Road Traffic Offences: Fatal Collisions 16:30:00 Andrew Rosindell
(in the Chair) Before we begin, I draw everyone’s attention to the
safety guidance issued by the House of Commons Commission, and I
ask everyone to be considerate of others and keep their distance
where possible. Thank you all very much. Christina Rees (Neath)
(Lab/Co-op) I beg to move, That this House has considered
e-petitions 323926 and 575620, relating to road traffic offences
for fatal...Request free trial
Road Traffic Offences: Fatal Collisions
16:30:00
(in the Chair)
Before we begin, I draw everyone’s attention to the safety
guidance issued by the House of Commons Commission, and I ask
everyone to be considerate of others and keep their distance
where possible. Thank you all very much.
(Neath) (Lab/Co-op)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered e-petitions 323926 and 575620,
relating to road traffic offences for fatal collisions.
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Rosindell.
E-petition 323926, started by Louise Smyth and Helen Wood, with
the title “Tougher sentences for hit and run drivers who cause
death”, opened on 20 July 2020 and closed on 20 January 2021, and
received 104,324 signatures. It states:
“The maximum penalty for failure to stop after an incident is
points and a 6-month custodial sentence. Causing death by
careless/dangerous driving is between 5-14 yrs. The sentence for
failing to stop after a fatal collision must be increased.
Our sons, Matt aged 25 & Paul aged 23, were both killed on
their motorbikes just 9 months apart. Both drivers fled the
scene. We are not the only families to have suffered this tragedy
or endure unjust sentencing. We at the Roads Injustice Project
want the laws changed as we feel they are both outdated and
unfair. Tougher sentences are needed for the life sentence we
have to deal with every single day from the loss of our son’s due
to the actions of somebody else.”
On 28 August 2020, the Ministry of Justice responded to the
petition, saying:
“It is wholly irresponsible for drivers to fail to stop and
report an incident. However, the offence of failing to stop
should not be used to punish an offender for a serious, but not
proven, offence.
We were very sorry to read of the deaths of Matt and Paul; our
sympathies are with their families and friends.
Failure to stop and report offences are often referred to as ‘hit
and run’ but this is not an accurate reflection of the offence.
The offence is designed to deal with the behaviour relating to
the failure to stop, not to provide an alternative route to
punish an offender for a more serious, but not proven,
offence.”
E-petition 575620, started by Leanne Saltern, with the title
“Ryan’s Law: Widen definition of ‘death by dangerous driving’”,
opened on 2 March 2021 and closed on 2 September 2021, and
received 167,470 signatures. It said:
“The offence of causing ‘death by dangerous driving’ should be
widened to include: failure to stop, call 999 and render aid on
scene until further help arrives.
A hit & run driver left my brother Ryan in the road & he
died. Hiding for 36 hours, charged with failure to stop, the
driver received a suspended sentence/fine. Failure to
stop/careless driving offers lighter custodial sentences &
focuses on fines/suspensions. Drivers should STOP, ring 999 &
render AID until help arrives. If they do not they should face
charges for death by dangerous driving. The Law should require
this & aim to reduce the number of hit & runs &
roadside deaths. With this definition, a minimum 10 years-max
life sentence, citizens would be better protected.”
On 24 March 2021, the Department for Transport provided a
response identical to that given by the Ministry of Justice,
apart from this sentence:
“Ministers are aware of the tragic circumstances surrounding the
death of Ryan Saltern and extend their sympathy to family and
friends.”
The DFT added:
“The Government takes this issue seriously. The Department for
Transport is looking into the issue of such incidents of failure
to stop resulting in death or serious injury, and exploring
whether there are further options that can be pursued.”
It is no surprise that those in favour of a change in the law say
that there is a perverse incentive for a driver who is under the
influence of drink or drugs to leave the scene of a traffic
collision, thereby avoiding a drink and drugs test by the police.
If they hand themselves in to the police later, they cannot be
tested because of the time that has elapsed and are likely to
avoid a more serious offence or penalty.
I met the petitioners virtually last week and listened to their
heartbreaking stories, which reduced me to tears. I cannot image
the pain they have gone through and are still going through. They
have come to Parliament today. I met them again this afternoon
and they are in the Public Gallery this evening. I cannot pretend
to understand the depth of their grief, but I commend their
courage and tenacity in wanting something good to come out of
their grief.
On 29 August 2018, 25-year-old Matt Smyth left his girlfriend’s
house at about 3 am. He was heading home on his motorbike on the
A1307 when he was hit by a delivery van that pulled out of a side
junction into his path. The driver stopped briefly at the scene
but then drove off, leaving Matt lying in the road. A passing HGV
driver found Matt about 25 minutes later. The driver who had
collided with Matt came to a stop a few miles up the road and
telephoned his employer. He told his company that he had hit a
deer and his van was damaged, so it could not be driven. The
company arranged for him to be sent a new van and he continued on
his delivery round before going home to bed.
The police caught up with the driver, Mr Ricardas Taraska, later
that day when he was still asleep in his bed. Mr Taraska was
charged with causing death by careless driving and failing to
stop after a collision. The prosecutor said that it was
inconceivable that the driver did not realise that he had hit a
motorcycle, because Matt was thrown on to the van’s bonnet and
the driver had to manoeuvre around Matt’s body and
motorcycle.
Mr Taraska was sentenced to 14 months, of which he served only
five months, and he was disqualified from driving for 31 months.
The judge said that it was a “grossly irresponsible act” not to
stop, and that driving around Mr Smyth’s body and the wreckage of
a motorcycle was inexcusable. On the morning that Matt was
killed, he had been due to attend his first midwife’s appointment
as a father-to-be. Matt never lived to see his daughter, who is
now two and a half years old. Matt’s father was also tragically
killed in similar circumstances 18 years ago while he was driving
his motorcycle.
Matt’s best friend, Paul, was 23 years of age when he was killed
nine months later. Paul left for work on 24 May 2019 at 6.45 am
on his daily motorbike drive to work. He was hit by a Range Rover
that pulled out in front of him. The driver, Mr Cooksey, got out
of his vehicle and lit a cigarette. A witness at the scene spoke
to Mr Cooksey and noticed the smell of alcohol on his breath, but
he ran away and hid behind some trees before walking to Cambridge
train station. There, he got into a taxi to go to a pub in
Romford, where he lived. He drank eight pints of lager before
handing himself in to the local police station that evening, and
he could not be breathalysed because he was intoxicated. Paul was
pronounced dead at the scene.
Mr Cooksey had been disqualified from driving the previous month,
and had previous convictions for drink driving and driving while
disqualified. He admitted drinking heavily the evening before
until about midnight and said that he was driving his car at
about 5 am, but that could not be proved because he had left the
scene, and he continued to drink until he handed himself in to
the police. The judge said that the driver was “devious and
untrustworthy”, with
“a bad record for driving offences that have resulted in
disqualification and even prison sentences”,
and:
“No sentence…will ever reflect the loss of a human life”.
