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Cyclists on Sunday training ride 'left for dead' by Usk driver who’d ‘topped up’ after eight-hour drinking session the day before

“Restarting the heart of my own sister is something I should never have had to do”

A group of Usk cyclists suffered a head-on collision during a Sunday training ride after a driver ‘topped up’ at the pub the day after an eight-hour drinking session that had lasted until the early hours. Louise Griffiths then sped off from the scene and abandoned the car. She was asleep when police came to arrest her four hours later.

  • Cyclist re-started her sister's heart and then worked out she had internal bleeding thanks to her heart rate monitor
  •  "Drive it like you stole it" boyfriend told driver when lending her his car
  • "She had not expected to driver her partners car but he drank in the morning"

 

Wales Online reports that at around 4pm on February 3, Gerald Barnes and his wife Dr Katherine Barnes were out training for a triathlon with her sister Caroline James and her partner Martin Burrows.

They were riding along Llanllowell Lane, between Usk and Llantrisant, when they saw Griffiths’ driving her then boyfriend Jason Cook’s Volkswagen Jetta in the opposite direction.

Gerald Barnes said Griffiths was swerving across the central line and he thought she lost control.

The car hit the grass verge and he said she seemed to overcompensate and skidded across the road. He then heard the crash behind him.

Katherine Barnes said Griffiths had been driving at “motorway speeds” and that at one point the car’s wheels seemed to leave the road.

She suffered a “glancing blow” which knocked her foot off the pedal and caused a graze to her shin. The car hit her sister and Burrows. The latter said he thought he was going to die.

Prosecutor Gareth James said the force of the collision knocked James off her bike and up over the crash barrier.

He said Griffiths reversed out of the hedge and drove away, before abandoning the car and asking her son to pick her up.

Barnes, a registrar at the University Hospital of Wales, initially thought her sister was dead. She performed lifesaving treatment on her as she lay "lifeless" in the road and managed to detect internal bleeding from her heart rate thanks to the fitness monitor on her wrist.

“Restarting the heart of my own sister is something I should never have had to do as a sibling, or as an anaesthetist,” she said. "The fact we were left for dead at the roadside is something I will never come to terms with and struggle to understand."

James stopped breathing twice on the way to hospital, where she was treated for concussion, spinal injury, multiple pelvic fractures, bleeding around her pelvis and nerve damage in her pelvis and lower back.

After three weeks in intensive care, she spent three months as a patient on the ward where she works as a physiotherapist.

Burrows suffered a serious soft tissue injury and has been told that problems with his knee and ankle may be long-term.

Griffiths had been at a party with Cook until 1am the night before, where she had drunk a combination of gin, white wine and jaeger bombs.

On her way home the next day, she drove Cook’s car to two different pubs where she drank more.

“You were topping up from the night before,” said the judge.

The court heard that she had not expected to drive her partner’s car, but he had drunk in the morning.

Griffiths told police that she swerved to avoid a rabbit. She also said Cook had told her, ‘Drive it like you stole it.’

Her barrister, James Tucker, said Cook had, “an appalling, lengthy criminal record for bad driving.”

Griffiths told officers she was driving between 35mph and 40mph, but a collision investigator concluded she would have been going “significantly” quicker.

She was under the legal limit for alcohol at the time of her arrest with 33mg per 100ml in her system – the legal limit is 80mg.

Experts suggested she would have been over the legal limit at the time of the collision but said this could not be proven.

Griffiths pleaded guilty to dangerous driving and causing serious injury by dangerous driving. She was jailed for two years and three months and handed a four-year ban.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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38 comments

Avatar
Pushing50 | 4 years ago
3 likes

gcommie - interesting point of view but please stay at home laugh

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PRSboy | 4 years ago
2 likes

People generally conduct themselves in a law abiding and considerate way, until they get in a vehicle.

But then why would the public take road safety seriously, if neither law enforcement nor the judicial system seems to.

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DoctorFish | 4 years ago
2 likes

How can you live with yourself after doing this to someone?  It was completely and utterly the drivers fault.  Surely they should spend significantly more time in jail than the victim spends in hospital and subsequent recovery?

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alansmurphy | 4 years ago
3 likes

We just need people to identify their own idiocy and end the "I drive my children to school as the roads are dangerous" mentality. The consumption and movement has increased because of motors rather than motors increasing to meet demand. It's not going to be easy but you don't just give up on trying.

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PRSboy replied to alansmurphy | 4 years ago
1 like

alansmurphy wrote:

We just need people to identify their own idiocy and end the "I drive my children to school as the roads are dangerous" mentality. 

