Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Girl band pop star jailed for killing Hertfordshire cyclist

M.O. singer Nadine Samuels failed to look before crashing into Debbie Mills at roundabout in Hemel Hempstead

The lead singer of a girl band has been jailed for eight months after pleading guilty to causing the death of a cyclist by careless driving in March this year.

Sr Albans Crown Court heard that Nadine Samuels, a member of the group M.O., failed to look as she approached a roundabout in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire in her Ford Ka, reports The Mirror.

She hit Debbie Mills, aged 54, with the impact throwing the cyclist against the car’s windscreen then onto the road.

Mrs Mills, who was wearing a cycle helmet, was taken by air ambulance to hospital where she died from traumatic brain injuries sustained in the collision.

Samuels, aged 27, told police that she had looked to her right as she approached the roundabout in the outside lane, and that the road was clear.

But Martin Mulgrew, prosecuting, told the court: "The defendant failed entirely to check the road ahead was clear. Other road users had stopped."

Simon Gledhill, defending Samuels, said that she was not familiar with the road, the A414, and was using a sat-nav for directions.

Sentencing Samuels to eight months’ imprisonment and banning her from driving for two years and four months, Judge Michael Kay QC said: "You did not see Mrs Mills. You did not stop and you collided with her bicycle and she was knocked off. Very tragically she died from her injuries.

"You stopped and you were distraught and you were heard to repeatedly say: 'I didn't see her. I didn't see her.'

"There is nothing I can say or do which can restore a life to a bereaved family. My heart goes out to them."

One of Mrs Mills’ three children, Josh, said that she had started cycling as a hobby, adding, "We will miss her dearly,"

Her husband Kevin said: "We had been married for almost 25 years. We had planned our first holiday together without the children.

"We planned to do so much together. We have suffered so much since Debbie died. Her life has been taken from us."

Samuels was a founder member of M.O. when it was formed in 2012. Two years later, the group was the main support act on Little Mix on their Salute Tour in Britain and Ireland, and this year achieved their second UK top 20 single.

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.

Add new comment

40 comments

Avatar
vonhelmet | 5 years ago
0 likes

If you don’t know the answer to a question then saying so is the best answer to that question... Your other choice is pretending and making something up which is far worse.

Avatar
mike the bike replied to vonhelmet | 5 years ago
2 likes

vonhelmet wrote:

If you don’t know the answer to a question then saying so is the best answer to that question... Your other choice is pretending and making something up which is far worse.

You do realise that your method undermines my complete armoury of techniques for making amusing and memorable conversation?  Have you no pity?

Avatar
Housecathst | 5 years ago
8 likes

“and gave two Highway Code recommended warnings,”

the judge used those warnings against him in the sentencing, apparently it show what Charlie believed it was up to the ped to get out of his way. I can only assume that this new case law will be used against any motorist that uses their horn in similar circumstances in the future, lol 

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds replied to Housecathst | 5 years ago
5 likes

Housecathst wrote:

“and gave two Highway Code recommended warnings,”

the judge used those warnings against him in the sentencing, apparently it show what Charlie believed it was up to the ped to get out of his way. I can only assume that this new case law will be used against any motorist that uses their horn in similar circumstances in the future, lol 

Using a horn as motorists do is saying 'get out the fucking way', the report last week of the motorist sounding their horn 4 or 5 times before mowing down a cyclist and killing them was glossed over as if it was nothing, yet shouting a an audible warning is totally different, why?

That the women who collided with alliston clearly didn't hear his audible warning means whatever language he used, she never heard it.

I'm making the point that he was stiched up like a kipper, he had the law used against him in a way no motorist or pedestrian ever has, including the massively flawed braking test by plod which was a disgrace it even got to court!

Avatar
vonhelmet | 5 years ago
1 like

Allison behaved like a bellend and was treated as such.

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will replied to vonhelmet | 5 years ago
11 likes

vonhelmet wrote:

Allison behaved like a bellend and was treated as such.

 

I'm sorry, but being a bell end in the heat of the moment / without full knowledge of the facts, should have little difference on the length of your prison sentence. 

if you don't think the Alliston case was a witch hunt already, I'd encourage you to think about the fundamentals some more. 

Avatar
FluffyKittenofT... replied to vonhelmet | 5 years ago
6 likes

vonhelmet wrote:

Allison behaved like a bellend and was treated as such.