Mr Cooksey admitted failing to stop at the scene of the collision
and was found guilty of causing death by careless driving,
causing death while disqualified from driving and causing death
while driving uninsured. He was sentenced to three years’
imprisonment—he will serve half, or less—and banned from driving
for four and a half years. Paul’s family told me that they have
not been the same since he was killed. His family are living a
life sentence, but the criminals on our roads are not punished in
accordance with their crimes.
Our loved ones need to be recognised as human beings, not wing
mirrors or bits of metal damaged in a road traffic collision. The
hit and run, or leaving the scene, sentencing guidelines were put
in place many years ago. They need updating to encourage drivers
who have caused a collision to stay and get the help needed for
the victim, potentially saving the lives of hundreds of victims
on our roads every year.
Ryan Saltern, a postman, husband, and father of young children,
was killed in the early hours of 28 July 2019 while walking along
the single-track B3267 to a party. He was hit by a driver who did
not stop. Ryan’s body was dragged beneath the car and he died of
catastrophic injuries. The driver made no attempt to stop, and
Ryan was subsequently left in the road to be discovered by the
next passing vehicle. The forensic investigation proved it was
the failure to stop that caused the injuries relating to Ryan’s
death.
The driver, Mr Wayne Shilling, was identified some 36 hours later
after being reported to the police by his own father. A blood
test proved negative for alcohol because of the time that had
elapsed, and it was too late to conduct a toxicology test. Mr
Shilling admitted to failing to stop and failing to report an
accident while he was driving home from a carnival, at which
witnesses said he had been drinking. Mr Shilling told the police
that he felt a slight bang and did not realise that he had hit
anyone, but the collision was found to have punctured his car’s
radiator.
Mr Shilling received a sentence of four months—suspended for 12
months—and he was disqualified from driving for 12 months, given
an evening curfew for four months and ordered to pay a £207
victim surcharge and prosecution costs. Ryan’s family believe
that the law protects not the victim of crime, but the criminal,
and that it is a total injustice to Ryan. Although Mr Shilling
chose not to answer questions leading up to and at the trial, he
admitted at the coroner’s inquest to drinking four cans of
alcohol before hitting Ryan. He has never displayed any remorse
whatsoever to Ryan’s family, and he taunts them.
Ryan’s family believe that when a driver hits a person, they
should stop, ring for help and remain on the scene, rendering aid
when possible, appropriate, and necessary, and as instructed by
emergency services. When a driver does not to do this, they
should be considered a dangerous driver and a minimum sentence
should be set, ultimately encouraging drivers to stop after a
collision. Stopping at the scene will help to save lives and
identify those who have genuine accidents, as opposed to those
who leave the scene to protect themselves. There are many more
cases like Ryan’s, with drivers escaping justice by not stopping
at the scene.
I also met virtually with , who is the police and
crime commissioner for Devon, Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly
and the road safety lead for the Association of Police and Crime
Commissioners. Alison launched a strategy in 2018 to create the
safest roads in the UK. A 2020 APCC road survey received 66,266
responses from across England and Wales, and 81% of respondents
believed that road offences required more enforcement.
This is not the first time that these life and death issues have
been debated in Parliament. On 8 July 2019, the former Member for
Warrington North introduced a debate on e-petition 236952,
“Violet-Grace’s Law – Life sentences for Death by Dangerous
Driving”, in memory of four-year-old Violet, who was tragically
killed when a stolen car was driven at 83 mph in a 30 mph zone.
Violet’s nan was with her and suffered life-changing injuries.
The driver and his passenger did not attempt to help Violet and
her nan; they fled from the scene. There is evidence that they
had to step over the bodies of Violet and her nan, lying in the
road, when they got out of the stolen car. The driver not only
fled the scene, but fled the country and went to Amsterdam. When
he eventually returned, he and his passenger were sentenced but
served less time in prison than Violet was alive. For people to
have confidence in the law, it has to protect the innocent,
punish the guilty and deter further offences. However, families
believe they have not had justice with the imposition of unduly
lenient sentences.
The offence of causing death by dangerous driving was not
introduced until the Road Traffic Act 1999, but even then there
were widespread complaints that the Crown Prosecution Service
often charged people with the lesser offence of careless driving,
because it was felt that doing so was more likely to lead to a
conviction. In 2003, the maximum sentence for causing death by
dangerous driving was increased from 10 to 14 years. The Road
Safety Act 2006 introduced the offence of causing death by
careless driving, and of causing death by driving while
unlicensed, disqualified, or uninsured. The Legal Aid, Sentencing
and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 introduced the offence of
causing serious injury by careless driving, which is punishable
with a sentence of up to five years. The Criminal Courts Act 2015
introduced the offence of causing serious injury by driving while
disqualified, which is punishable by four years’ imprisonment and
a fine.
In October 2017, following a consultation in which 70% of
respondents thought that the maximum sentence for causing death
by dangerous driving should be increased from 14 years to life
imprisonment, the Government announced that they would do so when
parliamentary time allowed. A one-clause Bill would have had
widespread support across the House and from the public, but the
Government failed to find any parliamentary time. Nearly three
years later, on Tuesday 21 July 2020, the former Prime Minister,
the right hon. Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May), introduced a Bill
to amend the Road Traffic Act 1988 to increase the maximum
sentence for causing death by dangerous driving to life
imprisonment, and for connected purposes. She said that
“dangerous driving is an all too familiar phrase”
that does not reflect
“the tragedy and devastation of lives that lies behind it.”
She told the House about her constituents, saying that
“19-year-old…Bryony Hollands died at the hands of a dangerous
driver—a driver under the influence of drink and drugs. He was
sentenced to eight years and served just four years in jail…Ciara
Lee’s husband Eddy was killed on the M4. The driver responsible
was sentenced to just 22 months”.—[Official Report, 21 July 2020;
Vol. 678, c. 2039.]
She also spoke of 13-year-old Max Simmonds, who was hit and
killed by a driver who was under the influence of drugs. The Bill
was short, specific, and targeted. It would have allowed judges
to retain the discretion to decide the appropriate length of
sentence, as well as providing greater scope and enabling more
severe sentences. It would have done the Government’s work for
them.
The latest statistics provided by the House of Commons Library
show that the current law does not cope with these offences. In
2020, there were 2,467 prosecutions and 1,889 convictions for
failing to stop or report a road traffic accident; the most
common sentence was an average fine of £289. A small number of
people received custodial sentences, the average being 3.6
months. In 2020, there were 184 prosecutions and 154 convictions
for causing death by dangerous driving; the most common sentence
was immediate custody, with an average sentence of four years and
seven months.