Funnily enough, I went through this myself, preferring to drop my children off at the village school on the way to work.  Its not a long way at all, but despite being a 30 limit you get some idiots driving far too fast.

Anyhow, we decided to let them walk.

Then a few days later, a lady on her way to the opticians (I kid you not) managed to drive her car at speed straight across the pavement and into a hedge more of less opposite our house. No harm done, but only because my kids or some other unfortunates did not happen to be in her way at the time.

They are still walking to school, but I find myself far too regularly yelling at passing drivers to slow the fuck down.

And until those drivers are faced with a) a strong likelihood of being caught and b) punished properly nothing is going to change.

Avatar
burtthebike replied to PRSboy | 4 years ago
3 likes

PRSboy wrote:

alansmurphy wrote:

We just need people to identify their own idiocy and end the "I drive my children to school as the roads are dangerous" mentality. 

Funnily enough, I went through this myself, preferring to drop my children off at the village school on the way to work.  Its not a long way at all, but despite being a 30 limit you get some idiots driving far too fast.

Anyhow, we decided to let them walk.

Then a few days later, a lady on her way to the opticians (I kid you not) managed to drive her car at speed straight across the pavement and into a hedge more of less opposite our house. No harm done, but only because my kids or some other unfortunates did not happen to be in her way at the time.

They are still walking to school, but I find myself far too regularly yelling at passing drivers to slow the fuck down.

And until those drivers are faced with a) a strong likelihood of being caught and b) punished properly nothing is going to change.

You could always set up  Community Speed Watch https://www.communityspeedwatch.org/

But be prepared to be rather unpopular with other residents, as the data shows that it is the locals who do most of the speeding.

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alansmurphy | 4 years ago
4 likes

Aren't you wasting energy by speaking against it in a forum of those that are likely to oppose your view?

 

Alternatively, people can do things to invoke a change in attitudes and even the law:

 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47902522

 

Unless you're also of the opinion that we should be freely allowed to photograph a woman's vagina and then run them over?

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brooksby replied to alansmurphy | 4 years ago
0 likes

alansmurphy wrote:

Aren't you wasting energy by speaking against it in a forum of those that are likely to oppose your view?

Alternatively, people can do things to invoke a change in attitudes and even the law:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47902522

Unless you're also of the opinion that we should be freely allowed to photograph a woman's vagina and then run them over?

Photographing a woman's vagina?  How far up her skirt was that camera being put?

(I'll get my coat...).

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gcommie replied to alansmurphy | 4 years ago
0 likes

alansmurphy wrote:

Aren't you wasting energy by speaking against it in a forum of those that are likely to oppose your view?

Probably, but as I said I'm hoping to clear out all the chaff of - frankly - pointless comments saying how bad the authorities act. We know, you've said a thousand times. Change the bloody record.

alansmurphy wrote:

Alternatively, people can do things to invoke a change in attitudes and even the law:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47902522

Unless you're also of the opinion that we should be freely allowed to photograph a woman's vagina and then run them over?

In deed they can, if they choose the right subject. And all credit to Gina Martin. But like Greta Thunberg, you're wasting your time unless to can make the economics of change work. Given that our economy it built on mobility of goods and people, quickly and conveniently, it will be worth the annual sacrifice that has to be paid on our roads; and that includes cases like Louisa Griffths. Because once they start clamping down on motorists, the slippery slope will hit the economy  bad as over time they would have to be ever more draconian in sentencing. This would have the unitended consequence that mobility will be impeded, resulting in enormous cost rises for everything.

As Dacia would say, you do the maths..

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to gcommie | 4 years ago
2 likes

gcommie wrote:

alansmurphy wrote:

Aren't you wasting energy by speaking against it in a forum of those that are likely to oppose your view?

Probably, but as I said I'm hoping to clear out all the chaff of - frankly - pointless comments saying how bad the authorities act. We know, you've said a thousand times. Change the bloody record.

alansmurphy wrote:

Alternatively, people can do things to invoke a change in attitudes and even the law:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47902522

Unless you're also of the opinion that we should be freely allowed to photograph a woman's vagina and then run them over?

In deed they can, if they choose the right subject. And all credit to Gina Martin. But like Greta Thunberg, you're wasting your time unless to can make the economics of change work. Given that our economy it built on mobility of goods and people, quickly and conveniently, it will be worth the annual sacrifice that has to be paid on our roads; and that includes cases like Louisa Griffths. Because once they start clamping down on motorists, the slippery slope will hit the economy  bad as over time they would have to be ever more draconian in sentencing. This would have the unitended consequence that mobility will be impeded, resulting in enormous cost rises for everything.