 

But there's no internationally agreed standard for the treatment of bellends. (And no ISO standardized unit of fuckwittery.)

 

  He was treated more harshly, and certainly more ineptly (that stupid police 're-enactment'), than motorists are when they do similar things.   Whether his treatment should have been milder or that of motorists harsher, is a matter for individual preferences, but the double-standard seemed obvious to me.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 5 years ago
2 likes

FluffyKittenofTindalos wrote:

vonhelmet wrote:

Allison behaved like a bellend and was treated as such.

 

But there's no internationally agreed standard for the treatment of bellends. (And no ISO standardized unit of fuckwittery.)

 

  He was treated more harshly, and certainly more ineptly (that stupid police 're-enactment'), than motorists are when they do similar things.   Whether his treatment should have been milder or that of motorists harsher, is a matter for individual preferences, but the double-standard seemed obvious to me.

I propose the new ISO standard be called the Trump.

I've got no idea how to measure it though and there could be difficulties defining it in terms of other units.

Avatar
burtthebike replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
2 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

I propose the new ISO standard be called the Trump.

I've got no idea how to measure it though and there could be difficulties defining it in terms of other units.

A question worthy of the imagination of Douglas Adams; remember the monetary exchange units?

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to burtthebike | 5 years ago
6 likes

burtthebike wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

I propose the new ISO standard be called the Trump.

I've got no idea how to measure it though and there could be difficulties defining it in terms of other units.

A question worthy of the imagination of Douglas Adams; remember the monetary exchange units?

I wonder what Douglas Adams would have said about Trump? Oh wait - I don't have to guess, he presciently wrote about him as Zaphod Beeblebrox:

Quote:

The President is very much a figurehead — he wields no real power whatsoever. For this reason the President is always a controversial choice, always an infuriating but fascinating character. His job is not to wield power but to draw attention away from it. On those criteria Zaphod Beeblebrox is one of the most successful Presidents the Galaxy has ever had- he has already spent two of his ten presidential years in prison for fraud.

Or would this be more accurate:

Quote:

One of the major difficulties Trillian experienced in her relationship with Zaphod was learning to distinguish between him pretending to be stupid just to get people off their guard, pretending to be stupid because he couldn’t be bothered to think and wanted someone else to do it for him, pretending to be outrageously stupid to hide the fact that he actually didn’t understand what was going on, and really being genuinely stupid. He was renowned for being amazingly clever and quite clearly was so — but not all the time, which obviously worried him, hence the act. He preferred people to be puzzled rather than contemptuous.

Avatar
brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

burtthebike wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

I propose the new ISO standard be called the Trump.

I've got no idea how to measure it though and there could be difficulties defining it in terms of other units.

A question worthy of the imagination of Douglas Adams; remember the monetary exchange units?

I wonder what Douglas Adams would have said about Trump? Oh wait - I don't have to guess, he presciently wrote about him as Zaphod Beeblebrox:

Quote:

The President is very much a figurehead — he wields no real power whatsoever. For this reason the President is always a controversial choice, always an infuriating but fascinating character. His job is not to wield power but to draw attention away from it. On those criteria Zaphod Beeblebrox is one of the most successful Presidents the Galaxy has ever had- he has already spent two of his ten presidential years in prison for fraud.

Or would this be more accurate:

Quote:

One of the major difficulties Trillian experienced in her relationship with Zaphod was learning to distinguish between him pretending to be stupid just to get people off their guard, pretending to be stupid because he couldn’t be bothered to think and wanted someone else to do it for him, pretending to be outrageously stupid to hide the fact that he actually didn’t understand what was going on, and really being genuinely stupid. He was renowned for being amazingly clever and quite clearly was so — but not all the time, which obviously worried him, hence the act. He preferred people to be puzzled rather than contemptuous.

Or, we have Zaphod's "I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that I don’t know the answer." which I think is pretty much a Trumpism too.

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
10 likes

And as per usual this story is tucked away with barely a register on msm, this pos gets a sentence 2.5x LESS than that of Alliston, he was slowing down (to less than half that of Samuels in a ton of metal) he was steering away and gave two Highway Code recommended warnings, she did neither. Why is their such a massive discrepency in the way these deaths are reported and how they are prosecuted.

Even the judge in the Alliston case ignored that Alliston did show some remorse - his reaction on social media (that of a scred kid IMHO) was clearly used as a tool against him and was punished for that too.