In September 2020, the Government produced a White Paper. Clauses
65 and 66 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill
propose increasing the maximum penalties for causing death by
careless driving when under the influence of drink or drugs, and
for causing death by dangerous driving, from 14 years’ to life
imprisonment, and they create a new offence of causing serious
injury by careless driving. That Bill is currently going through
Parliament.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) moved
new clause 20 in the House of Commons on 5 July 2021. It proposed
a maximum sentence of 14 years where a driver fails to stop and
exchange details or to report the accident to the police in cases
where they knew or ought reasonably to have known that a serious
or fatal injury had occurred or might have occurred. The then
Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice said that
“more work needs to be done to identify that class of driver who
manipulates the system and evades responsibility in a way that
clearly outrages the community and offends the wider
public.”—[Official Report, 5 July 2021; Vol. 698, c. 675.]
On 8 November, at Committee stage in the House of Lords, the
right hon. moved amendment 161, which had
wording very similar to that of new clause 20. stated that six months may be
appropriate when someone drives off after scraping the paintwork
of someone’s parked car, but not when someone is left dead by the
roadside.
(Bootle) (Lab)
My 31-year-old daughter, Jennie, was hit by a car just over 100
yards from my house 13 months ago. The driver drove off, came
back to look at the scene, and drove off again. My daughter died
nine days later. The driver received a 12-month custodial
sentence for careless driving but is now appealing that sentence,
as it is, I think she believes, disproportionately hard. Does my
hon. Friend agree that at the very least —the very
least—sentencing guidelines need a full, thorough and substantial
review, to assure families left bereft that justice is done?
I thank my hon. Friend—my dear friend—for his intervention.
Sometimes words are not enough to express what you must be going
through and what you have been through. I completely
agree—completely agree.
moved provisions including a
new subsection of section 170 of the Road Traffic Act 1988, to
cover hit-and-run collisions, and mentioned the petitions that we
are debating this evening. He said that they highlight the
inadequacy of the existing legislation. spoke in
support, calling hit-and-runs a menace and saying that judges
should have available a range of sentences to reflect the
severity of the offence and that there should be a lifetime
driving ban for a hit-and-run driver fleeing the scene—a cowardly
thing—and trying to escape justice. As she said, it is a
life-and-death situation for the person who has been hit.
Responding for the Government, gave the
standard response that we have heard so many times this evening.
She said that her
“ministerial colleagues at the Department for Transport
understand the concerns that have been raised”
and are “exploring options”, including
“the available penalties and how the offence operates as part of
long-term and wider work on road safety.”—[Official Report, House
of Lords, 8 November 2021; Vol. 815, c. 1557.]
It was on that basis that withdrew his amendment.
The petitioners, and many more families who have lost loved ones
in road traffic collisions, do not want any more warm words and
empty rhetoric from the Government. They want the law to be
changed. I have read a portfolio compiled by Leanne Saltern that
features hundreds of families who have contacted her after losing
a loved one in circumstances similar to those of the petitioners.
It made me cry. No sentence will ever make up for the tragic loss
of a loved one, and families have been constantly told that
reform will be introduced when parliamentary time allows.
The time is now. Will the Minister urge his Government to change
the law, as set out in the petitions, and will he meet the
petitioners and other families in order to give them the
opportunity to be heard? They must be heard.
16:57:00
(Truro and Falmouth)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Rosindell.
I am pleased to be called in this extremely important debate,
which I have been anticipating for quite some time, and I
congratulate the Petitions Committee on securing it.
I pay tribute to Ryan and Ryan’s family, who are in the Public
Gallery. Ryan lived locally to my constituency in Cornwall with
his wife and son, and I believe he worked in Truro as a postman.
I also thank the more than 270,000 people who signed the
petitions, including nearly 4,000 people in my constituency. I
believe that something like 14,000 people across the Devon and
Cornwall police area have signed the petition.
As we have heard, Ryan was killed in a road incident in which the
driver left the scene and did not report it for 36 hours—in fact,
he did not even go in of his own accord at that stage. The driver
had been seen drinking that evening and later admitted to failing
to stop and failing to report the accident. As we have heard, the
punishment was woeful. There is no question but that the
punishment did not fit the perceived crime, which led to the
campaign by Ryan’s family. They have been campaigning for tougher
sentences for those who fail to stop and report an accident, and
they set up the petition calling for Ryan’s law, whereby the
definition of death by dangerous driving would be widened.
I know that my hon. Friend the Member for North Cornwall () has been working incredibly
hard on this issue and that he will agree about the need for
change. We have been working towards increasing the sentencing
range for failing to stop and report an accident. Both he and I
have had meetings over the past few months with Transport
Ministers, as well as the former Secretary of State for Justice,
to discuss Ryan’s law specifically. I am pleased that my hon.
Friend the Member for North Cornwall is present and, like me,
awaits with interest the Minister’s update on this matter.
In addressing representations around the specific law change on
Third Reading of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill
back in July, the then Lord Chancellor said that his
“ministerial colleagues at the Department for Transport are
working to explore options with my officials about how these
offences will work in the wider context.”—[Official Report, 5
July 2021; Vol. 698, c. 675.]
Since then, however, I know that the Department for Transport has
been working on an options paper and has highlighted the
complexity of the area, which has brought up issues that will
require further investigation in order to fully assess the
potential impact of any legislative changes. I know that the
Department for Transport has been seeking external views, to
ensure that any changes are done correctly as part of a plan for
a wider call for evidence on road traffic matters.
I appreciate the meetings and the work that the Minister, the
Ministry of Justice and the Department for Transport have given
MPs such as myself and my hon. Friend the Member for North
Cornwall, and I understand the complexities around the specific
law change demand. However, we have heard, and will no doubt
continue to hear, tragic cases such as Ryan’s where the
punishment does not fit the crime. I read Ryan’s petition.
It took me some time. I was incredibly moved by the number of
stories similar to Ryan’s; it is emotional to read. I am sorry to
say that this is not an unusual situation, however shocking these
stories are. I am afraid to say that they are all too common.
We must do something positive while we have the opportunity. We
just cannot keep the status quo, which leaves grieving families
such as Ryan’s and others bereft of justice. We are better than
that. I hope that we are better than that as a whole society—I
know that we are better than that as a Government. I hope that
the Department is genuinely actively considering and working
towards this vital law change to ensure that those who fail to
stop and report an accident properly face a punishment that fits
the crime.
17:01:00
(Exeter) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Rosindell.
I congratulate the petitioners who brought this subject to
Parliament for debate, which reflects a growing concern in the
country and, indeed, the House about how, increasingly, when it
comes to road crime, the punishment does not fit the crime.
Offenders all too often get off with a paltry fine, a suspended
sentence or a ridiculously short driving ban, if they get a ban
at all, while the loved ones of the victims are left devastated
and grieving for the rest of their lives.
The debate is particularly timely because the Government’s
Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill is going through the
House as we speak, which gives the Government an opportunity to
address these concerns and put right these injustices. However, I
am afraid to say that, so far, I have seen little evidence, apart
from warm words, that they are serious about doing so. They
recommend a number of changes to some of the penalties, which may
go some way to addressing some of the historical concerns around
road safety and road crime, depending on how they are
implemented, and may deal with some of the most egregious road
crimes. However, they do not do anything to tackle the much
larger number of fatal and serious injury cases that do not
always attract the headlines but treat as careless driving what
is actually dangerous driving and are over-reliant on prison
sentences rather than driving bans, allowing offenders all too
often to escape a ban by pleading exceptional circumstances, as
well as severely limiting the sentences for causing serious
injury, rather than death.