As Dacia would say, you do the maths..

I don't see how stricter sentencing is going to affect the mobility of goods and services. Seriously, what percentage of drivers are involved in scenarios like this one? If you take them off the road, you'll probably marginally increase the mobility of everyone else as there's one less idiot on the road.

The fallacy is thinking that having lines of motorists stuck in traffic is doing anyone any good (except for the people selling cars and fuel).

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gcommie replied to hawkinspeter | 4 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

I don't see how stricter sentencing is going to affect the mobility of goods and services.

I'll try and dig out the report from several years ago that evaluated the economic cost of strict adherence to speed limits, given that at the time it was being reported that something like 80% of journeys the driver would exceed speed limits. Can't remember the numbers quoted, but remember the inference was that it was economically beneficial to allow speeding even taking account of the costs dealing with RTAs.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to gcommie | 4 years ago
1 like

gcommie wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

I don't see how stricter sentencing is going to affect the mobility of goods and services.

I'll try and dig out the report from several years ago that evaluated the economic cost of strict adherence to speed limits, given that at the time it was being reported that something like 80% of journeys the driver would exceed speed limits. Can't remember the numbers quoted, but remember the inference was that it was economically beneficial to allow speeding even taking account of the costs dealing with RTAs.

Switching the topic onto speeding now? Okay, I suspect that the maximum speed isn't really the issue as there is an optimum flow of traffic and generally that is obtained through a smoother, "laminar" flow of vehicles. Constantly accelerating and braking tends to reduce the capacity of the road as people's reactions lag which leads to phantom traffic jams.

As a simple demonstration, have a go at this game: https://madewithmonsterlove.itch.io/error-prone

 

Avatar
gcommie replied to hawkinspeter | 4 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

As a simple demonstration, have a go at this game: https://madewithmonsterlove.itch.io/error-prone

Cute little game, but of little relevance.

hawkinspeter wrote:

Switching the topic onto speeding now? Okay, I suspect that the maximum speed isn't really the issue as there is an optimum flow of traffic and generally that is obtained through a smoother, "laminar" flow of vehicles. Constantly accelerating and braking tends to reduce the capacity of the road as people's reactions lag which leads to phantom traffic jams.

Not switching the topic, the point is still the same. Endless noise about something you can't change, and won't be able to change, until you can provide an economic solution to the problem.

This country will have to continue to pay Charon his dues until it becomes un-economical to do so; and all the bleating in the world isn't going to change that.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to gcommie | 4 years ago
2 likes

gcommie wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

As a simple demonstration, have a go at this game: https://madewithmonsterlove.itch.io/error-prone

Cute little game, but of little relevance.

hawkinspeter wrote:

Switching the topic onto speeding now? Okay, I suspect that the maximum speed isn't really the issue as there is an optimum flow of traffic and generally that is obtained through a smoother, "laminar" flow of vehicles. Constantly accelerating and braking tends to reduce the capacity of the road as people's reactions lag which leads to phantom traffic jams.

Not switching the topic, the point is still the same. Endless noise about something you can't change, and won't be able to change, until you can provide an economic solution to the problem.

This country will have to continue to pay Charon his dues until it becomes un-economical to do so; and all the bleating in the world isn't going to change that.

So, the topic is now the futility of discourse without effecting immediate political change? I would consider that changing public opinion is paramount to effective policy change, otherwise you can simply get a backlash to any changes later on. As to an economic case, I'd consider replacing as many journeys as possible with cycling/walking/public transport and thus enable a quicker and more efficient use of the roads to transport goods and services without getting stuck e.g. in the school run. Cost in the reduction of NHS expenditure due to a healthier population and everyone is a winner (except car manufacturers and petrol companies). By the way, have you considered the irony of complaining about useless noise in comments, whilst not really adding anything except noise yourself?

Avatar
gcommie replied to hawkinspeter | 4 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

 So, the topic is now the futility of discourse without affecting immediate political change?

It always was. The endless bleating about inaction by the authorities when nothing is going to change, is the modern day equivilent of King Canute trying to hold back the tide. A complete waste of time, effort and energy.

If Canute wanted to hold back the tide, he should have built a dam. If you want to stop RTAs, address the economics that drive our use and behaviour with respect to transport.

hawkinspeter wrote:

By the way, have you considered the irony of complaining about useless noise in comments, whilst not really adding anything except noise yourself?

If I can get just one idiot to stop posting yet another "ban them for life" comment, it'll have been worth it, i.e. one less useless comment per news story to read equals eternity over a life time.