She will go back to her life, hardly anyone will know that she killed an innocent human being and hardly anyone will care. Very likely to be 4 months in a womens prison, which in no way is anything like what Alliston will experience. I've not heard of Alliston being released, I'm sure it would get huge media coverage if it had, so that's 14 months inside so far if he hasn't been released.

Yup, British 'justice'

Avatar
brooksby replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
5 likes

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

I've not heard of Alliston being released, I'm sure it would get huge media coverage if it had, so that's 14 months inside so far if he hasn't been released.

I would have thought he'd be out by now, surely?  Probably gone very undercover to hide from the tabloids, probably somewhere nobody would have heard of him, where nobody who rides would ever set foot...

Probably working in a Halfords yes 

Avatar
burtthebike replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
2 likes

brooksby wrote:

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

I've not heard of Alliston being released, I'm sure it would get huge media coverage if it had, so that's 14 months inside so far if he hasn't been released.

I would have thought he'd be out by now, surely?  Probably gone very undercover to hide from the tabloids, probably somewhere nobody would have heard of him, where nobody who rides would ever set foot...

Probably working in a Halfords yes 

Given the very determined and vengeful husband of the woman he killed, I would be keeping a very low profile indeed.  Never mind Halfords, working nights stacking shelves in the local supermarket in Aberystwyth.

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
0 likes

Plenty of stats and studies out there to support my opinion that young females are the demographic most likely to suffer from social media addiction and also mental health problems associated with this new age of narcisism.

Here's a sample from literally the first study I pulled up on google.

The effect size for sex was considered as small-to-medium, thus substantially meaningful, with women having higher addictive social media use score. This finding suggests that women are more at risk in developing addictive behaviors to activities involving elements of social interaction, whereas men tend to develop problematic use of more asocial and/or solitary activities (e.g., video gaming)

Once again we see be ignoring that men and women are indeed different creatures with different habits.

 

Avatar
madcarew replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
2 likes

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Plenty of stats and studies out there to support my opinion that young females are the demographic most likely to suffer from social media addiction and also mental health problems associated with this new age of narcisism.

Here's a sample from literally the first study I pulled up on google.

The effect size for sex was considered as small-to-medium, thus substantially meaningful, with women having higher addictive social media use score. This finding suggests that women are more at risk in developing addictive behaviors to activities involving elements of social interaction, whereas men tend to develop problematic use of more asocial and/or solitary activities (e.g., video gaming)

Once again we see be ignoring that men and women are indeed different creatures with different habits.

 

Your comment was the very definition of sexism. What you are now doing is called confirmation bias. You may well be right that women are more likely to have an accident due to mobile phone use, but the studies that would back up your argument are those that relate to women (and all drivers) having accidents whilst on the mobile phone, as the study you chose has nothing to do with that at all. Women are generally more careful drivers than men (as insurance premiums reflect). 

Your comment was made simply as a sexist comment which you are now trying to back up. Even if you are proven right, your comment was still sexist as it was made at the time on supposition and generalisation about the behaviour of one sex... which is pretty much the definition of a sexist comment. 

Please carefully note I haven't made any argument as to whether your supposition was right or wrong though.

Avatar
davel replied to madcarew | 5 years ago
1 like

madcarew wrote:

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Plenty of stats and studies out there to support my opinion that young females are the demographic most likely to suffer from social media addiction and also mental health problems associated with this new age of narcisism.

Here's a sample from literally the first study I pulled up on google.

The effect size for sex was considered as small-to-medium, thus substantially meaningful, with women having higher addictive social media use score. This finding suggests that women are more at risk in developing addictive behaviors to activities involving elements of social interaction, whereas men tend to develop problematic use of more asocial and/or solitary activities (e.g., video gaming)

Once again we see be ignoring that men and women are indeed different creatures with different habits.

 

Your comment was the very definition of sexism. What you are now doing is called confirmation bias. You may well be right that women are more likely to have an accident due to mobile phone use, but the studies that would back up your argument are those that relate to women (and all drivers) having accidents whilst on the mobile phone, as the study you chose has nothing to do with that at all. Women are generally more careful drivers than men (as insurance premiums reflect). 

Your comment was made simply as a sexist comment which you are now trying to back up. Even if you are proven right, your comment was still sexist as it was made at the time on supposition and generalisation about the behaviour of one sex... which is pretty much the definition of a sexist comment. 

