Mark Pawsey (Rugby) (Con) I am grateful for the opportunity to
raise the important topic of police investigations into road
traffic deaths. I do so this evening in support of and in tribute
to my constituents George and Giulietta Galli-Atkinson, who have
campaigned tirelessly on road safety over the past 25 years. I
first met the Galli-Atkinsons shortly after I was elected as the
Member of Parliament for Rugby in 2010. The family had recently
moved from London to Rugby....Request free trial
(Rugby) (Con)
I am grateful for the opportunity to raise the important topic of
police investigations into road traffic deaths. I do so this
evening in support of and in tribute to my constituents George
and Giulietta Galli-Atkinson, who have campaigned tirelessly on
road safety over the past 25 years.
I first met the Galli-Atkinsons shortly after I was elected as
the Member of Parliament for Rugby in 2010. The family had
recently moved from London to Rugby. They came to tell me about
the awards they had established in memory of their daughter
Livia, who was killed in a road traffic collision in 1998. I
remember our meeting very well. As we spoke, I was struck by
their strong commitment to making our roads safer so that other
families can be spared the tragedy they have had to bear.
Their daughter Livia was born at Chase Farm Hospital in Enfield
on 30 October 1981. She was growing into a beautiful young
woman—thoughtful, studious, hard-working, kind and with a clear
understanding of right and wrong. Her hobbies included riding and
ballet. She loved “Gone with the Wind” and had a dry sense of
humour.
On 12 January 1998, when she was 16 years old, Livia left home at
6.55 pm to walk to her Monday evening ballet class, which was due
to take place at 7.15 pm on Windmill Hill in Enfield. As she was
walking along the pavement leading to the studio, a car mounted
it and careered into her, having first injured another
pedestrian. Livia sadly died at the scene at 7.40 pm. At the
time, George and Giulietta were completely unaware of what had
happened. I remember George telling me how he had arranged to
collect Livia after her class, and on his way there he saw blue
lights flashing. He spoke of how the thought crossed his mind
that it must be sad that for the relatives of the person being
attended to by the emergency services.
When the case came to trial and the driver was found guilty by
unanimous verdict of the charge of causing death by dangerous
driving on 6 November 1998, I think everybody expected a
custodial sentence. The judge, however, considered the case to be
borderline with careless driving and accepted the defendant’s
last-minute decision not to testify. The judge declared that
there was no benefit in sending the defendant to jail, as he had
previously been of good character, and said nor would it serve
justice. The defendant received a £2,000 fine, 10 points on his
licence and a five-year ban from driving.
An appeal against this leniency was immediately lodged with the
Attorney General by the family and the Crown Prosecution Service.
As he did not consider the sentence to be unduly lenient, the
Attorney General declined the appeal. In 2000, the family took
the Attorney General to judicial review on the grounds of
unreasonableness. The first attempt failed. At the second
attempt, the High Court found that, for the purpose of the
hearings, it had been an unduly lenient sentence, and that while
the Attorney General had made an error of judgment in denying the
appeal, he had not made an error of law.
Still disappointed, in 2002 the family turned to the European
Court of Human Rights to test articles 2, 3, 13 and 14. Again,
Livia’s case failed. All avenues in the criminal process having
been exhausted, the family turned to civil redress and the civil
case succeeded. I understand that everyone who has read about
Livia’s case agrees that the sentence was very light.
The inspiration for an award in Livia’s memory arose from the
work of the three police officers in charge of the case, who were
described by George and Giulietta as “superlative”. At that time,
there was no public accolade for traffic police officers. The
award was established by Livia’s parents in gratitude to the road
traffic officers who investigated Livia’s case. George and
Giulietta recognised that they fulfilled the expectations of
professional service and integrity, and they formed the criteria
and mandate for the Livia award. Through their own experiences,
the family have, most admirably, turned their grief into
something very positive.
The Livia award for professionalism and service to justice has
grown from an award that was first presented in the Livia
memorial garden as a memento of personal gratitude, into a
milestone in the Metropolitan police’s history and annual agenda.
The Livia memorial garden in Enfield was opened by the then hon.
Member for Enfield, , in October 1999. The 100
square metre derelict site, adjacent to the pavement where Livia
was killed, was transformed into a haven for public use. Stephen
remains closely involved with the Livia award to this day.