BTW, this will be my last post as I'm going home now. It's been fun.

Avatar
burtthebike replied to gcommie | 4 years ago
5 likes

gcommie wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

 So, the topic is now the futility of discourse without affecting immediate political change?

It always was. The endless bleating about inaction by the authorities when nothing is going to change, is the modern day equivilent of King Canute trying to hold back the tide. A complete waste of time, effort and energy.

If Canute wanted to hold back the tide, he should have built a dam. If you want to stop RTAs, address the economics that drive our use and behaviour with respect to transport.

hawkinspeter wrote:

By the way, have you considered the irony of complaining about useless noise in comments, whilst not really adding anything except noise yourself?

If I can get just one idiot to stop posting yet another "ban them for life" comment, it'll have been worth it, i.e. one less useless comment per news story to read equals eternity over a life time.

BTW, this will be my last post as I'm going home now. It's been fun.

Canute wasn't trying to hold back the tide, but to demonstrate to his sycophantic court that he couldn't.

Have you considered the futility of posting so many useless comments about useless comments?

Avatar
burtthebike | 4 years ago
5 likes

Best wishes for a swift and full recovery.  As others have said, should be a lifetime ban.

I'm sure this tragic incident will instantly compel the BBC to produce a prog about cyclists being killed/injured by drivers like this.

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NickK123 | 4 years ago
6 likes

Trying to focus on the positive, the good news was the terrific first aid that was performed at the roadside - absolutely outstanding.  A terrible position to be in - to assist one's sibling.  However, job done.  Chapeau!

 
 
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the little onion | 4 years ago
3 likes

If I recall, a lifetime ban has not been imposed in the UK for at least 5 years. Sounds like something Sir Lord St Christopher of Boardman might want to campaign on.

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Awavey replied to the little onion | 4 years ago
2 likes
the little onion wrote:

If I recall, a lifetime ban has not been imposed in the UK for at least 5 years. Sounds like something Sir Lord St Christopher of Boardman might want to campaign on.

But I suspect that's a consequence of the relative inability to enforce it properly, what makes you think a drink driving, speeding, absconding driver who left someone basically to die at the roadside after theyd crashed into them would remotely have any scruples or conscience about getting behind the wheel of a car without a license? Theyd simply join the ranks of the other roughly 1 million unlicensed drivers on the road.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Awavey | 4 years ago
4 likes

Awavey wrote:
the little onion wrote:

If I recall, a lifetime ban has not been imposed in the UK for at least 5 years. Sounds like something Sir Lord St Christopher of Boardman might want to campaign on.

But I suspect that's a consequence of the relative inability to enforce it properly, what makes you think a drink driving, speeding, absconding driver who left someone basically to die at the roadside after theyd crashed into them would remotely have any scruples or conscience about getting behind the wheel of a car without a license? Theyd simply join the ranks of the other roughly 1 million unlicensed drivers on the road.

So you think they should be given back their license and clapped on the back and allowed to carry on maiming innocents?

Ban them from driving and then if they're ever caught again driving whilst banned, lock them up for a while. Just because they may be driving for a while without getting caught again is no reason to give them a license again.

Avatar
Awavey replied to hawkinspeter | 4 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

Awavey wrote:
the little onion wrote:

If I recall, a lifetime ban has not been imposed in the UK for at least 5 years. Sounds like something Sir Lord St Christopher of Boardman might want to campaign on.

But I suspect that's a consequence of the relative inability to enforce it properly, what makes you think a drink driving, speeding, absconding driver who left someone basically to die at the roadside after theyd crashed into them would remotely have any scruples or conscience about getting behind the wheel of a car without a license? Theyd simply join the ranks of the other roughly 1 million unlicensed drivers on the road.

So you think they should be given back their license and clapped on the back and allowed to carry on maiming innocents?

absolutely not, I would want them to be off the road as much as you, if you could convince me a life ban meant they could never got behind the wheel of a car again, Im totally for it in a case like this,  but I recognise from their actions especially in this case but other cases like it that led people to this point, they would be highly unlikely to comply with such a restriction because the chances of them being caught again are tiny.

and when you talk to the police about why they dont lobby more for longer or even lifetime driving bans, theyll tell you theyve found drivers like this are more likely to comply with a time limited ban,which ultimately does keep them off the road and not maiming innocents, whilst a life ban theyll almost certainly break very quickly in fact  because theyve got nothing to lose anymore, send them to jail sure, theyll be out again after a while and back to driving again, because thats just the way things are.

