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I'm puzzled about penalties for 'death by dangerous driving'
David Jenkins - 31/10/05 at 11:59 AM

This has come up on the BBC News pages:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4392584.stm

Why do you need special penalties for killing someone by driving badly? In other environments, if you cause the death of someone by carelessness or stupidity you usually face a manslaughter charge. Why should drivers be any different?

If a driver kills someone else, I feel that the choices should be "accident", "manslaughter" or "murder". There shouldn't be a "death by dangerous driving" option.

<rant off>

David


NS Dev - 31/10/05 at 12:14 PM

Have to say I agree with that.

The accident one would be the tricky one, because being killed by a car is always going to be emotive for somebody but there are genuine accidents, which should have been classed as such, but ended up being "death by dangerous driving".

Likewise there are no doubt cases which should have been "manslaughter" or even "murder" but were also lumped into the "death by dangerous driving" conviction.

I certainly agree with you on that one.


Fozzie - 31/10/05 at 12:21 PM

Absolutely agree! I could never fathom as to why there was such confusion over the death by dangerous driving, it should never have been classed in the first place (IMO)
I agree that its either an accident, manslaughter or murder. A vehicle after all is a very powerful weapon!
My rant over!
Fozzie


ned - 31/10/05 at 12:24 PM

to quote the bbc website linked above:

-----
There would also be a new offence of "causing death when driving while unlicensed, disqualified or uninsured", carrying a sentence of up to two years.
-----

is that really the best they could come up with?!!!!

Ned.


Aboardman - 31/10/05 at 12:29 PM

There would also be a new offence of "causing death when driving while unlicensed, disqualified or uninsured", carrying a sentence of up to two years.

should be min 2 years


GParkes - 31/10/05 at 12:42 PM

My issue on the whole death whilst driving offense is that it is dependant on the type of car you are driving.

If you hit someone in a rusty old mini whilst driving dangerously in your Bentley, they are more likely to be killed than if you are driving your rusty old mini dangerously and collide with someone in a Bentley.

I assume the 2 years for driving unlicensed etc would be in addition to the five years otherwise those who are driving illegally get off lightly!


ChrisGamlin - 31/10/05 at 12:44 PM

Looking at it the other way, if there was a 10-20 year jail sentence hanging over someone and there was the slightest doubt about the evidence, you'd probably find that a lot more get away without punishment because the jury would be less inclined to give a guilty verdict with so much at stake for the defendant.

Does manslaughter and then murder sit above the "death by dangerous driving" charge as an option for the prosection, or is it just DBDD or nothing? If the latter, then I think the more conventional charges should also be allowed to be considered if the prosecution feel they have a sufficient case.

Chris


MikeR - 31/10/05 at 12:50 PM

i think the problem is all around the area of intent.

if you intend to kill someone its murder,
if you don't plan to kill someone its manslaugher
if its an accident its an accident.

So i'm driving a little quickly but within the speed limit, i have an accident and someone dies. I've not planned to kill them, i don't intend to kill them but i've not been responsible in my actions so its not an accident.

ah heck, who knows, i can't figure this out, at least its keeping a lawyer in work.


NS Dev - 31/10/05 at 12:54 PM

that's exactly it. How do you define "responsible"

This dilemma is the crux of the whole claims culture enveloping the western world.

Obviously the devil would be in the detail, but if the court were looking on dbdd as a lesser alternative to manslaughter, then the verdict should almost certainly be accidental.


smart51 - 31/10/05 at 12:57 PM

My understanding is that it is murder if you deliberatly set out to kill someone. Manslaughter is if you deliberatly do something to someone which results in their death but you didn't plan to kill them (i.e. "I only wanted to teach him a lesson, I didn't think he would die"

Death by dangerous driving is driving dangerously (worse than carelessly) which leads to you causing someone to die. e.g doing 100 MPH in a residential street, loosing control and killing someone.

The new offence will be death by careless driving, so the BBC seems to say. This might be runing someone over because you were looking at your radio rather than where you were going.