In my view, the Government could easily do three things—I hope
they will—to go a lot of the way to addressing some of the
concerns of the families here today and more widely. First, they
could bring forward the full review of road traffic offences and
sentences promised nearly eight years ago—not the partial review
referred to in the House of Lords last week, not the limited
proposals in that Bill: nearly eight years ago, we were promised
by the former Justice Secretary, the right hon. Member for Epsom
and Ewell (), a full review of road
traffic offences and sentences. We need that. I ask the Minister
where it is.
Secondly, as we heard, the Government could address the
scandalously low maximum sentence for hit and run. I do not think
that many people out there realise that the maximum
sentence for hit and run, or leaving the scene of an accident, is
six months in jail. As we heard from in the other place, that might
be appropriate for scratching somebody’s car but not for leaving
somebody seriously injured or dying in the road, often with the
motive of getting off being tested for drink or drugs or getting
away with the crime altogether.
I have not heard a convincing argument from the Government as to
why they cannot adopt my amendment to considerably increase the
sentence for that offence. If there is one, I would like to hear
it. I do not accept the argument that doing so would offer a way
of prosecuting people unfairly for accidents that they were not
responsible for. Leaving the scene of an accident, or a driver
leaving someone who they know is probably seriously injured or
dead, is a serious enough offence in itself to warrant a longer
sentence than six months. We heard some tragic cases, but there
are many more cases that we do not hear about. The number of
hit-and-run cases has increased exponentially in the last 10
years, and we have to do something about that.
Thirdly, I hope that the Government will look again at how, far
too often, drivers get away without a driving ban by pleading
exceptional circumstances. One case that sums that up well is
that of cyclist , who was killed by Christopher Gard in 2015. That was
the ninth time in six years that Gard had been caught using a
mobile while driving. He had been convicted six times, fined and
sent on a driver retraining course, but he had escaped a ban by
pleading exceptional circumstances before going on to kill Lee.
He should have been disqualified.
In the last 10 years, 80,000 cases have occurred where road
criminals should have received a ban but were let off after
pleading exceptional circumstances. Courts have accepted as
exceptional circumstances the need to do the school run and the
effect a ban might have on a relationship—that brings the law
into disrepute. The Government should do something about it.
Again, I tabled an amendment to the Bill in Committee that would
do that, but they have not accepted it. I implore them to look at
it again when it comes back to the House of Commons.
In many cases, a driving ban is a more appropriate punishment
than locking in prison someone who does not pose any danger to
the public except when they are on the roads. We do not use
driving bans nearly enough in this country and we do not have
long enough bans when they are used.
The Government are in danger of missing an historic opportunity
to use the Bill to address some of the dreadful injustices that
we have heard about, and the many others that we have not heard
about. To be behind the wheel of a vehicle is to be in charge of
a lethal weapon. For far too long, our laws and courts have
treated driving as a human right rather than a privilege to be
earned and, if needed for others’ safety, to be taken away. I
hope that the Government will think again and not squander that
opportunity.
17:07:00
(Strangford) (DUP)
I was going to say that it is a pleasure to speak in the debate,
because it is a pleasure to speak, but it is a very emotive
subject, as other right hon. and hon. Members have said. I am
aware of those in the Gallery who have experienced
something that we will try to put forward for them and hopefully
illustrate with words. I thank the hon. Member for Bootle (), who spoke about his personal
experience, and the hon. Member for Neath () for setting the scene
appropriately and, importantly, with the right mood.
I thank the Petitions Committee for the opportunity to have the
debate and all those who took the time to sign the petition and
allow us to debate a worthy topic. I will try to give a Northern
Ireland perspective on the debate, because what has happened is
replicated across the whole great nation of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
I recently read some documentation from the Department for
Infrastructure in Northern Ireland. It stated:
“Over the last five years, 56 people have lost their lives here
due to ‘excessive speed having regard to the conditions’. Many,
many more have been seriously injured…Every 1 mph reduction in
average speeds causes, on average, a 5% reduction in collisions.
This could be”—
and clearly is—
“the difference between life and death.”
For too many families, there will be an empty chair at the
Christmas table this year, and a spot in many hearts that will
forever feel empty. We do all we can to fight cancer, diabetes
and heart disease—things that are difficult to control—yet deaths
that are preventable and that simply should not happen seem to be
accepted. That is why we look to the Minister, as the right hon.
Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) said, for legislative change.
That is what we hope the debate will achieve.
This debate highlights the preventable nature of some deaths.
Where there is fault, such as someone repeatedly checking their
Snapchat on their phone, as has been referred to, and making no
effort to stop driving, there must be consequences. In the past,
the right hon. Member for Exeter tried to introduce legislation,
and he referred to that. I very much support what he said, and I
challenge anyone in Westminster Hall, or outside, not to support
it as well. It is legislative change that is needed, and it is
legislative change that will make the difference. The right hon.
Gentleman summed it up well. The amendment to which he referred
would be appropriate and a substantial move in the right
direction.
When I read the premise of this debate, my heart ached for the
families. I express my sincere sympathy to Matt’s, Paul’s and
Ryan’s families. I also express my admiration for the steps that
have been taken to prevent other families from suffering the same
torment and to save other families from knowing that their loved
one was hit and then abandoned. We have heard specific examples,
but there have been many others. I absolutely support the
families in their efforts to prevent other families from feeling
what they have and to ensure that the message is clear: people
cannot run away from an accident; they must face it and take the
consequences.
In this place, when we legislate, we all know that the sentence
should equate to the seriousness. I believe that we need to
legislate more firmly for the message to be clear. However, we
must get the changes right. I note that the briefing by Cycling
UK states:
“Indeed, there are reasons to fear that the Government’s overall
legislative package could well prove counterproductive”—
the Minister, in his reply at the end, can give his thoughts on
what Cycling UK says—
“by creating a much stronger incentive for drivers facing
prosecution for causing death to argue that their driving was
merely ‘careless’”
and therefore not dangerous,
“while simultaneously making it easier to do so by creating a new
offence of causing serious injury by ‘careless’ driving. The
introduction of causing death by ‘careless’ driving in 2008 led
to roughly a halving in the number of prosecutions for causing
death by ‘dangerous’ driving, even though the definitions of
‘dangerous’ and ‘careless’ driving had not changed. We fear the
proposed new offence could have a similar effect.”
I fear the same.
With great respect to the Minister, I think those are the
questions that the families, and we as right hon. and hon.
Members, need answers to. We are not putting the Minister on the
spot, but I beseech him to respond in a way that the debate and
the mood of the debate demand, reflecting the seriousness of the
situation and the responsibility of the Government and himself to
respond.