Im not saying its right thats how things are, Im trying to be realistic

 

Avatar
Eton Rifle replied to Awavey | 4 years ago
1 like
Awavey wrote:
the little onion wrote:

If I recall, a lifetime ban has not been imposed in the UK for at least 5 years. Sounds like something Sir Lord St Christopher of Boardman might want to campaign on.

But I suspect that's a consequence of the relative inability to enforce it properly, what makes you think a drink driving, speeding, absconding driver who left someone basically to die at the roadside after theyd crashed into them would remotely have any scruples or conscience about getting behind the wheel of a car without a license? Theyd simply join the ranks of the other roughly 1 million unlicensed drivers on the road.

But the potential difficulty of enforcing sanctions against a criminal act should not determine whether that act is criminal or not. By that reasoning, we would pretty much give up on trying to prevent sophisticated tax evasion. Yet political will CAN make a difference. Look at the forthcoming EU anti-tax avoidance directive (nothing to do with Brexit, of course) - that is potentially a game changer. The same thing could happen with criminal driving behaviour.

Avatar
Awavey replied to Eton Rifle | 4 years ago
0 likes

Eton Rifle wrote:
Awavey wrote:
the little onion wrote:

If I recall, a lifetime ban has not been imposed in the UK for at least 5 years. Sounds like something Sir Lord St Christopher of Boardman might want to campaign on.

But I suspect that's a consequence of the relative inability to enforce it properly, what makes you think a drink driving, speeding, absconding driver who left someone basically to die at the roadside after theyd crashed into them would remotely have any scruples or conscience about getting behind the wheel of a car without a license? Theyd simply join the ranks of the other roughly 1 million unlicensed drivers on the road.

 

But the potential difficulty of enforcing sanctions against a criminal act should not determine whether that act is criminal or not. By that reasoning, we would pretty much give up on trying to prevent sophisticated tax evasion. Yet political will CAN make a difference. Look at the forthcoming EU anti-tax avoidance directive (nothing to do with Brexit, of course) - that is potentially a game changer. The same thing could happen with criminal driving behaviour.

 

Ive no idea where you think youve got that Im remotely even suggesting that the difficulty of enforcing sanctions determines whether an act should be criminal or not.

Avatar
PRSboy | 4 years ago
11 likes

Yet again, one wonders "What do you have to do to get the maximum sentence?"

Drink driving?  Check

Speeding? Check

Leaving the scene?  Check

Lying?  Check...  Swerved to avoid a rabbit, yet specially reversed out of a hedge and drove off without helping a human she'd probably killed?  Hmm.

Showing no apparent remorse? Check

There was no death involved, but only because of the expertise of the victims sister and other medical professionals.

Hopefully Griffiths will do the right thing and never drive again, but I somehow doubt it.

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Hirsute | 4 years ago
5 likes

She should be banned for life after failing to stop (which isn't listed above as being guilty of) and basically leaving someone for dead.
Or are we now expected to take account that a fully trained medic was there to save her?

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Zebulebu | 4 years ago
5 likes

Four years is an absolute fucking disgrace. An utter travesty. She should never be allowed to drive a vehicle again, spend at least ten years in prison and perform lifelong community activity in reparation. This country is utterly fucked.

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Rick_Rude | 4 years ago
3 likes

We need to do something to stop car sales to these shitbags. No doubt as she has a record for 'bad' driving' she will just drive without a licence once released.

When I bought a new car the dealer wanted proof of insurance before I was able to take it but yet these scum can get cars from anywhere with no repercussions for sellers. It would be a start if all used sellers had to record the driving licence number and tick a box stating they'd seen proof of insurance before sale/v5 transfer. Then again this probably wouldn't work as some people sell stuff as non working but maybe that scenario could be worked in.

The amount of people will to sell cars to those who they know have no right to drive would surely drop if they got into trouble to? When I sold my last car I put that I wanted to see a driving licence before it was sold as I didn't want to see it on Crimestoppers or something later that night.

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Stef Marazzi | 4 years ago
8 likes

This country is bizarre. I don't get why the Top Gear/Channel 5/Daily Mail/Jeremy Clarkson mentality seems to pervade the justice system. This person should be banned from driving forever.

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Kendalred | 4 years ago
12 likes

Staggering.

We call ourselves a civilised society, but then treat driving an automobile as a basic human right, one that should not be taken away under any circumstances. Except it's not a right at all - it's a privilege, one that needs to be taken away permanently for anyone who proves they do not derserve this privilege.

"Her barrister, James Tucker, said Cook had, “an appalling, lengthy criminal record for bad driving.”

This just proves this point - presumably this scrote owns this car legally despite the above.

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