logo
Driver who struck and killed eight-month-old baby in her pram after accidentally hitting the accelerator has prison sentence reduced

Driver who struck and killed eight-month-old baby in her pram after accidentally hitting the accelerator has prison sentence reduced

Daily Mail​17-06-2025
A driver who struck and killed an eight-month-old baby in her pram outside a hospital has had her prison sentence reduced at the Court of Appeal.
Bridget Curtis, 71, lost control of her automatic BMW 520d car after accidentally pressing down on the accelerator outside Withybush Hospital in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, on June 21, 2023.
The company director was helping her daughter locate her handbag in the backseat when it propelled forward, causing it to mount a kerb and collide with the pushchair of Mabli Cariad Hall.
Mabli had just said a final goodbye to her paternal grandmother Betty Hall, who was receiving end-of-life care at the hospital moments before the collision.
The youngster, whose first name is Welsh for 'lovable' and middle name means 'love', sustained fatal head injuries and died in hospital in the early hours of June 25.
Curtis, who was 69 at the time of the offence, pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving last September and was jailed for four years at Swansea Crown Court in January.
At the Court of Appeal on Tuesday, her barrister said the sentence was 'manifestly excessive' and should be reduced, stating that the case concerned a 'lapse of concentration'.
Three senior judges ruled that Curtis's sentence was 'manifestly excessive' and reduced it to one of three years, while increasing her disqualification from driving from six years to seven-and-a-half years.
Mr Justice Butcher, sitting with Lord Justice Bean and Judge Richard Marks KC, said: 'We say at once that this is a truly tragic case.
'We have read the very moving victim personal statements of Mabli's parents, expressing their grief at the death of their beloved baby.
'No one could fail to sympathise with them for the appalling loss that they have sustained.'
Curtis, who attended the appeal via video link from HMP Eastwood Park in Gloucestershire and sat in a wheelchair throughout, had no previous convictions at the time of the incident and had held a clean driving licence for more than 50 years.
Her sentencing hearing at Swansea Crown Court heard that on the day of the collision, she had driven her daughter to an outpatient appointment at the hospital.
When her daughter struggled to find her handbag in the rear of the car, Curtis unlocked the door and turned around to assist her.
But as she did so, she pressed down on the accelerator of her car, which had been left running and was not in park mode.
The car reached speeds of more than 29mph and travelled 28 metres in around four seconds, mounting the kerb of a grass seating area and causing Mabli to be thrown out of her pushchair.
The car only stopped when it collided with a tree, having also caused injuries to Mabli's father Rob Hall.
Mabli, the youngest of six siblings, received treatment at the Withybush Hospital, as well as hospitals in Cardiff and Bristol, dying in the arms of her parents on June 25.
Her mother, Gwen Hall, told the sentencing hearing that her daughter was 'so bright, so beautiful, so full of love and life'.
She said: 'She hadn't crawled yet. She had said "Mama" for the first time only the day before. We had so much planned with her.
'It was nowhere near the time for her to be taken away from us. She was my baby. My eight-month-old baby.'
John Dye, for Curtis, told Swansea Crown Court that she was a mother-of-four and grandmother of 10, who was 'absolutely devastated' by the incident.
Appearing again for Curtis at the Court of Appeal on Tuesday, Mr Dye said: 'This is a tragic case, but the issue really was one of pedal confusion.'
He continued: 'Objectively, this is clearly dangerous driving, but in terms of culpability, these four seconds of driving were more akin to, maybe not a momentary lapse, but a lapse of concentration.'
Craig Jones, for the Crown Prosecution Service, made no oral submissions to the court.
Reducing the sentence, Mr Justice Butcher said: 'True it is that the appellant did not intend to cause any harm, and true also that the mistake was of a short duration, but the driving was well over the threshold of dangerousness.'
He continued that Curtis would have known that she had stopped 'in a busy area outside a hospital with potentially very vulnerable pedestrians around', and that four or five seconds 'is far from being a negligible duration'.
He added that the court accepted that Curtis's remorse was 'genuine', stating: 'It was inattention and confusion as to which pedal she was pressing that caused this tragedy.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trainee priest 'sexually assaulted worshippers' at booze-addled cathedral where choristers 'did last seven shots of Christ drinking game'
Trainee priest 'sexually assaulted worshippers' at booze-addled cathedral where choristers 'did last seven shots of Christ drinking game'

Daily Mail​

time10 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trainee priest 'sexually assaulted worshippers' at booze-addled cathedral where choristers 'did last seven shots of Christ drinking game'