Manslaughter or murder in a car would have to be if you INTENDED to run them over rather than running them over due to stupidity or incompetance.


MikeP - 31/10/05 at 01:07 PM

There's a writer over here (Jim Kenzie) that wants us to stop using the term "accident" to refer to collisions. His point is that it's never "an unforeseen and unplanned event or circumstance" nor "lack of intention or necessity". It's always the result of negligence by one or all of the parties involved. He want's to get rid of the notion that they are ever blameless and unpreventable.

Manslaughter seems a much more appropriate charge with this view. It would be a shame to ruin more lives though unless there was a danger of offending again - I doubt stricter penalties would be a deterrent. Maybe we could be more effective if there was a greater social stigma associate with inattentive driving like there is with drunk driving - like cell phone use when the vehicle is moving, etc.


NS Dev - 31/10/05 at 01:13 PM

well Jim Kenzie is an inhuman Wan*er then! What an utter twat.

I take it that he is a lawyer or in some way connected with the legal system in a manner to increase his personal wealth.

Hopefull he will be on the recieving end of an "accident" that can't happen.

I will say no more.

[Edited on 31/10/05 by NS Dev]


ChrisGamlin - 31/10/05 at 01:19 PM

So who's to blame in this Jim Kenzie's world when a tree falls on your car whilst driving along, or a deer runs out in front of you and you crash because the impact has knocked you unconcious?


smart51 - 31/10/05 at 01:37 PM

The term accident is used because collisions are usually not deliberate. Accident does also imply that the crasher is blameless to at least some extent. Often one or other driver is careless, malicious, incompetant or ignorant. Sometimes collisions are accidental.

Consider someone who runs over some debris in the road, like a nail or some broken glass, blown there by high winds in a storm. That debris caused a tyre to fail catastrophically. Despite the best efforts of an experianced and capable driver who was allert and concentrating on driving, the car swerves causing a collision. Is this not an "accident"? Whose fault is it? the driver for not performing a miracle? the wind? The manufacturer of the nail?

Just because some crashes are caused by ar5eholes, it doesn't mean that they all are, no matter how upset the victims are.


NS Dev - 31/10/05 at 01:47 PM

Exactly right.

Imcompetence should be punished, but it is not always the case that incompetence caused an accident.

unfortunately the human cost of some accidents is very high, and the emotional side of this causes blame to be unfairly attributed.


JoelP - 31/10/05 at 03:50 PM

IMHO, we seem to have the definition of manslaughter slightly wrong Manslaughter is any criminal act resulting in death, but obviously not intentional. If you were 'trying to teach someone a lesson but never meant to kill him' you would normally be correctly convicted of murder. Manslaughter would include killing someone by gross negligance (ie, a fatality resulting from chucking a beer bottle out of a car window, or doing bad gas work, or selling poor quality car jacks, or failing to maintain a railway line etc)

just thought id add that.


David Jenkins - 31/10/05 at 03:56 PM

That was my interpretation - killing someone "without malice aforethought" (or however it's spelled).

DJ


ned - 31/10/05 at 04:08 PM

so, forgive my ignorance but would driving above the speed limit (but with due care and attention) and being involved in an accident put you up for manslaughter? speeding is a criminal offence isn't it as opposed to a civil offence? so say doing 75-80mph on a dual carriageway/motorway (guess they have to proove that) and having an accident potentially makes 80+% of drivers (rough guess of drivers that drive at these speeds or higher) on these roads potential manslaughter fellans?

Ned.

ps You'd never believe I work with Lawyers, Barristers, QC's, ex Lord chief justice and the like would you!


David Jenkins - 31/10/05 at 04:13 PM

I tried to do a Google to find a definition of manslaughter in UK law. (and Yahoo, Ask Jeeves, etc). It's very clear that it's a difficult area, with the difference between it and murder being a major part of law student's course work! Little chance of us getting it right...

In general though, it seems to be unintentionally causing someone's death through an illegal act. The example I saw was a trespasser dropping a stone down a mineshaft and killing someone down below. He didn't go with the intent of killing someone, but did, unintentionally.

