Driver Colin Coveney may have pressed accelerator instead of brake: court
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by Annette Wilson
A lorry driver who may have fatally mistaken his accelerator for
the brake pedal, an error that killed a nurse, has been jailed for
two years.
Rose Parsons, 71, died from her injuries when the lorry driven
by Colin Coveney of Sturry Way, Gillingham failed to stop at the
roundabout near William Harvey Hospital, Ashford and collided with
Mrs Parsons' red Ford Fiesta and another vehicle.
Coveney, a lorry driver for 37 years, later admitted causing
death by careless driving in July 2010 but went on trial at
Canterbury Crown Court denying causing death by dangerous driving
and was acquitted.
But Judge Adele Williams told the 64-year-old she viewed his
driving as in the most serious category of careless driving,
falling not far short of dangerous driving.
The jury heard Coveney's speed as he came up the sliproad from
the M20 only reduced from 52mph at the bottom to 38.5mph at the
roundabout where the vehicle toppled over, crushing the red
Fiesta.
Coveney in his evidence said he braked but was "getting nothing"
and kept pumping the pedal to try to build up pressure. He thought
his brakes had failed, but forensic evidence showed there were no
faults with the brakes.
Coveney was driving a Sainsbury's lorry delivering frozen goods
to a New Romney store when he exited on the coastbound
carriageway.
A tachograph expert discovered as the vehicle drove up the slip
road, there were three "very short" increases in speed, each
lasting quarter of a second.
"They may raise the possibility that the defendant pressed the
accelerator pedal by mistake rather than the brake," said
prosecutor Anthony Prosser. But, he added, the Crown did not accept
that was necessarily the explanation for what happened.
A witness saw Coveney waving his arms and sounding his horn as
he approached the roundabout and the other motorist caught in the
crash, Ronald Woodward, said he was suddenly aware of the lorry
coming up the slip road. He escaped minor injuries but Mrs Parsons
died from severe head and neck injuries.
Coveney said he tested his brakes before leaving the Aylesford
depot but when he later put his foot on the pedal it went to the
floor. "I was astonished, scared," he told the jury.
He realised he was going to go into the roundabout and wanted to
avoid any collision so was making a noise and waving his arms to
get people out of the way. "I saw a red car in front of me, I
turned to the left to avoid it but couldn't and hit it with the
front nearside of the lorry and pushed it," he said.
After the lorry overturned, he tried climbing out of the broken
window.
Coveney was banned for three years and must take an
extended driving test before he drives again.
Jailing Coveney, Judge Williams said the loss to Mrs Parson's
family was incalculable and described her as a kind and extremely
caring person, very much valued in her work.
Her husband had suffered great difficulties since the accident
and her daughters had needed treatment for physical and emotional
symptoms.
She told Coveney he had made a fundamental mistake for a
professional driver, one for which there was no apparant
explanation with catastrophic consequences.
Tuesday, December 13 2011
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