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Drunk, speeding, hit and run van driver who killed cyclist sentenced to eight years in jail

Dying cyclist discovered by his mother in a ditch three hours after fatal collision

A drunk van driver who killed a cyclist in hit and run incident in September 2012 while travelling at more than 20mph over the speed limit was yesterday sentenced to eight years in prison at Lincoln Crown Court.

The body of 27 year old Tim Osborn, who was wearing a hi-viz motorcycle jacket and riding a well lit bicycle on - was found in a ditch by his mother and younger brother at the side of the A151 Bourne Road a straight stretch of road in Spalding, Lincolnshire.

Mr Osborn's family had gone to look for him after becoming concerned when he didn’t return home from work. When found he had been lying at the side of the road for three hours. The lights on his bicycle were still on his father Stephen his father told road.cc.

It emerged at his trial that Mr Osborn's killer, beer pump engineer Paul Walken, had driven on after the collision stopping two miles further down the road to check for damage to his van before driving home.

Three days later after a police appeal for witnesses  Walken contacted Lincolnshire Police. The Lincolnshire Echo reports that the court was told that he initially claimed that although he had been driving in the area that night and had hit something he was “100 per cent sure” it was a deer. Tests on Walken’s van however found traces of Mr Osborn’s DNA and its anti-theft tracking device confirmed that he had been on the same stretch of the A151 at the time Mr Osborn was hit, and that he had been travelling at 70mph - 20mph over the road’s 50mph limit.

According to the prosecution Walken had drunk at least 5 and a half pints of beer that day as he checked the effectiveness of his repair work in pubs and restaurants around the East Midlands. When police visited his last job of the day, an Italian restaurant, they were told that Walken had made a mess of the repair, and that on leaving had reversed in to a parked car and driven off without stopping.

Walken pleaded guilty to causing death by careless driving while unfit to drive through drink - as we reported earlier this week the maximum sentence for this offence is 14 years.

Sentencing Walken to eight years imprisonment and a 10 year driving ban Judge Stuart Rafferty told him:

“Any car has the potential to become a lethal weapon. The greater the amount of intoxication the greater the risk becomes. This is not murder but it is mechanised manslaughter.

"It does not matter precisely how much you had to drink. All that matters is that it took you far beyond the limit. You should have known that and yet you continued to drive.

"Tim Osborn was entirely without fault. He was there for anyone to see who wanted to see him. You had every opportunity to see him but you did not.

"This was not momentary lack of attention. It was high speed driving and then not stopping at the scene when you can have been in no doubt that you had hit something."

In its report of the proceedings the Lincolnshire Echo says Judge Rafferty described Tim as a popular man adding "He was well-loved by his family and friends. He was a man who it seems from all that I have read would not wish to do harm to anyone. He was 27. He had his life ahead of him."

Commenting on road.cc the day after Tim’s death, his father Stephen said: “My son travelled that road on his beloved bike since he was 10 years old! At night if he heard a vehicle coming up behind him he would ride up on the pavement then back on the road after it had gone - according to the police he didnt get that chance last night.”

Walken's sentence is exactly the same as that handed down earlier this week to hit and run driver Kingsley Gordon-Allen, 20, who hit, and killed Edward Orrey, 56, outside Leytonstone tube station on February the 9th last year while three times over the limit and driving on the wrong side of the road. Both drivers are likely to have received automatic reductions in their sentences of up to a third for entering early guilty pleas. 

As we reported on Tuesday Mr Orrey's widow Elaine condemned the sentence given to her husband's killer as "disgusting" in its leniency. That incident coupled with sentence handed out in Lincoln for another particularly callous and careless piece of driving resulting in the death of an entirely blamess person is likely to lead to renewed calls from cycling organisations, campaigners, and victims' families for a tougher approach to sentencing of such crimes and for quicker progress on the Ministry of Justice's promised sentencing review. 