To finish, it is clear that any changes must ensure that
prosecutors have the ability to make the punishment fit the crime
and not overcomplicate the system. With respect, I look to the
Minister to outline how this House can achieve that goal. Too
many lives are gone, with too much hurt, too much pain and not
enough acknowledgement in law. That has to change. I support the
petition that the hon. Member for Neath introduced and ask for
meaningful legislative change to be the result of this difficult
and emotionally draining debate.
17:14:00
(Keighley) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Rosindell.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Neath () on presenting the petition
on behalf of the Petitions Committee. I pay tribute to everyone
who has lost their life in tragic circumstances and to their
families, some of whom are present today.
Road safety and reckless driving are huge problems in my
constituency of Keighley and Ilkley. I receive endless
correspondence from constituents wanting to bring these issues to
my attention. We hear too often that Keighley’s streets are being
used as a racetrack, and the consequences of dangerous driving
can be catastrophic. Reckless driving can prove fatal, so I
welcome the opportunity to discuss the tragic consequences of
reckless driving in my constituency and across the UK.
I am afraid to say that a fatal accident happened near Eastburn,
right on the boundary of my constituency, only a few months ago,
resulting in the tragic death of George Lewis—a nine-year-old
boy. It was a hit-and-run incident and the driver—a 49-year-old
man—fled the scene, later turning himself in at a police station,
where he was arrested. That nine-year-old boy died at the scene,
and the person he was with was also hit and injured. Earlier this
year, there was another collision in my constituency, on the
Addingham bypass, which sadly took the lives of two more people.
These crashes were the result of reckless, dangerous driving.
Instances such as these and those mentioned by other hon. Members
show the importance of addressing these issues and the sentences
that are necessary following these fatal collisions. We must
ensure that sentences for reckless driving do justice to any
victim of such horrific incidents and their families. That could
also provide a proper deterrent to make people think more
carefully about driving dangerously in our communities. The
petitions we are debating call for tougher sentences for
hit-and-run drivers who cause death and for widening the
definition of dangerous driving, and I wholeheartedly support
both those notions.
It is important to widen the definition of dangerous driving so
that it includes failure to stop after involvement in a traffic
accident. The fatal incident in Eastburn that I mentioned was a
hit-and-run incident, and it is absolutely right that those who
leave the scene after being involved in a car crash face tougher
consequences. We must strengthen the sentences for those
convicted of dangerous driving, so that we take note of those who
leave the scene after the crime, as well as failure to report the
incident. After all, who knows what the consequences would be, or
what better circumstances would prevail, if the driver did not
leave the scene and reported the incident straightaway, ensuring
that provision can get there quicker? The current punishment of
six months’ imprisonment or a fine is not strong enough, and it
absolutely needs to change. It is paramount that we address the
issue.
Reckless driving is a huge problem in Keighley and Ilkley and
across West Yorkshire and, as I have mentioned, it can lead to
tragic results. Hit-and-run drivers are cowards trying to flee
responsibility. They are cowards for not facing up to the
consequences of their actions. Justice is needed for the families
of the victims, and strengthening the definition of dangerous
driving and the punishments for those who commit the worst crimes
is essential. Ultimately, changes to the law will help prevent
such tragic circumstances, and I stand with those campaigning to
make that happen.
17:18:00
(Brentford and Isleworth)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship in this important
debate, Mr Rosindell. I thank the Petitions Committee, and I
particularly thank my hon. Friend the Member for Neath () for her powerful speech
introducing the debate. I thank the hundreds of thousands of
people who have signed the petitions and particularly the
families who have come here today, who are sitting in the
Gallery. I also thank my hon. Friend the Member for Bootle
(), who was so brave in
describing his tragedy. His experience and the experiences of our
constituents bring home what an important issue it is. It is a
cross-party issue.
I co-chair the all-party parliamentary group for cycling and
walking. In 2017, when we were still the all-party parliamentary
cycling group, we published a report on justice and the legal
system, which made a number of recommendations about changing the
law. Some of those recommendations were subsequently incorporated
into law, but more can be done, as I will discuss shortly.
Three years ago this month, I led a debate in Westminster Hall on
this very topic. We had a useful response from the then Minister
with responsibility for transport, who repeated his announcement
that the law was changing, and I congratulate the Government on
the changes they have made. We thank them for increasing the
maximum sentence for dangerous driving from 14 years to life and
for increasing the sentence for careless driving while under the
influence of drugs or alcohol from 14 years to life. The
Government are bringing in a new offence of causing serious
injury by careless driving, with a maximum sentence of two
years.
I congratulate the Government on what they have done to encourage
more people to cycle and walk, using covid emergency legislation.
They have brought in funding and regulatory changes that make it
safer to walk and cycle in those areas where local authorities
have used that funding and regulatory change, particularly in
areas that have created more space for cycling. However, we will
not get more people cycling until or unless the conditions on the
road not just feel safe, but clearly are safe. The same goes for
motorcyclists, who are proportionately among the most frequent
victims of road traffic incidents.
I also thank the Government for bringing in revisions to the
highway code. Those revisions, about the hierarchy of road users,
are supported by many organisations that represent vulnerable
road users. There is now an expectation placed on the vehicle
driver, who is driving a potentially dangerous metal can weighing
several tonnes at speed at people on bikes or motorbikes, walking
or in buggies. That is good, but we need improved messaging about
the revisions, because I do not think most drivers, possibly even
most police officers, are aware of them.
I thank Living Streets, British Cycling, Cycling UK and the Road
Danger Reduction Forum for providing Members with useful
briefings and statistics, all of which bring home the importance
of this issue. Every time road safety has been discussed in this
House, Members from all parties have taken part, and today we
have heard from the hon. Members for Keighley () and for Truro and Falmouth
(), my right hon. Friend
the Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) and the hon. Member for
Strangford (). We all have experiences of incidents where justice
has not been done for the victims of road traffic collisions and
their families. There is still more work to do to get that to
change.
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill is currently going
through Parliament. I thank the Members of the House of Lords for
taking some amendments forward, and my right hon. Friend the
Member for Exeter for his amendment to the Bill when it was in
this House. We will discuss these matters again on consideration
of amendments. We need to clarify the distinction between
careless and dangerous driving. Driving should be deemed careless
or inconsiderate if it involves a breach of the highway code that
causes inconvenience, intimidation or danger to another road
user, and it should be deemed dangerous where a breach would lead
to a driver being failed automatically if they drove in that way
during a driving test.
We also need to ensure that the maximum custodial sentences for
causing serious injury do not fall vastly below those for causing
death by equally bad driving, while strengthening the role of
driving bans for offenders whose driving has clearly caused
danger but who are not obviously dangerous persons. We have heard
examples today of repeat offenders who are clearly dangerous and
who need to be imprisoned to ensure public protection. As right
hon. and hon. Members have said, there are others for whom a
driving ban would be sufficient punishment because they are not
otherwise dangerous people.
