack of empathy
  • Lack of deep emotional attachments
  • Narcissism
  • Superficial charm
  • Dishonesty
  • Manipulativeness
  • Reckless risk-taking
Avatar
don simon fbpe replied to hawkinspeter | 6 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

don simon wrote:

Quote:

drove over Mr Croxon as he lay in the road - then carried on driving.

Quote:

Edwards briefly returned to the scene - then drove past slowly before slinking away.

What sort of person does that?

A psychopath?

  • Lack of guilt/remorse
  • Lack of empathy
  • Lack of deep emotional attachments
  • Narcissism
  • Superficial charm
  • Dishonesty
  • Manipulativeness
  • Reckless risk-taking

Why yes! Some would say that she's pretty.

Avatar
vonhelmet | 6 years ago
0 likes

She’s pretty, he was a bit tipsy. Justice has been served.

Avatar
hawkinspeter | 6 years ago
5 likes

It seems that not paying attention is now considered "normal" driving.

So, which of the political parties is supposed to be "tough on crime"?

Latest Comments