Incidentally, drivers have been charged with manslaughter in the past, but it's very rare.

DJ


ChrisGamlin - 31/10/05 at 06:01 PM

After reading this thread at lunchtime I was wondering exactly the same as Ned, is speeding classified as careless driving?


MikeP - 31/10/05 at 07:41 PM

quote:
Originally posted by NS Dev
well Jim Kenzie is an inhuman Wan*er then! What an utter twat.
[Edited on 31/10/05 by NS Dev]


LOL, he's been called worse. He's an automotive journalist here in Canada.

He makes his points rather abrasively, but I usually agree with him. In this case he's talking about the majority of "accidents" that are caused by inattentiveness, impaired driving, driving too fast, lack of skill/training, etc. He'd rather we stop shrugging them off as unavoidable and try to figure out how to reduce or eliminate them. Usually he doesn't blame incompetence but often does blame lack of training.
(I hope I'm not butchering his ideas too much).

Hitting a deer? Running over debris left by the wind? Too fast for conditions IMO (not to say I wouldn't make the same mistake, but it is a mistake).

Tree falling on a car? An accident, assuming it wasn't windy and the tree was properly maintained.

Can't be incompetence, then the blame would be squarely on the government who licensed us to drive in the first place !


JoelP - 31/10/05 at 07:46 PM

obviously we can misinterpret him, or not overlook his poor wording, but he really means that in many accidents, someone is to blame. Certainly in every one ive been involved in, someone was to blame. Obviously mechanical failure is sometimes unavoidable, and acts of god/nature, but i bet if we all drove according to the letter of the highway code, at least 95% of accidents wouldnt happen. We'd also all be perminantly late and pissed of, but thats another matter except the highway code probably says set off in good time too!

[Edited on 31/10/05 by JoelP]


steve_gus - 31/10/05 at 07:46 PM

I dont understand the causing death when uninsured charge.

Surely its what you did that counts, not that you didnt have insurance or tax. Would the person have lived, and things been ok, if you had that bit of paper from Norwich Union.

Its a bollox charge. If someone was driving without insurance, and someone chucks themselves under your car as a suicide, then you go down. What sense is there in that?

atb

steve


jollygreengiant - 31/10/05 at 07:49 PM

The thing to remember about speed limits are that they are maximum speed limits for that road (or section of that) you are on, but as a responsible driver you are expected to drive safely at all times and the speed you are traveling at should reflect the road/weather/visibility conditions applicable at that time.
Would 70mph on a motorway be considered safe in a thick fog with only 10 meters visibility?
Would 30mph be considered safe on a narrow country road, with houses around, at night, in an area where there are known herds of deer (hence warning signs)?
Would 40mph be a safe speed through a wooded area, whilst there is torrential rain (20 metres visibility) and gale force winds (80mph +)?

I believe that in Germany the police take the attitude that there is NO such thing as an accident and SOMEONE is ALWAYS responsible. Even if its the mechanic who failed to do a bolt up.!

Occasionally you do get events that are beyond a drivers control (speed/steering/visibility) and we had one recently(ish) where an older lady stepped off the kerb in front of a bus (as it was turning into another road) and she was killed instantly. In this case the investigation exhoneratated the bus driver on the grounds that she had possibly diliberately stepped into the road but to this day they do not know if she had or had not seen the bus. Personaly I feel deep sympathy for the bus driver likewise train drivers who are completely helpless when it happens to them.

The main problem lies with the lack of proper public transport, and, that as a working population, we no longer live within walking distance OR sensible public transport distance of our places of employment.

Consider the possibility that the government recognises this and the fact that if they started cracking down on the drivers with severe penalties for driving then the economy would colapse fairly quickly and the prisons would fill up very rapidly. They are however quite happy to accept a large income from speeding drivers and do nothing about improving general driving standards or the policing of those standards of driving.


OK lads debate that lot.

