Bus incident - 83 year old loses legs
Bus incident - 83 year old loses legs
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Bennet

Original Poster:

2,133 posts

153 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/28/fa...

Appalling and tragic situation.

Hate to say it, but the prison sentence seems very harsh. The actual act of negligence, failing to notice the stuck walking stick, was surely an easy mistake to make. Is that worthy of 27 months? The wrist strap certainly didn't help matters.

The family are obviously playing on the age and "compassion" angle. Has the court done the same?

Poor woman.

Sebring440

3,059 posts

118 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
Bennet said:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/28/fa...

Appalling and tragic situation.

Hate to say it, but the prison sentence seems very harsh. The actual act of negligence, failing to notice the stuck walking stick, was surely an easy mistake to make. Is that worthy of 27 months? The wrist strap certainly didn't help matters.

The family are obviously playing on the age and "compassion" angle. Has the court done the same?

Poor woman.
Bennet said:
Hate to say it, but the prison sentence seems very harsh.
Are you being serious...?


Edited by Sebring440 on Friday 28th July 14:45

LeighW

5,178 posts

210 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
Bennet said:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/28/fa...

Hate to say it, but the prison sentence seems very harsh.
Disagree, he fully deserves it, and more. Deliberately closed the door on an old lady who was half on the bus and drove off? Scumbag. How would she 'have previously dodged a fare' anyway? She's a pensioner with a free bus pass.

qwerty360

277 posts

67 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
IMHO the issue here is that even without a walking stick to get trapped etc, having shut the door they should be making sure that the person is properly clear before pulling away.

They indisputably know someone is at extreme proximity (given they shut the door on them) so should be showing extreme caution. They clearly didn't given the subsquent serious injury.

Bendo

120 posts

64 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
If only buses had nearside mirrors.

Doesn't seem a harsh punishment at all. Perhaps a fair punishment would be to drive a bus over his legs?

surveyor

18,581 posts

206 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
My only comment is that there are two sides to the story. Not every 83 year old granny is a sweetheart.

Although the comments on making sure that they are clear of the doors still stand.

freedman

5,979 posts

229 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
Bennet said:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/28/fa...

Appalling and tragic situation.

Hate to say it, but the prison sentence seems very harsh. The actual act of negligence, failing to notice the stuck walking stick, was surely an easy mistake to make. Is that worthy of 27 months? The wrist strap certainly didn't help matters.

The family are obviously playing on the age and "compassion" angle. Has the court done the same?

Poor woman.
He deliberately shut the doors on her

He then failed to ensure she was clear of the bus before he drove off

Fully deserved sentence, for a charge he plead guilty to

GT03ROB

13,971 posts

243 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
freedman said:
Bennet said:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/28/fa...

Appalling and tragic situation.

Hate to say it, but the prison sentence seems very harsh. The actual act of negligence, failing to notice the stuck walking stick, was surely an easy mistake to make. Is that worthy of 27 months? The wrist strap certainly didn't help matters.

The family are obviously playing on the age and "compassion" angle. Has the court done the same?

Poor woman.
He deliberately shut the doors on her

He then failed to ensure she was clear of the bus before he drove off

Fully deserved sentence, for a charge he plead guilty to
Agree

IJWS15

2,111 posts

107 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
GT03ROB said:
Agree
Agreed

Too many people on here think the driver is never in the wrong!

PorkInsider

6,347 posts

163 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
surveyor said:
My only comment is that there are two sides to the story. Not every 83 year old granny is a sweetheart.

Although the comments on making sure that they are clear of the doors still stand.
There can be no side to this story in which the bus driver is anything but beneath contempt for what he did.

blue_haddock

4,820 posts

89 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
freedman said:
He deliberately shut the doors on her

He then failed to ensure she was clear of the bus before he drove off

Fully deserved sentence, for a charge he plead guilty to
If she was close enough for her to put her stick in the closing doors there can be no argument about if she was close enough to be seen and so he knew what he was doing and which will be why he plead guilty.


SmoothCriminal

5,766 posts

221 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
Why would you stick an object in closing doors.

Her actions had consequences

Biker 1

8,348 posts

141 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
As others have noted, surely he could have glanced in his mirrors?? I thought busses were festooned with mirrors to prevent this type of thing.

surveyor

18,581 posts

206 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
PorkInsider said:
surveyor said:
My only comment is that there are two sides to the story. Not every 83 year old granny is a sweetheart.

Although the comments on making sure that they are clear of the doors still stand.
There can be no side to this story in which the bus driver is anything but beneath contempt for what he did.
There can be a side where not allowing her on his bus was reasonable.