The award has been endorsed over the years by all the Prime
Ministers since that time, from through to , , my right hon. Friend the
Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May) and , along with every single
Metropolitan Police Commissioner since 2000, and, most especially
and significantly, by the Metropolitan police’s traffic command
and its officers. The award is made annually to the Metropolitan
police officer in the roads and transport policing command,
serious collision investigation unit who is judged to have
provided the most meritorious service to road death
investigation, either in a specific case or sustained through
several investigations, or by providing the family of a road
crash victim with outstanding service.
(Halifax) (Lab)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing the debate. He is
making an incredibly powerful speech. Having inquired about what
goes on behind the scenes when investigating fatal road traffic
collisions following a particularly tragic case in my
constituency, I know that one thing that distresses families is
the length of time it takes to investigate a collision and bring
a case to court. West Yorkshire police do fantastic work and I
pay tribute to them, as he is paying tribute to some of the
officers he has referenced. One challenge is that it takes three
years to train a forensic collision investigator. The challenge
of getting the capacity in those training courses to train
officers, so that there are enough incredibly talented and
experienced officers to do this important work, is creating some
of those delays. Does he share my thought that that is something
for the Government to consider, so that the training can be
undertaken in a timely fashion to ensure that we have the right
number of special investigators and we get justice for families
who are hit the hardest by these tragedies?
The hon. Lady makes some important and pertinent points. I will
go on to talk about the work of some of the officers I have heard
about as a judge for the award. She is right to talk about the
specialism of the role and the importance of effective training,
and the time it takes for officers to achieve that level of
expertise.
There are three criteria for the Livia award: service to justice
when outstanding detective ability is displayed, professionalism
when there is clearly excellence in the investigation, and
service to the families of the victims. A 25th anniversary event
was held in November last year, and I am proud to have been asked
to be a member of the judging panel in recent years. It is worth
pointing out that throughout those 25 years, the panel has been
independent of the Metropolitan police and, indeed, independent
of George and Giulietta. It consists of professionals and former
professionals including solicitors and barristers, a former court
reporter for a major newspaper, former senior police officers
and, usually, a Member of the House of Lords and a Member of
Parliament. It is also significant that nominations are made by
colleagues of officers involved in the investigation of serious
road transport collisions. The nominations are initially in
writing, and are followed by interviews with those who are
nominated.
In reading these accounts and hearing from the nominees each
year—this is relevant to what was said by the hon. Member for
Halifax ()—I have been struck by the
professionalism and service to justice that each of the
candidates portrays. I have read, and heard face-to-face,
accounts from police officers who have had to attend the most
harrowing incidents. It was particularly interesting for me, as a
provincial MP from a small town in the midlands, to understand
some of the challenges of policing in a capital as large and
sophisticated as London. Often, the people who have to pick up
the pieces and bring families together are police officers, and I
have heard a great deal from family liaison officers—a role that
I had not heard of before my involvement with the Livia award.
Being a member of the panel has given me an insight into a world
that I would not otherwise have seen.
I want to provide a flavour of the calibre of the candidates, and
the kind of work that they have had to do, through a couple of
case studies. The first is the 2023 Livia award winner, Detective
Constable Davina Nash, who had been the collision investigator
for a serious injury collision that took place in Acton, London,
in June 2021. The collision resulted in potentially life-changing
injuries to a two-and-a-half-year-old girl who was with her
mother and brother, crossing a major road showing a green light
at a pedestrian crossing. She was on a toy scooter when, despite
the signal being red for traffic and a stream of stationary cars
waiting for the signals to change, a moped rider approached the
crossing at speed, overtook the stationary cars and collided with
the little girl, who was part of the way across the crossing. Her
injuries were so severe that medical staff thought she would die,
or would be left with a severe brain injury.
As family liaison officer for the family, DC Nash had to pick up
the pieces. She carried out a meticulous and thorough
investigation, and her work led to a successful prosecution for
causing serious injury by dangerous driving, driving while over
the cannabis limit, and driving with no licence and no insurance.
The judge imposed the maximum sentence possible after a guilty
plea reduction, which was 42 months’ imprisonment, and commented
that the sentence was nowhere near high enough given the gravity
of the little girl’s injuries.
