This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-37834668
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Police criticised over wrong-way M1 death crash | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Police have been criticised for failing to stop an 87-year-old driving the wrong way on major roads before killing himself and another man in a crash. | Police have been criticised for failing to stop an 87-year-old driving the wrong way on major roads before killing himself and another man in a crash. |
Albert Newman drove for 30 miles in the wrong carriageways on the M42, the A42 and the M1 before crashing into a van. | |
An inquest heard one force had no motorway patrols on duty and another had earlier failed to notice Mr Newman's licence had been revoked. | |
The coroner adjourned the hearing so officers could answer more questions. | The coroner adjourned the hearing so officers could answer more questions. |
Dementia patient Mr Newman, from Nottingham, crashed his Mazda Premacy into a Transit van near Kegworth, Leicestershire, in October last year, killing passenger Michael Luciw and injuring the driver, Andy Harrington. | |
The inquest was told that Warwickshire police took the first call about a car on the wrong carriageway on the M42, but officers incorrectly recorded the direction he was heading. | |
The error was put right, but Mr Newman crossed the county boundary into Leicestershire on the A42, where the specialist roads policing unit had finished work for the night. | |
This meant the force had no specialist motorway patrols in the county. | |
Coroner Trevor Kirkman, speaking about Leicestershire police's involvement, said: "It does seem as if the procedure does not seem to be working very satisfactorily. | |
"This vehicle had travelled a long distance with no intervention." | |
Medical grounds | |
It emerged at the hearing in Loughborough that Nottinghamshire Police spoke to Mr Newman months before the crash after reports about him driving while showing signs of dementia. | |
An officer did not check the paperwork before visiting him. That would have revealed his licence had been revoked on medical grounds two years earlier. | |
Mr Kirkman adjourned the hearing until December to establish whether the force could have seized his car at that time. | |
At the end of the hearing, a senior officer from Nottinghamshire police offered an apology to the families if there was anything the force could have done to prevent the deaths. |