Please carefully note I haven't made any argument as to whether your supposition was right or wrong though.

The first act is confirmation bias, as in 'whenever I look/register, surprise surprise, its a woman'.

I can't say I've noticed women staring at phones any more than men. But when I filter past them, I can tell their silly little heads are full up with Love Island and vajazzles.

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will | 5 years ago
5 likes

I think this is actually fair enough.

Fucked up, no malice... however, due to the seriousness of the offence, it gets a serious punishment... 

Prison is not a picnic for the vast majority of society. 

What annoys me is why this punishment can't be handed out ore consistently. 

Yep, you could argue its no where fitting with regards to the loss experienced by teh victims family, and I agree, but as a warning to others, I believe it would be sufficient to focus minds a little.

 

Avatar
ROOTminus1 | 5 years ago
6 likes

Another tragic outcome.

I'm loathe to stir up the age-old high horses, but it's a sad state of affairs when this is a necessary line in reports such as these:

road.cc wrote:

Mrs Mills, who was wearing a cycle helmet, was taken by air ambulance to hospital where she died from traumatic brain injuries sustained in the collision

...as if bigoted folk would exclaim Mrs Mills' injuries were her own fault were she not wearing a helmet. Such aides are a riders choice, and those who pontificate either way are as arrogant as the privileged motorists who have no regard for any vulnerable road user.

 

Avatar
daccordimark replied to ROOTminus1 | 5 years ago
10 likes

ROOTminus1 wrote:

Another tragic outcome.

I'm loathe to stir up the age-old high horses, but it's a sad state of affairs when this is a necessary line in reports such as these:

road.cc wrote:

Mrs Mills, who was wearing a cycle helmet, was taken by air ambulance to hospital where she died from traumatic brain injuries sustained in the collision

...as if bigoted folk would exclaim Mrs Mills' injuries were her own fault were she not wearing a helmet. Such aides are a riders choice, and those who pontificate either way are as arrogant as the privileged motorists who have no regard for any vulnerable road user.

 

It could be spun the other way of course. It could be specifically mentioned to reinforce the point that helmets are in no way a guarantee of survival in collisions with motor vehicles.

Mark.

 

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
7 likes

Bet she was on the phone but they'd couldn't pin it on her. This isn't sexism but take away white van man and women seem to be the worst offenders for this based my travels. More so now I've got the motorbike and can go past and look through the windows at what I suspected was happening and most of the time I'm right......on the phone.

You used to think these people were drunk but it's just on the phone. Such is the lure I don't even think an instant ban would stop people.

 

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
3 likes

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Bet she was on the phone but they'd couldn't pin it on her. This isn't sexism but take away white van man and women seem to be the worst offenders for this based my travels. More so now I've got the motorbike and can go past and look through the windows at what I suspected was happening and most of the time I'm right......on the phone.

You used to think these people were drunk but it's just on the phone. Such is the lure I don't even think an instant ban would stop people.

 

 

I think your comment is actually the definition of sexism, however it has validity. 

I believe stats show that women are statistically more likely to have trivial accidents due to lack of care / concentration. Men, especially young men, are more likely to have large crashes caused by pushing the envelope / aggressive driving. 

So it might be that you see more women looking at their phones simply because you are more likely to be passing women as the men are off driving fast ahead of you. 

But I digress.

The reality is mobile phone use when driving is a problem for both sexes, and is arguably a side effect of a fundamental lack of care and attention / required focus applied to driving by too many in society.

Being sexist, I'd say my perception is that women can be more risk adverse than men. This might explain the statistical difference in crash rates / types. However, being risk adverse can bring its own problems, specifically around risk awareness. The two are not necessarily linked and if there is a fundamental belief that an activity is safe, then the person (no matter the sex) will not look for risk at all and can end up doing things that are incredibly dangerous, in total ignorance of the risk.

That is indeed a very dangerous proposition. 

 

Avatar
Capercaillie replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
2 likes

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Bet she was on the phone but they'd couldn't pin it on her. This isn't sexism but take away white van man and women seem to be the worst offenders for this based my travels. More so now I've got the motorbike and can go past and look through the windows at what I suspected was happening and most of the time I'm right......on the phone.

You used to think these people were drunk but it's just on the phone. Such is the lure I don't even think an instant ban would stop people.