Oh and I do know what it is like to have a pedestrian step into my path, serveral years ago I followed some cars past a school bus, half way along I spotted feet crossing the front of the bus, I STOPPED. The twelve year old boy didn't and ran into the stationary nearside front of my car. He got some bruises, but it could have been worse. 5 hours later I got a grilling from the (BEDFORDSHIRE) police. The only thing that saved me was that I had imediately reported the incident to the local station (NORTHANTS).
Even now it scares the cr*p out of me.


steve_gus - 31/10/05 at 07:58 PM

The case in 1984 where two miners killed a taxi driver dropping a brick of a bridge was eventually judged to be mansluaghter, as they had not set out to kill. Thats the malice aforthought bit.

Problem is with car legislation is there is no murder or manslaughter - simply 'causing death' - so its really a bit of a meaningless debate.

Proletarian pleaser legislation.

atb

steve





quote:
Originally posted by David Jenkins
I tried to do a Google to find a definition of manslaughter in UK law. (and Yahoo, Ask Jeeves, etc). It's very clear that it's a difficult area, with the difference between it and murder being a major part of law student's course work! Little chance of us getting it right...

In general though, it seems to be unintentionally causing someone's death through an illegal act. The example I saw was a trespasser dropping a stone down a mineshaft and killing someone down below. He didn't go with the intent of killing someone, but did, unintentionally.

Incidentally, drivers have been charged with manslaughter in the past, but it's very rare.

DJ


ChrisGamlin - 31/10/05 at 08:41 PM

quote:
Originally posted by MikeP

Hitting a deer? Running over debris left by the wind? Too fast for conditions IMO (not to say I wouldn't make the same mistake, but it is a mistake).



You've obviously not driven on British B roads
Years ago I had a deer headbutt the side of my car when it ran out from a tree lined roadside into my car! Had he decided to run out 1/2 second earlier he would have been coming across the front of my car but there's no way I could have reacted, and even if I was only doing 10mph he still would have hit the car and I wouldnt have been able to avoid him. Was the mistake I made choosing to drive down that road in the first place?

[Edited on 31/10/05 by ChrisGamlin]


Cita - 1/11/05 at 05:36 AM

Hmmm.. I dont think Kenzie is too far off
nor does the German police!!

cheers Cita


NS Dev - 1/11/05 at 08:17 AM

quote:
Originally posted by jollygreengiant
The thing to remember about speed limits are that they are maximum speed limits for that road (or section of that) you are on, but as a responsible driver you are expected to drive safely at all times and the speed you are traveling at should reflect the road/weather/visibility conditions applicable at that time.
Would 70mph on a motorway be considered safe in a thick fog with only 10 meters visibility?
Would 30mph be considered safe on a narrow country road, with houses around, at night, in an area where there are known herds of deer (hence warning signs)?
Would 40mph be a safe speed through a wooded area, whilst there is torrential rain (20 metres visibility) and gale force winds (80mph +)?

I believe that in Germany the police take the attitude that there is NO such thing as an accident and SOMEONE is ALWAYS responsible. Even if its the mechanic who failed to do a bolt up.!

Occasionally you do get events that are beyond a drivers control (speed/steering/visibility) and we had one recently(ish) where an older lady stepped off the kerb in front of a bus (as it was turning into another road) and she was killed instantly. In this case the investigation exhoneratated the bus driver on the grounds that she had possibly diliberately stepped into the road but to this day they do not know if she had or had not seen the bus. Personaly I feel deep sympathy for the bus driver likewise train drivers who are completely helpless when it happens to them.

The main problem lies with the lack of proper public transport, and, that as a working population, we no longer live within walking distance OR sensible public transport distance of our places of employment.

Consider the possibility that the government recognises this and the fact that if they started cracking down on the drivers with severe penalties for driving then the economy would colapse fairly quickly and the prisons would fill up very rapidly. They are however quite happy to accept a large income from speeding drivers and do nothing about improving general driving standards or the policing of those standards of driving.


OK lads debate that lot.

Oh and I do know what it is like to have a pedestrian step into my path, serveral years ago I followed some cars past a school bus, half way along I spotted feet crossing the front of the bus, I STOPPED. The twelve year old boy didn't and ran into the stationary nearside front of my car. He got some bruises, but it could have been worse. 5 hours later I got a grilling from the (BEDFORDSHIRE) police. The only thing that saved me was that I had imediately reported the incident to the local station (NORTHANTS).
Even now it scares the cr*p out of me.