We need to strengthen the penalties for those who continue to
drive while banned; align more closely the offences and penalties
for causing death and serious injury while under the influence of
drink or drugs with those for causing death and serious injury
while driving while disqualified; and create a new offence for
causing serious injury while under the influence, with a maximum
sentence of five years. We also need to increase to two years the
maximum sentence for opening the doors of vehicles in a manner
that results in death or serious injury. A woman died in such a
situation on Chiswick High Road in my constituency many years
ago.
I want to address another point that I do not think has been
mentioned today but which we raised during our 2017 inquiry. A
number of people get off and avoid a ban—or successfully appeal
against one—after receiving 12 points or more, which should
result in an automatic ban. To make an analogy with a serious
house burglar or someone who carries out an assault in the
street, they do not get off and avoid their sentences because
they need to go to work or look after their children, so why
should somebody who causes serious injury through dangerous or
careless driving be let off a driving ban? I agree that a driving
ban should be used more, but it should be imposed more by the
judicial system.
Safer roads mean that more people will walk and cycle. That will
reduce congestion, improve health, reduce pollution and improve
the economy because those vehicles that need to be on the road
will be able to get to their destination faster. Our sympathy has
to be with all those who have lost a loved one through death by
dangerous driving. We in this place can act on that sympathy, and
offer more than just words, by strengthening the law.
17:27:00
(Birmingham, Hall Green)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Rosindell.
Last Thursday in my constituency a three-year-old girl was killed
by a hit-and-run driver while crossing a zebra crossing. The
24-year-old man who was driving fled the scene but was arrested
later. On Sunday 29 August my next-door neighbour, a 61-year-old
bus driver, was struck by a car while walking to work. The car
had been stolen and had false plates, and it was being driven by
a 20-year-old. Last week he received a sentence of three years
and eight months. My neighbour did not need to go to work that
day. He only went because he donated all the money he earned on a
Sunday to charity. Ghulam Nabi was 61 years old. The dangerously
driven car had been stolen—no insurance—and the driver fled the
scene. It was only after police released the CCTV images that he
handed himself in. Had that not happened, I believe that he would
never have handed himself in. If we look at the crime committed
and the sentence given, we see that there is no comparison. A
three-year-old girl, crossing a zebra crossing with her mother
last Thursday on Reddings Lane in Tyseley in my constituency lost
her life to another reckless driver. At what point do we say,
“Enough is enough”?
These tragedies are examples of fatalities due to reckless
driving in the UK, which is a growing concern not only for my
constituents but in every constituency across the UK. In both
examples the drivers fled the scene, failing to demonstrate any
concern for the victims. Such callous behaviour warrants serious
punishment under the law. Measures need to be brought forward to
help to stem the rise in reckless driving. Every year, road
traffic accidents claim over 1,700 lives, with many more injured.
Imagine 1,700 lives being taken in another way. There would be
uproar. That is 30 to 35 lives being taken on a weekly basis, yet
the punishment does not seem to match the crime.
Equally, I believe that councils need more resources to adapt the
street scenery in a way that is safe for pedestrians, children
and cyclists, and encourages motorists to automatically reduce
their speed. We cannot provide 24-hour policing on these roads,
so we urgently need to address the issue of street scenery, which
can only be done through Government providing resources to
councils, and also punishing the culprits of these callous and
senseless acts, where people flee the scene and show no remorse
for their actions. Not only do we need tougher measures to
encourage safer driving; the repercussions of killing someone
through reckless driving are currently nowhere near adequate.
Sentencing for hit and run drivers must be toughened, and in my
view the offence of causing death by dangerous driving should be
widened to include the failure to stop, call 999 or render aid on
the scene until further help arrives.
This is a plea from everyone in the room. There has not been a
single contribution that I can disagree with today, whether it
was about constituents in Keighley or any other constituency that
has been mentioned—or indeed from those who were unable to make
it here and put their cases. It is a plea to the Minister: this
needs to be addressed with seriousness, and doing so will receive
support from Members on both sides of the House.
17:33:00
(Glasgow South West)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure as always to see you in the Chair, Mr Rosindell.
I am sure you will agree that we have heard a powerful and
emotional debate, in the best traditions of the House, with
first-class arguments used by hon. Members who have raised the
issues so far. My heart goes out to those in the Public Gallery,
and to my good friend the hon. Member for Bootle (), for the most tragic
circumstances that they have found themselves in; because that is
what the petitions before us today deal with.
It is really difficult to imagine how hard it must be to deal
with the grief of losing a child or sibling in this way and still
feel that justice has not been served; because it is the concept
of justice that is at the heart of these petitions. It is
perfectly acceptable for all of us to have differing opinions on
what justice is. For some, it is the right punishment for those
who have committed a harm to another; for others, it is the
chance to get answers and to hear an explanation, or an apology.
Of course, it can be a combination of both those things, but the
fundamental principle is that the perpetrator of the crime is
held to account. And the understandable frustration in the
petitions arises from the feeling that neither of those concepts
is fulfilled when a person flees the scene of an incident.
As we have heard, the Road Traffic Act 1988 deals with failing to
stop or report an accident, and with dangerous and careless
driving offences, which are the two fundamental types of offences
engaged in instances of hit and run. As both petitions suggest,
there is a gulf of disparity between the sentencing guidelines
for failure to stop after an incident and those for death by
dangerous or careless driving. As we have also heard, the former
has a maximum six-month custodial sentence, while the latter has
a maximum custodial sentence of between five and 14 years.
The Government have reiterated in their responses to the
petitions that failure to stop offences are more often than not
low-level traffic incidents, such as the clipping of a mirror or
the scuffing of a bumper in a car park. However, on occasions
where the failure to stop or report an accident relates to an
incident that leads to the death or serious injury of another
person, it can be an aggravating factor in the sentencing
decision.
The question that we are considering today is whether that
situation is good enough. It is a question that has gathered
interest in recent years, as hon. Members have said, first with
the consultation for the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts
Bill, and then with the amendments to that Bill tabled by the
right hon. Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw), which would have
created a new offence of failing to stop or report accidents
where the driver knew that the accident had caused serious or
fatal injury, or where they ought reasonably to have realised
that it might have done so. I hope that the Government will
consider the right hon. Gentleman’s amendment in the Bill
Committee. He will certainly have my support for it, as he does
for many other amendments he tables in the House.
It is the disparity between sentencing for failure to stop or
report an accident and that for causing death or serious injury
by carless or dangerous driving that has led hon. Members to
suggest that there is a perverse incentive for people to flee the
scene of an accident. This has been said before and it has been
said again today. As hon. Members have explained, if a driver
under the influence of drink or drugs kills someone and remains
at the scene, the likelihood is that they will be tested, charged
and prosecuted for that offence. However, if they flee the scene
and have time to sober up, and there is no other evidence of
careless or dangerous driving, they can be prosecuted only for
the minor offence of failing to stop or report an accident. We
really must deal with that situation in the future.