 

road.cc's founder and first editor, nowadays to be found riding a spreadsheet. Tony's journey in cycling media started in 1997 as production editor and then deputy editor of Total Bike, acting editor of Total Mountain Bike and then seven years as editor of Cycling Plus. He launched his first cycling website - the Cycling Plus Forum at the turn of the century. In 2006 he left C+ to head up the launch team for Bike Radar which he edited until 2008, when he co-launched the multi-award winning road.cc - finally handing on the reins in 2021 to Jack Sexty. His favourite ride is his ‘commute’ - which he does most days inc weekends and he’s been cycle-commuting since 1994. His favourite bikes are titanium and have disc brakes, though he'd like to own a carbon bike one day.

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41 comments

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FluffyKittenofT... | 10 years ago
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Agree with Jasecd. Also being honest I am all-over-the-place when it comes to the issue of appropriate sentences, can't decide if I'm a Guardianista or a Daily Maily. Though I can't shake the feeling that whatever the general stance, motoring violence gets treated more leniently than other forms do.

But we do need to move away from the idea of driving as an essential right.

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jasecd | 10 years ago
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If I'm honest in these cases I find the custodial sentences difficult to assess - what are they really designed to achieve? Punishment, rehabilitation or as a deterrent to others? Generally the families involved understandably want a far longer incarceration but they are far from objective - this is the challenge of the judiciary.

However I cannot ever understand why a lifetime driving ban is not imposed for those who kill with their vehicles. As is constantly stated driving is a privilege, not a right and while taking someones liberty through imprisonment has to be a balanced decision, the taking of their driving licence does not. I do believe that lifetime driving bans would have a very strong deterrent effect and keep proven dangerous drivers from the roads.

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gazzaputt replied to jasecd | 10 years ago
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jasecd wrote:

If I'm honest in these cases I find the custodial sentences difficult to assess - what are they really designed to achieve? Punishment, rehabilitation or as a deterrent to others? Generally the families involved understandably want a far longer incarceration but they are far from objective - this is the challenge of the judiciary.

They should achieve punishment for the crime committed.

This man drove around all day drinking beer without a thought of the consequences of getting behind the wheel of a car.

Under the influence he goes on to kill an innocent person.

Not difficult to assess the sentence here should have been a full 14 years to reflect his crime.

He has taken a life and destroyed those of the mans loved one.

14 years would give him enough time to contemplate his actions.

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seven replied to jasecd | 10 years ago
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jasecd wrote:

...while taking someones liberty through imprisonment has to be a balanced decision, the taking of their driving licence does not.

Couldn't have put it better

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OldRidgeback | 10 years ago
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My sympathies are with the family of the victim. A life ban would be appropriate for the driver and an eight year sentence sounds insufficient for the crime.

It isn't just cyclists who are victims of terrible drivers - this may be from the Daily Hate but...

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2596050/Woman-driver-high-drin...

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stevebull-01 | 10 years ago
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Should never be allowed to drive again. In fact he shouldn't be let out of prison.

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pz1800 | 10 years ago
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when is this judicial black comedy going to stop?

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Paul_C | 10 years ago
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so this lowlife used his job as a means to get free beer and drive at the same time??? That 10 year drinving ban, it had better not start until he gets out... I hate it when most of their ban is while they're doing time... defeats the object.

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brooksby replied to Paul_C | 10 years ago
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Paul_C wrote:

so this lowlife used his job as a means to get free beer and drive at the same time??? That 10 year drinving ban, it had better not start until he gets out... I hate it when most of their ban is while they're doing time... defeats the object.

If it were true that the beer inspector is expected to drink beer at every stop then this would be a case for corporate manslaughter, surely? (or should that be 'shoorly'?).

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jacknorell replied to brooksby | 10 years ago
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brooksby wrote:
Paul_C wrote:

so this lowlife used his job as a means to get free beer and drive at the same time??? That 10 year drinving ban, it had better not start until he gets out... I hate it when most of their ban is while they're doing time... defeats the object.

If it were true that the beer inspector is expected to drink beer at every stop then this would be a case for corporate manslaughter, surely? (or should that be 'shoorly'?).

I'm pretty d*mn certain he's not supposed to drink on the job...

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YorkshireMike | 10 years ago
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Utterly hideous in its leniency. I can only hope this case is reviewed and he is given the maximum sentence. I simply cannot fathom how it reflects the magnitude of devastation he has caused through his grotesque stupidity.

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