A trainee priest is alleged to have sexually assaulted two worshippers while drunk at a cathedral where choristers played a last seven shots of Christ drinking game. Serious complaints have been made about 'a culture in which sexual boundaries seemed blurred' at Bangor Cathedral with one of the victims coming forward. One of the trainee's alleged victims said she was assaulted at the Cathedral's booze-addled Oktoberfest event in 2022. She explained that the priest-in-training had consumed copious amounts of alcohol which led to the assault. 'He had had considerably too much to drink,' she told the BBC. 'I'd already warned people that night he's drinking a lot more than everyone else. So these warning signs were ignored and that led to that assault.' The Church in Wales confirmed that two people complained about the man's behavior and his priest training was not taken forward. Despite reporting the assault and receiving an apology, she said the intense drinking culture at the church did not change. She explained that after a cathedral concert on Good Friday in 2023, where the choir sang seven songs to mark the Seven Last Words of Christ - the seven last sentences that Jesus spoke from the cross - choristers and priests went for a drink. To mark the occasion they all decided to do 'the seven last shots of Christ'. Meanwhile, Esme Byrd, 29, who was a lay clerk at Bangor Cathedral for six months said there was an 'unhealthy' culture of binge drinking at the church. Ms Byrd, who sang with the choir until she left in January said she was deeply concerned about the wellbeing of younger members of the choir. 'I looked around and I just thought, this is not safe,' Esme told the BBC. 'This is not a safe and nurturing and good environment for children to be in.' She left the church after her concerns were ignored and a lack of action was taken. The claims come days after the Archbishop of Wales announced his sudden retirement following a critical report into the drinking culture at Bangor Cathedral. Most Reverend Andrew John said he would also be stepping down from his role as Bishop of Bangor on August 31. The report included claims of excessive drinking and 'inappropriate language' being used in front of younger members of the choir. Announcing his retirement on Friday, Mr John said: 'It has been an enormous joy to serve in the Church in Wales for over 35 years. 'I would very much like to thank the clergy and congregations of this wonderful diocese before I retire.' While no mention of the report was made in his retirement announcement, Mr John has previously faced calls to resign. Ruth Jones, Labour MP for Newport West and Islwyn, said: 'We want openness and transparency in all our church settings and it's really, really important that the archbishop makes clear what has gone on.' Two priests from within Bangor Cathedral have also called an independent inquiry following the report into the church's culture. Mr John previously offered his 'most heartfelt apology to any members of the cathedral community who have been hurt or who feel I have let them down'. Mr John assumed the role of Bishop of Bangor in 2008. He was elected Archbishop of Wales in December 2021 and was the 14th person to hold the title.

Newport motorbike crash: Tributes to 'true friend'
Newport motorbike crash: Tributes to 'true friend'

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Newport motorbike crash: Tributes to 'true friend'

Tributes have been paid to a 40-year-old man who died in a motorcycle "Laney" Willis, from Risca, Caerphilly county, died in a collision with a second motorbike at Ringland Way, Newport, on Saturday 28 family said he would be "unbelievably missed by a lot of people, but he will never be forgotten"."He was a true friend and gentleman to everyone that knew him," they said, in a tribute." Gwent Police said officers continued to provide his family with second motorcyclist was taken to hospital following the crash but his injuries were not believed to have been life threatening or life changing, according to the force.

Woman fined over £400 by her council for flytipping for strange reason
Woman fined over £400 by her council for flytipping for strange reason

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Woman fined over £400 by her council for flytipping for strange reason

A woman has been fined more than £400 - after paying for someone to dispose of her rubbish. Tyler Marie Richards employed them to remove a pile of 20 bin bags from her property in Bridge Street, Tonypandy. The mountain of waste included a plastic kennel, 15 of general rubbish, four recycling bags, a cardboard box and a pile of general loose garbage. But she was left horrified when she was tracked down after the sea of waste was discovered strewn across the residential area of Penrhys in Ronda Cynon Taf. Ms Richards then failed to engage with Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council's enforcement officers - and the local authority decided to take court action against her, WalesOnline reports. And she was fined £120 alongside clean-up costs of £255.51 and a victim surcharge of £48 after she was found guilty of failing to control her waste and committing an offence under Section 34 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990. In total she was fined a stunning £423.51 - despite not fly-tipping any rubbish herself. But the furious council blasted Ms Richards furiously telling the newspaper that 'fly-tipping will not be tolerated, ever'. Councillor Ann Crimmings said: 'There is never an excuse to blight our, towns, lanes, streets and villages with waste, and we will find those responsible and hold them to account. 'If your waste is fly tipped, you could be fined along with the individual or company you paid to remove it. 'We will use every power available to us to hold those accountable for their actions.' Official figures recently suggested flytipping in England has risen to its highest level in almost 20 years. Environment Secretary Steve Reed vowed to toughen up enforcement after reported cases of illegal dumping passed 1.15million in 2023-2024. The figure is an increase of six per cent from the 1.08million the previous year and the highest level in the six years since the current method for reporting was brought in. The statistics also revealed a year-on-year fall in the number of fixed penalty notices issued for flytipping and a decline in the number of court-issued fines. Analysis of the data revealed London as a major hotspot, with eight boroughs in the top 10 local authorities for overall dumping and the highest proportion by population. The London Borough of Croydon was said to be the flytipping capital of the UK with 35,470 recorded incidents, according to an analysis of government data published covering the period from April 2023 to March 2024. Across England, the scourge of fly-tipping represnted a 6.2 per cent increase on the previous year and the second consecutive annual rise recorded. Nottingham and Liverpool were also included in the top 10, with other places towards the highest levels being Birmingham and Bradford. Last year some 60 per cent of cases involved household waste, with 688,000 incidents of illegally dumped rubbish from homes - ranging from black bags of waste to the contents of shed clearances, furniture, carpets and DIY. The most common places for flytipping to occur were on pavements and roads, accounting for 37 per cent of incidents. Almost one third, or 31 per cent, of incidents were the size of a small van load. And another 28 per cent amounted to the equivalent of a car boot or less of rubbish. Meanwhile, four per cent were the size of a tipper lorry load or bigger. Large flytipping incidents have cost £13.1million for local authorities to clean up, research showed. Mr Reed has said: 'Flytipping is a disgraceful act which trashes communities and its increase is unacceptable. Communities and businesses shouldn't have to put up with these crimes. 'This Government will crack down on fly tipping and punish rubbish dumpers, forcing them to clean up their mess.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store