The second case study refers to the work of another 2023 award
nominee, Police Constable Ed Raymond. On Sunday 10 July 2022, a
fatal road traffic collision occurred in New Kent Road,
Southwark. The 24-year-old driver was unlicensed and at almost
twice the drink-drive limit when the car that he was driving
smashed into a pedicab, throwing the passenger from the vehicle
and killing her. The driver of the rickshaw sustained
life-changing injuries.
PC Raymond was employed as a family liaison officer—such an
important role—and he went to extraordinary lengths to support
the victim’s family. In this case, the defendant pleaded guilty
to causing death by dangerous driving and a number of other
offences, and was sentenced to just over nine years in November
2022. However, in the first case of its kind, the case was
reviewed by the Attorney General and an unduly lenient sentence
appeal was heard at the Royal Courts of Justice in January 2023.
This was due to the changes in sentencing guidelines for death by
dangerous driving that came into force in June 2022. The appeal
resulted in the first stated case and the sentence was increased
by a third. The driver of the vehicle is now serving 12 years in
prison.
PC Raymond’s role was to ensure that the victim’s family were
fully supported throughout, and he was able to establish a very
special relationship with them. A year on from the collision, he
joined the family in raising over £9,000 for various charities,
one of which is Brake, which provides support for bereaved
families who have lost loved ones in road traffic collisions. I
give those examples as an illustration of the severity of the
cases that officers are having to deal with.
George and Giulietta have not initiated these awards over 25
years just for the sake of the awards; they have also fought
tirelessly for more appropriate punishment for those found guilty
of causing death by dangerous driving. On both fronts they have
been incredibly successful. It has been an honour to work
alongside the Galli-Atkinsons and to see how their energy and
dedication to road safety has inspired and changed the work of
the police in this area. As a consequence of their pressure,
there are now three specialist units within the Metropolitan
police: the roads and transport policing command, the serious
collision investigation unit and the forensic collision
investigation unit. All are working tirelessly on the vision to
achieve safer roads and fairer sentencing.
The roads and transport policing command is the largest
operational command unit in the Metropolitan police and, working
in partnership with Transport for London, its focus is to deny
criminals use of the roads, and to reduce serious injury and road
deaths within London. The roads policing teams work 24/7, 365
days a year, responding to serious and fatal collisions and
incidents as well as targeting collision hotspots and educating
road users.
Education is a theme that George and Giulietta have picked up.
They have been involved with many successful campaigns and
programmes as well as supporting road safety charities such as
RoadPeace, Brake and Victim Support. I would like to refer
particularly to Safe Drive Stay Alive, which George helped to set
up in Enfield in 2008. Positive feedback grew, and more and more
London boroughs became interested in delivering that brand of
road safety education to a range of people that it was important
to influence, including learner drivers in their sixth-form
years. This programme, initiated by George, eventually covered 19
London boroughs, working in partnership with councils, emergency
services and the roads police.
As the local MP in Rugby, I am delighted that the programme was
introduced in my constituency in 2017—George and Giulietta having
come up to the midlands—when funding was provided by the
Warwickshire chief constable. I have seen that Safe Drive Stay
Alive is a professional, high-impact and effective stage show.
The objective of this road safety initiative is to show easily
influenced young people why, as young drivers, they and their
passengers are so vulnerable in their early years on the roads,
and to show them what they can do to reduce this vulnerability. I
have absolutely no doubt that those messages have saved
lives.
George has also been involved with Learn2Live in Hertfordshire—an
initiative similar to Safe Drive Stay Alive that reached more
than 7,000 students. He was subsequently asked by the Ministry of
Defence in 2019 to be involved with its road safety initiative,
Survive the Drive, in London and Surrey.
Over 25 years, George and Giulietta have contributed to countless
public consultations on road safety legislation and enforcement,
and their influence has borne fruit. In 2011, the then Member for
Enfield, Southgate, David Burrowes—who was a judging panel member
for a number of years, and who worked closely with George and
Giulietta—successfully campaigned for a change to dangerous
driving legislation to increase the maximum sentence to five
years.
To this day, the couple are campaigning tirelessly with Members
on both sides of the House to ensure that the road safety
investigation branch, promised by the Government, comes to
fruition. I am delighted to say that in 2023, for the first time
and after much campaigning in which George and Giulietta have
been instrumental, the Home Office included roads policing in its
strategic policing requirement, starting at paragraph 166:
“Roads policing is responsible for the enforcement of traffic
laws, detection, deterrence and the response to illegal or
dangerous activity on the roads… Roads policing capabilities play
an essential role in tackling the use of the roads network by
terrorist threats and serious and organised criminals involved in
county lines drug transportation, modern slavery and human
trafficking. They are also essential in managing incidents caused
by public disorder or civil emergencies.”
