
Lillie Clack: Mum calls for law change after drink-driving crash
Sebastian Naughton, assistant coroner for London South, said the evidence showed Hilton's actions could be considered as gross negligence as he fled police reaching speeds of more than 100mph (161km/h), carried out an illegal U-turn and ran a red a light as passengers inside the car begged him to stop.Speaking after the inquest at South London Coroner's Court, Lillie's mother said: "Lillie went through a horrific ordeal and we are continuing to live through this every day."She added: "Hilton killed my daughter."He pleaded guilty to causing her death by dangerous driving while more than twice the legal alcohol limit, running from the police, refusing to stop, losing control of his car, and crashing into a tree."She is calling for lifetime driving bans for anyone convicted of causing death by dangerous driving while under the influence and for tougher penalties for dangerous drivers.
Ms Clack said the crash caused a bleed on Lillie's brain and she died on 28 December. "She was just 22. My baby girl," she said."If going through today's pain means something changes, if it shines a light on what went wrong and stops even one other family from feeling this kind of grief, then it was worth it."It cannot be right that any driver involved in a fatal crash gets to go home still carrying their licence in their pocket. It is also the case that too often those convicted of injuring people by their dangerous driving can one day return to the road."What happened to Lillie, her family, friends and the whole community, has to mean something. We all need to believe that lessons will be learned."
'In trouble'
The friends had been enjoying a Winter Wonderland attraction and visited a pub in Morden before accepting a lift home from Hilton.The car crashed in Beeches Avenue, Carshalton.In February 2023, Hilton was jailed at the Old Bailey for 10 years and six months after pleading guilty to causing Lillie's death by dangerous driving, three counts of causing serious injury, failing to stop when directed and driving above the alcohol limit.The coroner suggested Hilton "possibly knew he was in trouble due to the number of people in his vehicle", that the U-turn was "practically inviting the police to pursue" and he would have known he was over the alcohol limit to drive.He "made no effort to ascertain" if his passengers were wearing their seatbelts.
In his findings the coroner said: "Despite repeated requests from passengers throughout the pursuit to slow down or stop, the driver of the Mercedes would not stop or slow down after the police were no longer in pursuit of the Mercedes."The Mercedes was travelling at about 70mph - in a 30mph speed zone - just seconds before the car went over a raised pedestrian crossing."The driver of the Mercedes lost control of the vehicle, was weaving before striking kerbs on both sides of the road and leaving the carriageway, striking a tree and the Mercedes," Mr Naughton said."Lillie sustained serious chest and head injuries in the collision."Due to the severity of her injuries there was no possible surgical intervention. Lillie deteriorated and died on 28 December 2021."It is not possible to say if her injuries could have been mitigated if her seatbelt had been fastened."Complications of a head injury was given as the cause of death in a post-mortem examination.
