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Cyclist's family consider private prosecution after no charges brought against driver

Police say insufficient evidence to charge motorist in connection with death of Michael Mason earlier this year

The family of Michael Mason, who died earlier this year after being struck by a car while riding his bike on London’s Regent Street, is taking legal advice on bringing a private prosecution against the driver of the vehicle. No charges have been brought against the motorist due to what police say is a lack of evidence, a decision the family may also seek to challenge.

A coroner’s inquest last week concluded that Mr Mason, whose life support machine was switched off in March, three weeks after the crash which happened at around 6.25pm on the evening of 28 February, was an “accident,” reports the London Evening Standard’s Ross Lydall.

Following the inquest, Mr Mason’s daughter, Anna Tatton-Brown, said: “I’m annoyed that the police have not taken any further action.

“I don’t think it sends a very good message to other drivers, or to cyclists that their lives are considered not worth protecting.

“You do wonder what more evidence they need to take action against a driver for killing someone.”

Mr Mason, a stand-in teacher who campaigned for safer roads for cyclists, was heading home to Kentish Town when he was struck by a Nissan Juke 4x4 being driven by Gale Purcell, who claimed at the inquest at Westminster Coroner’s Court that she had no seen him.

She said: “It was like something had fallen from the sky. I was totally unaware of a cyclist. I just heard an impact.”

Questioned by Martin Porter QC, Mrs Purcell admitted: “I should have seen him if he was [immediately ahead], but I didn’t see him.”

Police collision investigator PC Brian Gamble told the inquest “there was a view available” to the motorist of the cyclist through her vehicle’s windscreen, adding, “I’m unable to explain why Mrs Purcell was unable to react to his presence.”

Another officer, Detective Constable Andrew Meikle, said that while Mr Mason was seen cycling into the right-hand lane on CCTV footage, the moments immediately before the impact were not recorded.

He said: “The problem was that we couldn’t say what had happened in that vital 25 metres,” and that a detective inspector had decided last month not to seek to prosecute Mrs Purcell due to insufficient evidence.

According to the Evening Standard, Mrs Purcell has still not expressed remorse over Mr Mason’s death to his family, who are taking legal advice over a potential challenge to the decision not to refer the case for prosecution, as well as the chances of a private prosecution succeeding.

“I have tried to do what my dad would have wanted, said Ms Tatton-Brown. “He was quite livid about bad driving on London’s roads and cyclists not being protected and being very vulnerable. Were he alive now, he would be fighting this tooth and nail.”

Referring to Mrs Purcell, she said: “At some level, I would like her to be held responsible for killing my dad.

“I’m quite shocked by her admission that she should have seen him if he was in front of her. It’s the first time we have heard her explanation but it raises more questions than it answers.”

The crash left Mr Mason with broken ribs, a fractured skull and severe brain injuries and his life support machine was switched off four days after his 70th birthday after doctors said there was no prospect of his making a recovery.

After his death in March, Ms Tatton-Brown released a picture of her father in hospital to warn motorists of how vulnerable cyclists are.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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31 comments

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severs1966 replied to benb | 9 years ago
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benb wrote:

She ran him over from behind. What additional evidence do the police need to proceed with a prosecution?

No EVIDENCE is needed. That isn't what is missing here. What is missing is giving a damn whether someone lives or dies.

Sling your leg over a bicycle and the cops, the CPS, the system all stop caring about you. Around where I live. most cops would love it if cycling was simply stamped out. If that happens by the route of everyone on a bike being killed, that would be OK by them.

hampstead_bandit wrote:

When the hell are the Police going to do something about these people?.

Don't forget: Cops are all drivers, and hardly any of them are cyclists.

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