Just two months ago, on 11 September, 18-year-old Aidan
Pilkington was struck by a car and killed on Crow Road in
Glasgow. The driver of the car fled the scene. Aidan was about to
move to Dundee to attend university and he was so well loved by
his friends that they kept a daily vigil for over three weeks at
the spot where he was killed. To date, an arrest has still not
been made and the driver—whoever they are—remains out there, on
the roads, in the knowledge that at 2 am on 11 September they
struck a bright, well-loved young man and ended his life. Could
it be that the driver was under the influence of either alcohol
or drugs, or was driving a vehicle that they had no right to
drive? That is something we really need to deal with, and I have
the support of hon. Members who seek a change in the law.
The Scottish Government and Police Scotland are committed to
reducing road deaths by half over the next 10 years. That is an
ambitious target, but such commitments are required in order to
make our roads safer for us all. Deaths and serious injuries
caused on our roads can often be prevented, and it is our duty to
ensure that we do all we can to improve driver behaviour and
educate road users. The new road safety framework of Scotland
sets out a vision for Scotland to have the best road safety
performance in the world by 2030.
In conclusion, although the current measures go no way to
achieving justice for the families who have tabled these
petitions, what is happening in Scotland may go some way to
ensuring that we prevent such tragedies. I look forward to
hearing from the Minister on how the Government are looking at
education to improve driver behaviour, and answering the calls
for tougher sentencing and new laws to address the points raised
in these petitions.
17:39:00
(Bristol East) (Lab)
It is a pleasure, as always, to see you in the Chair, Mr
Rosindell.
I am very pleased that the Petitions Committee managed to secure
a slot for this important debate, fittingly at the start of Road
Safety Week. I hope that we have been able to do justice to the
topic this afternoon, for the sake of the families and friends of
victims of driving offences, particularly the families and
friends of Matt, Paul and Ryan, some of whom are here today.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Neath () on a thorough exposition
of the reasons behind the petition and why a change in the law is
needed, and on going further and meeting the families and
friends. It is really important—I say this as a former member of
the Petitions Committee—that we do justice to the petitioners,
which is not always the case in these debates. I hope that they
feel we are at least speaking up for them today. It cannot have
been easy for them to relive their personal tragedies in pursuing
the petition, but I understand they felt compelled to do so to
try to ensure that others do not have to go through the same
hellish experience. My hon. Friend commended their courage and
tenacity, and so do I.
Some people might recall the case of Kevin Duggan, who was killed
in 1998 by a drink-driver. Anyone who has grown up in Luton, as I
did, knows the Duggans. There are an awful lot of them. They are
a big Irish family. Kevin’s father, Declan, campaigned for the
law to be changed four years later to give doctors the right to
take blood samples from unconscious drivers, because in the case
of Kevin they were not able to do so. That shows how tenacity, of
which he had huge amounts, and campaigning can pay off. I urge
the petitioners to continue, because we have to do better. As we
have heard today, far too many lives have been lost in road
traffic accidents. In far too many cases, drink-driving is
involved.
In 2019 it was estimated that between 210 and 250 people were
killed in accidents in Great Britain where at least one driver
was over the drink-drive limit. As the Labour spokesperson, I
want to assure the petitioners that road safety is a priority for
us. We have supported increasing the maximum penalties for the
offences of causing death by dangerous driving and causing death
by careless driving while under the influence of drink and drugs
from 14 years’ imprisonment to imprisonment for life. We have
also supported the introduction of a new offence of causing
serious injury by careless or inconsiderate driving, fixing a gap
left by previous legislation, which would set the maximum penalty
for the offence on indictment at two years’ imprisonment.
I do not want to dwell too much on the contributions made by
other speakers today, because it is important to allow the
Minister time to speak. Rather than reiterating specific asks
from the petitioners, and particularly from Cycling UK, which my
right hon. Friend the Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) and my hon.
Friend the Member for Brentford and Isleworth () more than did justice to, I
want to ask about the full review of the road traffic offences
framework that was promised in 2014 but never happened. I have
pressed Ministers on that. They failed to provide a timeframe for
the review, so will the Minister clarify whether a review will
still go ahead and when? As my hon. Friend the Member for Neath
said, the time to do it is now. There can be no excuse for
further delay. Unfortunately, when it comes to road safety, at
the moment the Government are steering us in the wrong
direction.
Last week the Department for Transport introduced changes to
driving tests, including the removal of the requirement to take a
separate test to tow a trailer. My hon. Friend the Member for
Bristol South () campaigned on that after the
death of a young child in her constituency.
The Labour party recognises the urgency of the need to expand
testing capacity in the light of HGV driver shortages and the
consequent damage to UK supply chains, but we are concerned about
the safety implications of such changes. If they do go ahead,
they should be temporary.
In the last week or so we have seen a damning report by the
Select Committee on Transport on smart motorways. The shadow
Secretary of State for Transport, my hon. Friend the Member for
Oldham West and Royton (), and I have met the families
of some of those involved in deaths attributable to the lack of a
hard shoulder. It is clear that the botched roll-out should be
paused until appropriate safety measures are in place so that no
other families have to go through the grief that they have
experienced.
Lastly, as we have heard, cyclists are especially vulnerable road
users. I will not go into detail, but cycling campaigners have
raised concerns about the lack of deterrents for drivers fleeing
the scene after collisions with cyclists; the inadequacy of
sentencing; the car dooring offences; and the ability of drivers
to defend their actions by labelling them careless rather than
dangerous. I hope that the Minister will address those concerns
and set out what consideration the Department for Transport, the
Ministry of Justice and the Office of the Attorney General have
given to strengthening legal protections. I would like to know in
particular what recent discussions have taken place between the
Department for Transport and the other Departments that I have
mentioned.
I know that many victims of driving offences will be listening
closely to the Minister’s response, so I hope he will offer some
reassurances that the matter is a priority for the Government. At
the moment, as we mark Road Safety Week, it does not appear to
be.
17:45:00
The Minister of State, Department for Transport ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Rosindell.
I thank the hon. Member for Neath () for opening this petitions
debate relating to road traffic offences for fatal collisions and
to specific concerns about the offence of failing to stop and
report.
I pay tribute to all hon. Members who have spoken with such
passion about families in their own constituencies and across the
UK, many of whom have been fighting for justice for some time
following what has happened to their loved ones. I thank in
particular the hon. Member for Bootle (), who spoke movingly about the
death of his daughter.
I reassure all Members that the Government take road safety
seriously. It is at the core of the work of the Department for
Transport, especially as we are working so hard to boost walking
and cycling across the UK. Many of the cases that have been
mentioned have, tragically, involved pedestrians or cyclists.
(Leigh) (Con)
More than 1,000 people in my Lancashire constituency of Leigh
have signed the petition on Ryan’s law. Will the Minister give
those people assurances that the Department is looking at both
clarifying and strengthening the law on this matter?
I thank my hon. Friend for that point—I hope he will bear with
me, as I will come to that in more detail. Like other hon.
Members, I know the strength of feeling in my own constituency,
where dangerous driving is a top concern for residents.