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Bangladesh tribunal sentences Hasina to jail for contempt over a claim she had a license to kill
A special tribunal has sentenced Bangladesh's former leader Sheikh Hasina to six months in jail after she was found in contempt of court for allegedly claiming she had a license to kill at least 227 people. Wednesday's sentence was the first in any case against Hasina since she fled to India during a mass uprising last year that toppled her 15-year rule. The contempt case stemmed from a leaked audio recording of a supposed phone conversation between Hasina and a leader of the student wing of her political party. A person alleged to be Hasina is heard on the audio saying: 'There are 227 cases against me, so I now have a license to kill 227 people.' The Criminal Investigation Department confirmed the audio's authenticity through forensic analysis. The recording showed Hasina's anger at the charges of murder and numerous other crimes against her under the interim administration of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, who vowed to punish Hasina and her top aides for the deaths of hundreds of people in the uprising against her. The sentencing by the Dhaka-based International Crimes Tribunal came as a trial against her being held in absentia on charges of crimes against humanity began in June. The tribunal had ordered Hasina and her former home minister to respond by May 15. When they failed to do so, the tribunal summoned them May 25 to appear in court June 16. Later the tribunal asked for notices to be published in newspapers asking Hasina to appear. The prosecution said later neither of the suspects appeared before the court or explained their absence through a lawyer. In such circumstances, the tribunal has the authority to issue a sentence under the law. Hasina and her Awami League party had earlier criticized the tribunal and its prosecution team for their connection with political parties, especially with the Jamaat-e-Islami party. The Yunus-led government has banned the former ruling Awami League party and amended laws to allow for the party to be prosecuted for its role during the uprising. In February, the U.N. human rights office estimated that up to 1,400 people may have been killed in Bangladesh over three weeks in the crackdown on the student-led protests against Hasina, who was the country's longest serving prime minister. The tribunal was established by Hasina in 2009 to investigate and try crimes involving Bangladesh's independence war in 1971. The tribunal under Hasina tried politicians, mostly from the Jamaat-e-Islami party, for their actions during the nine-month war against Pakistan. Aided by India, Bangladesh gained independence from Pakistan under the leadership of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Hasina's father and the country's first leader.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
‘I was constantly scared of what she was going to do': the troubled life and shocking death of Immy Nunn
Just a few hours before she ended her life, Immy Nunn seemed happy. She and her mother, Louise, had been shopping and had lunch. It was the final day of 2022 and Immy, who was 25, appeared positive about the new year. She talked about taking her driving test and looking for a new flat. She was excited about the opportunities her profile on TikTok was bringing her; known as Deaf Immy, she had nearly 800,000 followers, attracted by her honest and often funny videos about her deafness and her mental health. By the early hours of the next morning, Immy was dead, having taken poison she bought online, almost certainly after discovering it through an online pro-suicide forum. On a sunny day, kitchen doors open to the garden, Louise sits at her table; every so often she glances at the photographs of her daughter. Immy's assistance dog, Whitney, now lives with her parents, and wanders around, stopping occasionally to be stroked. Louise describes these last couple of years as: 'Hell. Horrible.' The pain of losing her child, she says, 'you wouldn't wish on anyone'. She copes, she says, 'day by day. I struggle with a lot of things. I don't like doing a lot.' For the previous 10 years, Louise had been on high alert, always terrified something would happen to her daughter. Since she was about 14, Immy had periods of severe mental illness. She had self-harmed, and attempted suicide many times, and for four years she had been an inpatient at a psychiatric hospital. She had spent the Christmas of 2022 at her parents' home in Bognor Regis, West Sussex, then gone back to her flat in Brighton. On 29 December, she had cut herself and gone to hospital – as far as her family knew, it was the first time she had self-harmed in ages. Immy's dad, Ray, went straight to see her and tried to get her to come home with him, but she told him she wanted to stay, and that she had an appointment with one of her support workers the following day. On 31 December, Louise and Ray went to spend the day with her in Brighton. They returned to Bognor Regis with Whitney because Immy was going to a New Year's Eve party at a friend's house in nearby Shoreham-by-Sea. Louise was woken about 5am by the mother of Immy's friend calling to say Immy had left unexpectedly, and without her coat and shoes. They had known Immy since she was a child, and were aware of her mental health problems. Louise phoned the police straight away and kept trying to ring Immy; Ray went out to look for their