Some good points here (unlike some further up I feel!)

The "no such thing as an accident" bit is utter crap as I said further up, but yes, in MANY cases someone IS to blame directly.

The german mechanic who fails to do a bolt up IS indeed to blame. If I worked on someone's car and left it in dangerous condition then I would expect to face the full force of the law if they were injured as a result of my work.

Several years servicing for rally teams made me think VERY methodically when it came to safety critica bits (I may come over as devil may care to those on here who know me but I am extremely careful with safety critical items!)

RE. the speed limits, I have said before, some are FAR too low, and some are too high. Many roads in my area (I know it's the nimby view but I know these roads!) are narrow, with cars parked both sides and children playing. They should be educated but many are not, and of course they are easily distracted. 30mph gives NO time to stop when there are parked cars both sides. When the cars are gone in the day though 40mph is perfectly safe. SPEED APPROPRIATE TO THE CONDITIONS!!!!

The other night driving down a single carriageway A-road near to me, in dry conditions, with no other cars visible, I drove home at speeds considerably into licence losing territory, but again it was appropriate to the conditions (yes, I know that is my opinion, but I am driving the car and can see hazards as they appear)

The children in the road one always scares me, hence why I drive SOOOO slowly are with utter care in streets where they are regularly playing. In a similar vein to the bus driving thing, shortly before the mobile phone while driving legislation change, I receved a call which i would normally not have answered, but as it was somebody that I knew and who would no mind me breaking off the conversation to concentrate on driving, I did.

I then came to some parked vans and cars opposite a shop, and slowed right down, as in to 15mph or so. Another car was then right up my chuff evidently peed off with me for slowing down. At this point a small girl crossed to road to the shop without looking at all. I braked again to around 5mph suspecting she may not be alone, and surely enough at that point a small (7ish) year old boy ran out after her, around 8 feet in front of my car. One furhter stamp on the brake stopped my car in about 1m with the boy frozen in front of me...........................................................had I been doing 30mph he would certainly be in hospital, if not worse. I would have been blamed for being on the phone, when that had NOTHING to do with it as I was concentrating 100% on the unfolding situation and though I was holding the phone, I had totally stopped conversing for the period. I would then have been lynched by the locals as it is not the best area to run over a child in.

SPEED APPROPRIATE TO THE CONDITIONS IS THE KEY, both above and below the speed limit in my humble opinion.


MikeP - 1/11/05 at 05:49 PM

quote:
Originally posted by ChrisGamlin
Years ago I had a deer headbutt the side of my car when it ran out from a tree lined roadside into my car!
[Edited on 31/10/05 by ChrisGamlin]


Clearly too slow for conditions Chris !

I agree completely NS, the right speed for the right conditions. You'd like what Kenzie says about speeding: "On highways speed isn't the problem, it's the point!", and he's a big advocate of raising the highway limits. He's got a lot to say about left (right to many of you) lane bandits obstructing traffic by running at the legal limit, and to SUVs passing either side when there's deep snow & ice on the road.

Trouble is when laws aren't black and white they're much easier to fight in court. It's illegal here to obstruct traffic by driving in the left lane regardless of how fast you're going. But that law is seldom enforced - it's just not worth the officer's time. Speeding tickets are much easier to hand out.

Of course there are freak accidents where no one is to blame, but the vast majority have fault, often shared. Kenzie would like us to spend more time figuring out why and eliminating the causes rather than shrugging them off as "accidents".


NS Dev - 1/11/05 at 06:33 PM

Ok, perhaps I was a little harsh then!

I will agree that many accidents are the fault of stupid mistakes made by inattentive drivers, but there lies another problem which many will disagree with me on!

Low speed limits dull the reactions. This is a fact proven in scientific study. The lack of use of rapid reactions leads to the inability to use them at all.........which I guess leads back to the "highway limits" argument I suppose!