 

It is sexism.

Do you any statistics for this?  Otherwise your evidence is just anecdotal.  Pretty much the same as saying all cyclists run red lights and ride recklessly at pedestrians.

However I do believe that phone use at the wheel is far too prevalent among both sexes.

I agree she could have been using her phone but not for calls or texts as that would have discovered by the police.  Maybe social media use can't be picked up and she was using that on her phone.

She could even have been changing her music.   A while ago a lorry driver was caught on CCTV in his cab doing that, having caused a fatal accident when he drove into a car carrying a family of four.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/oct/31/lorry-driver-distracted-...

Note he was male, as was the guy who killed a cyclist having previously been caught using his phone at the wheel 8 times and allowed to keep his licence.

https://road.cc/content/news/203741-nine-years-jail-texting-driver-who-k...

 

Avatar
HarryTrauts replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
2 likes

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Bet she was on the phone but they'd couldn't pin it on her. This isn't sexism but take away white van man and women seem to be the worst offenders for this based my travels. More so now I've got the motorbike and can go past and look through the windows at what I suspected was happening and most of the time I'm right......on the phone.

You used to think these people were drunk but it's just on the phone. Such is the lure I don't even think an instant ban would stop people.

 

 

You don't have any evidence other than your experience.  My experience is that I see more blokes in commercial vehicles with a phone to their ear than anyone else, but I wouldn't put money on that being a statistical fact.  

Avatar
Capercaillie replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
2 likes

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Bet she was on the phone but they'd couldn't pin it on her. This isn't sexism but take away white van man and women seem to be the worst offenders for this based my travels. More so now I've got the motorbike and can go past and look through the windows at what I suspected was happening and most of the time I'm right......on the phone.

You used to think these people were drunk but it's just on the phone. Such is the lure I don't even think an instant ban would stop people.

 

You got a lot of likes for this sweeping generalisation.  Well done!

Shame this website seems to attract just as many casual misogynists as you might expect from your average lad mag or petrolhead site.

 

Avatar
alansmurphy replied to Capercaillie | 5 years ago
2 likes

CaribbeanQueen wrote:

 

You got a lot of likes for this sweeping generalisation.  Well done!

Shame this website seems to attract just as many casual misogynists as you might expect from your average lad mag or petrolhead site.

 

 

Calm down love!

 

Avatar
Housecathst | 5 years ago
6 likes

I a lot of ways I’m surprised she got a prison sentence. Normally “I didn’t see” Is a cast iron get out of jail free card. Couple of months driving ban and £200 fine 

Avatar
Hirsute replied to Housecathst | 5 years ago
6 likes

Housecathst wrote:

I a lot of ways I’m surprised she got a prison sentence. Normally “I didn’t see” Is a cast iron get out of jail free card. Couple of months driving ban and £200 fine 

I found another site that described the accident more clearly. The cyclist was approaching from the right but the driver did not stop at the roundabout but carried on at 20+ mph. The reason " I didn't see" could not be used was that there was a car already stopped in the middle lane of that approach clearly giving way to traffic from the right.

Avatar
burtthebike replied to Hirsute | 5 years ago
10 likes

hirsute wrote:

I found another site that described the accident more clearly. The cyclist was approaching from the right but the driver did not stop at the roundabout but carried on at 20+ mph. The reason " I didn't see" could not be used was that there was a car already stopped in the middle lane of that approach clearly giving way to traffic from the right.

[/quote]

I have seen this any number of times, where one lane approaching a roundabout has stopped to give way to vehicles on the roundabout, but another driver approaches in another lane and pulls out, including one of the closest calls I've ever had without actually being knocked off.  It demonstrates such a low standard of driving that it cannot otherwise be described as anything but dangerous, and would immediately fail a driving test.

Anyone doing it should have their licence removed forever as they are clearly not competent to operate a dangerous machine in a public place, whether or not they cause a collision; if they didn't this time, it was just luck and they will do it eventually.

Avatar
ooldbaker | 5 years ago
12 likes

Personally I think the driving ban of only 2 1/2 years is more upsetting. Any prison sentence is going to be traumatising and I would see no point in prolonging it. 

But I would feel much safer if people who show such poor attention and complete inabillity to drive safely should never drive again.

We seem to be trapped in a legal system that believes that it is a human right and absolute necessity to be allowed to drive.

Pages

Latest Comments