daughter, eventually driving to her flat in Brighton. When he arrived, the police and an ambulance were already there. Immy's devastated family is one of several that appear in a two-part Channel 4 documentary, Poisoned: Killer in the Post. It is based on an investigation by the Times journalist James Beal, which started after he was contacted by David Parfett, whose son Tom also died after taking a substance he bought online. The documentary shows the impact on vulnerable people of a pro-suicide forum where methods were discussed, including signposting to a Canadian chef, Kenneth Law, who Canadian police believe shipped about 1,200 packages of poison around the world. In the UK, the National Crime Agency has identified 97 potential victims. Law is awaiting trial in Canada, charged with 14 counts of murder – the dead were in the Ontario area and between the ages of 16 and 36 – but is pleading not guilty. About five months after Immy's death, the police told Louise and Ray that they had been given a list of names of British people linked to Law, and Immy was on it. They were doing checks, Louise says the police told her, to see who on the list was still alive. Louise would like to see Law extradited to the UK, though she knows this is unlikely. For a decade, she and her family went through heartbreaking effort to try to keep Immy safe. 'And then it's someone online. You fear the man on the corner, don't you, but not the man you can't see?' And she would like to see more regulation of sites that can be harmful to vulnerable people. 'The [government] are allowing them; no one's stopping them from doing it.' The site Immy is believed to have accessed is now under investigation by Ofcom; as of 1 July, the site was no longer accessible to people in the UK. A journalist had showed Louise the site, and she was shocked at how accessible it was. 'It wasn't even on the dark web,' she says. 'I was just shocked that something like that is just there. How is it even allowed?' Vulnerable people who are struggling understandably might want to find others who are feeling the same, but the site encourages and facilitates suicide – methods are discussed and tips swapped, and the 'goodbye' posts are met with congratulatory messages. As for Law, Louise says: 'I hate him. Hate the sound of his name, hate seeing his face.' Immy was always a fighter, Louise says. She had been born six weeks early and spent her first couple of weeks in hospital. The fourth of her five children, Immy had siblings who doted on her. 'She was just beautiful,' Louise says of Immy as a baby. 'She was so good and happy; everything about her was just perfect.' The family found out that Immy was profoundly deaf when she was 18 months old, though Louise suspected it already (one of her older children also has hearing loss, though not to the extent Immy did). Having a child with additional needs meant they spent a lot of time together. When Immy was three, she had cochlear implants, which involved trips to Great Ormond Street hospital in London every few weeks. She was happy at school, Louise remembers. It was a mainstream school but with a unit for the several deaf children there at the time. Then, when Immy was about 13, Louise noticed a change in her. Some of her deaf friends had left, and Immy stopped seeing other friends. 'You just thought: 'Typical teenager', until one day I saw cuts on her legs and I realised that there was something going on,' says Louise. She had been running away from school, and was clearly unhappy there. She had an appointment with the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services but refused to go, then took her first overdose shortly before she turned 15. 'I thought she was dead at that point,' says Louise. 'Reality hits – this is really serious.' The National Deaf Children's Society helped Louise advocate for Immy at school, and find her a place at a leading school for deaf children, but it took a while, and Immy's mental health was deteriorating. After school one day, Louise could hear her in the bathroom and became worried about what she was doing, but couldn't get her to come out. Immy's older sister went in and found she had cut her arm badly. 'I just remember her face and her saying, 'Mum, you need to get her to hospital straight away.' I was constantly scared of what she was going to do.' There were other suicide attempts. Ray is a roofer and Louise had worked part-time in a shop, around looking after the children, but she gave that up to be there for Immy. 'If she was at home, you wouldn't leave her for second,' she says. Immy was in and out of children's mental health units and then got a place in a unit for deaf children in London. 'We would go up two, three times a week to visit and she was doing really well, but she could only stay there until she was 18,' says Louise. Once Immy was discharged, Louise says there was no follow-up care and she was instead put on unfamiliar medication, which she had a terrible reaction to. 'We ended up right back where we were. She was in her room smashing things over her head, blood everywhere.' The following year, Immy was back in psychiatric hospital, where she would be for the next four years. The family hoped it would be the start of Immy getting better, but it was also, says Louise, 'four years of hell. We just didn't know when you were going to get a phone call.' On the weekends she was allowed home, Louise would sleep in her room with her 'because I was so scared of what she'd get up and do'. Immy had been diagnosed with emotionally unstable personality disorder, PTSD and other conditions including depression and anxiety. There were periods when she was well and she seemed happy; she had a girlfriend for a while. 