As said he should still make sure it is safe to pull away.

havoc

32,556 posts

257 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
SmoothCriminal said:
Why would you stick an object in closing doors.

Her actions had consequences
To stop the driver of a (probably very infrequent) bus from driving off without her. In concept it's very little different to shoving a hand/foot between closing lift doors...

Bennet

Original Poster:

2,133 posts

153 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
I'm not looking to die on this particular hill. I think it depends on how you imagine the situation playing out, based on the brief written description.

From the bus driver's point of view, apparently he believed he had closed the door on a putative fare dodger. (I assume that's accepted practice among bus drivers as a means of preventing people from getting on, and probably happens all the time.)

The fact that the victim had inserted her walking stick into the closing doors and the fact that she was physically attached to that stick amount to something close to a freak occurrence.

We can all agree that (as it turns out) bus drivers need to be aware of such freak possibilities. But can I imagine overlooking those two facts if I'd been him? Honestly, yes...

The odds are, he's a decent enough bloke. Wrong time, wrong place, a poor decision and he's now in prison. A secondary victim of a freak situation. I'm surprised there isn't slightly more sympathy for that point of view. Also, the guilty plea doesn't mean much without knowing his reasoning for that.

Anyway, I can see what others are posting. I'm happy to take on board the general consensus.

Maybe another bus driver will be along in a moment to confirm that they are all trained and drilled in these sorts of things every week and failing to check for it is just incomprehensible.

Edited by Bennet on Friday 28th July 15:38

havoc

32,556 posts

257 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
Bennet said:
The fact that the victim had inserted her walking stick into the closing doors and the fact that she was physically attached to that stick amount to something close to a freak occurrence.
You may not know many old people, but quite a few walking sticks have wrist straps on them - not a "freak occurrence" at all.

...and as others have said, he had a mirror, he should have made very sure she was clear before proceeding...I think the phrase is 'duty of care'...

freedman

5,979 posts

229 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
Bennet said:
I'm not looking to die on this particular hill. I think it depends on how you imagine the situation playing out, based on the brief written description.

From the bus driver's point of view, apparently he believed he had closed the door on a putative fare dodger. (I assume that's accepted practice among bus drivers as a means of preventing people from getting on, and probably happens all the time.)

The fact that the victim had inserted her walking stick into the closing doors and the fact that she was physically attached to that stick amount to something close to a freak occurrence.

We can all agree that (as it turns out) bus drivers need to be aware of such freak possibilities. But can I imagine overlooking those two facts if I'd been him? Honestly, yes...

The odds are, he's a decent enough bloke. Wrong time, wrong place, a poor decision and he's now in prison. A secondary victim of a freak situation. I'm surprised there isn't slightly more sympathy for that point of view. Also, the guilty plea doesn't mean much without knowing his reasoning for that.

Anyway, I can see what others are posting. I'm happy to take on board the general consensus.

Maybe another bus driver will be along in a moment to confirm that they are all trained and drilled in these sorts of things every week and failing to check for it is just incomprehensible.

Edited by Bennet on Friday 28th July 15:38
She was 83, she gets free bus travel

Caddyshack

13,727 posts

228 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
freedman said:
Bennet said:
I'm not looking to die on this particular hill. I think it depends on how you imagine the situation playing out, based on the brief written description.

From the bus driver's point of view, apparently he believed he had closed the door on a putative fare dodger. (I assume that's accepted practice among bus drivers as a means of preventing people from getting on, and probably happens all the time.)

The fact that the victim had inserted her walking stick into the closing doors and the fact that she was physically attached to that stick amount to something close to a freak occurrence.

We can all agree that (as it turns out) bus drivers need to be aware of such freak possibilities. But can I imagine overlooking those two facts if I'd been him? Honestly, yes...

The odds are, he's a decent enough bloke. Wrong time, wrong place, a poor decision and he's now in prison. A secondary victim of a freak situation. I'm surprised there isn't slightly more sympathy for that point of view. Also, the guilty plea doesn't mean much without knowing his reasoning for that.

Anyway, I can see what others are posting. I'm happy to take on board the general consensus.

Maybe another bus driver will be along in a moment to confirm that they are all trained and drilled in these sorts of things every week and failing to check for it is just incomprehensible.

Edited by Bennet on Friday 28th July 15:38
She was 83, she gets free bus travel
Maybe the driver must scan a pass which she previously refused to show him?



budgie smuggler

5,922 posts

181 months

Friday 28th July 2023
quotequote all
The only reason the sentence seems harsh is that usually motoring sentences for idiotic driving are pathetically short/non-existent.