Let me be clear: any death or serious injury on our roads is
unacceptable, and our deep condolences go to victims and their
families. My ministerial colleague , the Roads
Minister, has met families of victims of similar incidents, as
well as MPs who are campaigning for their constituents, including
my hon. Friends the Members for North Cornwall (), for North Warwickshire () and for Truro and Falmouth
().
We understand the tragic circumstances that have led to the
petitions and to the concern that, in some cases, something is
perhaps not working with the law. Although we must do all we can
to improve the safety of our roads, we must also be careful that
we do not make any rash decisions that could ultimately make
things worse, or create other unforeseen effects, in a rush to
resolve problems with the way in which the law currently
operates.
I will start by turning to the current offence of failing to stop
and report. In the case of failure to stop and report, we know
that in a small number of cases the failure to stop may be
related to an event that leads to death or serious injury to
another person, but we must not forget that in the vast majority
of cases convictions for failing to stop involve low-level
traffic incidents such as hitting a wing mirror on a narrow
street. It is only in an extremely small number of cases that
there may not be any other evidence to connect the death or
serious harm with the driver who failed to stop, meaning that the
only offence that they have committed is that of failing to stop
and report.
I understand the concerns that have been raised about the matter,
which has previously been brought to the attention of my
Department. However, increasing the maximum sentence for failing
to stop and report, even in a limited scope where there has been
a serious or fatal injury, cuts across the basis for that
offence. I must stress that the offence of failure to stop and
report is designed to deal with the behaviour relating to the
failure to stop; it is not provided as an alternative route to
punish an offender for a more serious but unproven offence.
Increasing the custodial sentence so that it is comparable to
sentences for causing death by careless or dangerous driving, or
including it in one of those offences, would represent a massive
uplift in the potential sentence, for an offence that I remind
hon. Members requires no evidence of a causal link between the
failure to stop and the death or serious injury.
It must be remembered that where there is evidence that a driver
has caused harm, there is already a range of other offences,
including causing death by serious injury or dangerous or
careless driving, with which the driver can be charged. In those
cases, courts can treat the failure to stop as a factor that adds
to the overall seriousness of the offending. That can result in
the offender receiving a higher sentence. Where there is evidence
that the driver knew about the incident and took steps to avoid
detection, they can be charged with perverting the course of
justice—a common law offence that already carries a maximum
sentence of life imprisonment.
Does the Minister have any details on how often that has been
invoked? It is one thing to say that they could be charged with
perverting the course of justice. Does it ever happen?
It is unwise for Ministers to comment on prosecutorial or
judicial decisions. I was reading this week about a case just
outside my constituency where somebody who had failed to stop was
charged with death by dangerous driving. We need to look at the
suite of options for the charging authorities. Simply
strengthening the failure to stop and report offence may not be
the most effective way of ensuring the justice that I know many
families are seeking to achieve.
The concern that the petitioners and hon. Members have relates to
the perverse incentive for people to flee the scene. Should there
not be a new charge of failing to stop following a fatal or
serious injury?
That is something that the Department has been looking at, and
that Baroness Vere, the Roads Minister, has been talking to
families about. We are keen to see more evidence on the reasons
behind failures to stop and report such serious incidents. As I
have said, it is clear that the majority of incidents that are
treated as a failure to stop and report are low-level motoring
incidents; however, we need to gain more evidence on the most
serious cases.
In some of the cases cited today, drivers said that they felt
they hit a fox or a deer. Various other people panicked. A range
of justifications have been used. Whether they are true
justifications or not, it is important that we understand the
situation more. The University of Leicester carried out some
research in 2017 on behalf of the Motor Insurers’ Bureau, but we
have to build the evidence base to ensure that whatever we do to
reform the offences does not have unintended consequences, but
strengthens the law and gets families the justice that they
deserve.
Linking death or serious injury with a failure to stop as a
cause, however well intentioned, could risk creating an unfairly
severe offence. The law already imposes severe penalties for
vehicle owners who cause death or serious injury, but a clear
causal link needs to be provided between the driver’s behaviour
and the outcome. The proposals in the e-petitions essentially
equate the seriousness of a failure to stop with culpability for
causing death or injury. I repeat that that would create serious
anomalies with other offences, which could result in potential
injustices.
I want to be clear, however, that the Government are not
dismissing the concerns that have been raised. We are aware of
the traumatic effects of such incidents, which we have heard so
eloquently expressed by Members from all parties today. We agree
that there might be something wrong with the law as it stands; it
may not be working as well as it should in this area. I am sure
that right hon. and hon. Members will appreciate from what I have
already said that this is a very complex area, and any change in
the law should fit within the current driving offence framework.
Officials from my Department have been exploring options that
could be pursued in this area. They include, but are not limited
to: the available penalties; how the offence operates; how the
offence is dealt with in the sentencing guidance; and the
potential for a new offence as part of a longer term and wider
approach to road safety. I am sure that officials will consider
the points raised by Members from across the House in the debate
today as part of their considerations of that offence. As the
next step, the Department is considering conducting a call for
evidence on parts of the Road Traffic Act. Although details are
still being worked on, I expect this will include failures to
stop and report as an offence.
Mr Bradshaw
Could the Minister possibly address the question of where the
full review of offences and penalties has reached? Is that what
he was talking about? He seems to be suggesting a call for
evidence on just a few areas, but we were promised a full review.
Could he also say something about the use of exemptions to get
off bans; is that involved in this call for evidence? It is an
egregious problem.
As the right hon. Gentleman said, the Government committed to
carry out this review of road traffic offences in 2014. A review
of the most serious offences was carried out in 2017; the outcome
of that review has fed into the measures that we are bringing
forward as part of the police, crime, sentencing and courts Bill
that was referred to by a number of hon. Members. Baroness Vere
is looking at that and seeing how we could potentially go
further. The further call for evidence would seek to build on the
measures that we have already identified, and are bringing
forward as part of the Bill—that would be in addition to the
steps we have already taken.
I thank right hon. and hon. Members for what they have said;
their contributions are being listened to by officials in the
Department for Transport and across Government. This is an area
that we have to get right. I especially pay tribute to the
families who have come here and taken the time to share their
stories with right hon. and hon. Members.
17:57:00
I thank all right hon. and hon. Members for their valuable and
emotive contributions to this very important debate. The Minister
has heard agreement that road traffic offences and sentencing for
fatal collisions need to be fully reviewed and changed now, to
strengthen sentences and close the loophole that allows drivers
who run away after hitting and causing serious or fatal injuries
to escape punishment.
The Minister is a magnanimous man, and I appreciate that, as he
says, his Government are taking the issue seriously—as they
should. Please, no more warm words or delays; we need change now.
Justice must be done for victims and their families. It has been
an honour and a privilege to meet the petitioners and represent
them in this debate. I urge the Minister to meet the petitioners
and listen to them directly—they must be heard.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered e-petitions 323926 and 575620,
relating to road traffic offences for fatal collisions.
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