George and Giulietta are truly an inspiration, and their energy
and commitment to road safety, fair sentencing and proper
recognition of outstanding police officers in this area of
policing deserve high recognition and praise. Rugby is incredibly
lucky to have two such people in our midst, and it has been my
honour to have been invited to join Giulietta’s work on the Livia
award.
I have found it inspirational, and deeply challenging, to learn
about the work of road collision investigators. The role is
sometimes overlooked within the police service, but it is vital
to the pursuit of justice for those affected by road traffic
incidents. The work that George and Giulietta have done to
maintain the high profile of the Livia award throughout its 25
years has done much to highlight this valuable policing role, and
has recognised many police officers who have gone above and
beyond the call of duty in supporting families such as the
Galli-Atkinsons.
8.53pm
The Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire ()
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Rugby () on securing this Adjournment
debate. Every road traffic death is a tragedy, and I strongly
echo what he said about the impact on those affected. I join him
in thanking the police for the excellent work they do up and down
the country every day to keep our roads safe, and to respond to
fatal and serious road traffic incidents. These are often
extraordinarily distressing incidents, but it is the role of the
police to investigate them in a clear-minded and thorough way.
The investigations can often be complex and technical, but the
public rightly expect the police to undertake them.
I would like to convey my deepest sympathy to my hon. Friend’s
constituents, George and Giulietta Galli-Atkinson, for the tragic
loss of their daughter Livia. I have been very moved, as I am
sure we all have, by his description of the family’s work since
the tragic death of their daughter to try to bring some good out
of an awful personal tragedy.
I wish to put on record my sincere thanks to George and Giulietta
for the work they have done these past 25 years to promote and
campaign for road traffic safety, including in establishing and
perpetuating the Livia award for professionalism and service to
justice. As my hon. Friend has said, it has played such an
important role in highlighting the work that collision
investigators and family liaison officers do—in trying to bring
some answers following tragedy and in looking after the families
in their hour of darkness as best they can.
Police officers up and down the country show, on a daily basis,
enormous commitment and dedication in responding to fatal road
traffic incidents, and it is right that their efforts are
recognised. Again, I thank the Galli-Atkinsons for what they have
done to support and promote this work, and to campaign for road
safety. What they have done has truly made a difference over the
past 25 years, as my hon. Friend set out. They should be
incredibly proud that they have shown such courage, fortitude and
determination to bring such good out of a terrible tragedy.
Of course, many families respond in that way. As a constituency
Member of Parliament, and in my role as the Minister for Crime,
Policing and Fire, I, like other Members, often meet families
whose lives have been touched by tragedy; and we find that often
they do respond as the Galli-Atkinson family have, by trying to
bring some good out of their tragedy in order to help other
people who find themselves in the same situation. It is important
that we, as Members of Parliament and Ministers, listen carefully
to what families who have had such terrible experiences have to
say, to make sure that we in Parliament and in Government can
learn from them. I therefore repeat my thanks to the
Galli-Atkinson family for their campaigning, which does make, and
has made, a difference; their voice has absolutely been
heard.
Let me make one or two more general remarks about road safety,
which is, of course, a priority for the Government. We continue
to work to make our roads safer. Britain’s roads are among the
safest in the world, but we are not complacent. In 2022, there
were, sadly, 1,711 fatal road collisions—each one a life cut
short. We need to make sure we do everything we can to make our
roads safer and to tighten the law where it needs to be tighter.
We need to do that to make sure, first, that accidents are
avoided and, secondly, that where a driver has been careless,
dangerous or reckless, or has driven under the influence of drugs
or drink, they are brought to justice, that families can see
justice being done, that there is a deterrent effect and that
those sentences can be felt across society.
Although we have safe roads compared with many other countries,
the work is certainly not done—there is more to do. By working
with Members from both sides of the House—especially those whose
constituents, like those of my hon. Friend, have experienced
tragedy—and listening to them and to their experiences, I know
that we can do even more. All of us will work together to make
sure that that happens.
Question put and agreed to.
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