'She'd have really good days; you'd be able to go on holiday and have fun times. But you just never knew when her mind was going to suddenly hurt herself, and she didn't know. That was the scary thing. She'd just dissociate.' Starting a TikTok account in 2020 helped her, Louise says. 'It took her mind off things. Obviously, she was still really poorly. She'd have her good days and bad days. But I think because of the followers that grew, she felt she could help other people. As her followers grew, her confidence grew, and I think she felt as if she'd finally found something that she could do.' It helped her embrace the deaf and LGBTQ+ communities and gave her a sense of identity. 'She felt as if she belonged, whereas she never really knew where she belonged.' Immy showed her followers what life in a psychiatric hospital was like, and was open about her struggles. But she could also be joyful, and often got her family involved, usually her mum. 'You'd be sat in the evenings, and she'd say, 'Mum: I've got an idea – I want you to be in it.' I loved watching her laugh.' Immy was getting brand and charity collaborations, and positive messages from people who said she'd helped them. 'She just couldn't believe it, and we were just so excited for her,' says Louise. She was desperate to try to live more independently, even though Louise thought she wasn't ready to leave hospital. 'She was determined. She'd been in there for four years; she wanted out, she wanted a normal life.' It was a worry, she says, having Immy live an hour away in Brighton, and she would video-call her often – again and again if she didn't pick up. 'She didn't want me to keep worrying. She was like, 'Mum: I'm 24 – let me have my life.'' And she seemed to be doing well, though Louise could never relax. Early in 2022, Immy took an overdose. Nine months after that, in November, she told her support worker she had been on a pro-suicide forum and had bought poison from it. Louise didn't know about this until just before the inquest. The police went to do a welfare check on Immy, but didn't take a British Sign Language (BSL) interpreter – something Louise was familiar with in all the years of trying to get Immy the care she needed. She would go to see doctors with her, she says, and there would be no interpreter. Louise would have to accompany Immy, even when Immy didn't want her to, so that she could explain things to her. After that police visit, Immy wasn't seen by a mental health professional for several weeks. A few days after Christmas with her parents, Immy harmed herself and went to hospital but left before being seen by the mental health team. She told her parents that she'd been in hospital, and Ray immediately went to see her. 'We didn't know how bad she was,' says Louise. 'The plan was that he was going to bring her home, but she said she wasn't coming back.' Of course they were alarmed, but sadly this wasn't out of the ordinary for Immy. 'She self-harmed a lot. That was her coping mechanism. We had no clue that anything else was going on.' Immy had sent a text to her support worker, saying she thought she needed to be admitted to psychiatric hospital and that she 'could easily go to the last resort' even though she didn't want to. In another message to her psychologist the following day, she said she planned to take poison, but also said she didn't have any (she did – it was later discovered she had already bought some online). She agreed to be admitted to a mental health crisis facility, but that didn't happen that day. A meeting that she was supposed to have with her care coordinator also didn't happen. The inquest found failings in mental health care contributed to Immy's death. The coroner also highlighted systemic challenges to deaf patients, particularly the shortage of BSL interpreters. With grim irony, the inquest itself had to be adjourned at one point because of a lack of interpreters. Louise says the family has received no apology. The trial of Law isn't due to start until early next year, and he has been charged only over deaths in Canada. She says she feels stuck. 'I always feel as if I'm waiting for the next thing. It's just hard.' She likes to talk about Immy, but she finds it hard to watch her videos. 'The dogs start crying when they hear her voice, especially Whitney – she still recognises Immy's voice, and then that upsets me.' There are some lovely videos of Immy and her mum together, including the two of them singing and signing You Are My Sunshine – the first song, Immy wrote, that her mum taught her with sign language. She touched a lot of people in her short life. It has helped to receive messages from people who were helped by Immy's videos and her work on deaf awareness and mental health, says Louise. 'I've had some that said: 'She basically saved my life.'' Poisoned: Killer in the Post is on Channel 4 at 9pm on Wednesday 9 and Thursday 10 July For more information on online safety for young people, visit the Thomas William Parfett Foundation and the Molly Rose Foundation In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@ or jo@ In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at


Times
3 hours ago
- Times
Lenders must probe joint borrowers for signs of exploitation
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