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Charlie Alliston: Cyclist detained over pedestrian death | Charlie Alliston: Cyclist detained over pedestrian death |
(35 minutes later) | |
A cyclist who knocked over and killed a 44-year-old woman in east London has been sentenced to 18 months in a young offenders' institution. | A cyclist who knocked over and killed a 44-year-old woman in east London has been sentenced to 18 months in a young offenders' institution. |
Charlie Alliston, then 18, was travelling on a fixed-wheel track bike with no front brakes before crashing into Kim Briggs in February last year. | Charlie Alliston, then 18, was travelling on a fixed-wheel track bike with no front brakes before crashing into Kim Briggs in February last year. |
He was cleared of her manslaughter, but found guilty of bodily harm by "wanton or furious driving". | He was cleared of her manslaughter, but found guilty of bodily harm by "wanton or furious driving". |
Judge Wendy Thomas described Alliston as "an accident waiting to happen". | Judge Wendy Thomas described Alliston as "an accident waiting to happen". |
Sentencing at the Old Bailey, the judge said: "I am satisfied in some part it was this so-called thrill that motivated you to ride without a front brake shouting and swearing at pedestrians to get out of the way. | Sentencing at the Old Bailey, the judge said: "I am satisfied in some part it was this so-called thrill that motivated you to ride without a front brake shouting and swearing at pedestrians to get out of the way. |
"I have no doubt you are wrong in this. You were an accident waiting to happen. | "I have no doubt you are wrong in this. You were an accident waiting to happen. |
"The victim could have been any pedestrian. It was in fact Mrs Kim Briggs." | "The victim could have been any pedestrian. It was in fact Mrs Kim Briggs." |
Mother-of-two Kim Briggs was crossing Old Street during her lunch break when she was hit. | Mother-of-two Kim Briggs was crossing Old Street during her lunch break when she was hit. |
She suffered serious head injuries, including a fractured skull, and died a week later in hospital. | She suffered serious head injuries, including a fractured skull, and died a week later in hospital. |
Alliston, now 20, raised his eyebrows as the judge said his sentence would be custodial. | |
In a series of posts on social media, he described how he twice warned Mrs Briggs to get out of the way. | |
He wrote: "We collided pretty hard, our heads hit together, hers went into the floor and ricocheted into mine." | |
He complained: "It's not my fault people either think they are invincible or have zero respect for cyclists." | |
'Gap in the law' | |
In a statement outside court, Mrs Briggs' widower Matthew, from Lewisham, south London, called for the introduction of new laws, including causing death by dangerous cycling. | |
He said the case demonstrated the "gap in the law when it comes to dealing with death or serious injury by dangerous cycling." | |
"To have to rely on either manslaughter at one end, or a Victorian law that doesn't even mention causing death at the other end, tells us there is a gap", he said. | |
"The fact that what happened to Kim is rare is not a reason to be no remedy." | |
Alliston's lawyer Mark Wyeth QC told the court that his client had "a lot of internal sense of emotional turmoil but keeps this hidden as a coping strategy." | |
The court heard Alliston was depressed, had broken up with his girlfriend and lost his job. | |
Prosecutors took the unprecedented step of bringing a manslaughter charge due to the unusually grave circumstances of the case. | |
The other offence of wanton and furious driving, under the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act, carries a maximum sentence of two years in jail. | |
Alliston, from Bermondsey, south London, had denied both charges against him. |