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5 years in jail for driver who was on phone when she killed cyclist

Julie Watson deleted record of call from her phone after hitting Alistair Speed

A driver who was making a phone call when she killed a cyclist, then tried to delete a record of it, has been sentenced to five years in prison and banned from driving for 10 years, reports STV.

Julie Watson, aged 36, was convicted last month of causing the death by dangerous driving of cyclist Alistair Speed in Fife on 5 September 2013. Mr Speed, from Glenrothes, died of severe head injuries.

She was also found guilty of attempting to defeat the ends of justice due to her deleting the record of the call before she dialled 999 to summon help.

Passing sentence yesterday at the High Court in Glasgow, judge Lord Kinclaven told the mother-of-two: "You have demonstrated remorse which I accept is genuine for causing Mr Speed's death and you are well aware of the devastation that has been caused to Mr Speed's family and indeed all those who knew him."

He added: "The use of a mobile phone has the capacity to wreck lives and literally kill. Use of a handheld mobile phone is in itself an unlawful act.

"The fact an offender is avoidably distracted by the use of a mobile phone when committing an offence of this sort will always make an offence more serious."

During her trial, Jim Keegan QC, prosecuting, had said: “The use of a mobile phone, especially calling out, is a conscious, wilful act. The use of a phone when driving, a hand-held phone, is an offence."

Watson, who was convicted unanimously by the jury, had claimed, "The first time I took the phone out was to phone for an ambulance," but her mobile phone provider’s records proved otherwise.

Mr Speed’s sister, Mhairi Laffoley, told the court that both her parents died within three months of his death.

She described the impact on her family as “horrendous,” adding, “It will never be the same. He was everything to us.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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31 comments

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catfordrichard | 8 years ago
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If somebody just walked or ran out in front of you and you hit them then it's very unlikely to be your fault and thus careless or dangerous driving. if they were on their phone or otherwise distracted and thus their reactions were slower or they were taking the wrong line in the road. well that's a different matter.

Feeder thank you for your bravery in coming on here and engaging with this and like the others I'm sorry for your loss. I think with these things its important sometimes to have a human face to the story so to speak because it just reinforces for me the shear selfishness of this woman's actions and how somebody can still claim to be innocent when the evidence is seen is astonishing so I'm glad for your sakes that she appears to have had her sentence increased to take into account the extra hurt her denials must have caused.

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giff77 | 8 years ago
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That I didn't know Feeder. The sentence is far to lenient. I'm sorry that you and your family have had to been put through this and for the loss that you've suffered due to this woman.

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HalfWheeler | 8 years ago
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EK Spinner replied to HalfWheeler | 8 years ago
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On the face of it this looks like she will spend 4.5 years locked up BUT when you delve a little deeper the same government that have approved this are also reducing the capacity for female prisoners, despite the current women's jail being dogged with overcrowding issues for years.

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SNS1938 | 8 years ago
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That's longer than I'd expected. So she'll have to serve at least two years? Is there a chance she can do home detention? I really hope not, as two years at home is absolutely nothing. I'd take two years of home detention over spending even a week in prison.

I'd like to see it that this sort of thing gets 10 years, released in 5, but banned from driving for 20. If caught driving whilst banned, go back in to serve the remainder of the sentence in full (as I'm assuming most people like this will be out after serving 1/3 of it for good behavior).

I don't remember if it's as big of an issue in the UK as it is in the US when you're an ex-con and it haunts you for years and makes jobs really hard to get etc. I hope so.

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Olionabike replied to SNS1938 | 8 years ago
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@The Feeder. I'm so, so sorry for your loss. I can't imagine what living through the aftermath of Alistair's death must have been and still be like. I hope you find some peace, some day.

SNS1938 wrote:

I don't remember if it's as big of an issue in the UK as it is in the US when you're an ex-con and it haunts you for years and makes jobs really hard to get etc. I hope so.

You do understand that successful reintegration into society is the biggest factor in stopping someone reoffending, don't you?

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EK Spinner | 8 years ago
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I can't work out how the judge can say

"You have demonstrated remorse which I accept is genuine for causing Mr Speed's death and you are well aware of the devastation that has been caused to Mr Speed's family and indeed all those who knew him."

When she pleaded deleted the phone records, pleaded not guilty, denied making the call ...... Surely someone who is showing remorse would be firstly required to admit their actions.

The sentence is just over 1/3 of the maximum (14 years I believe) for this offence, normally the sentence is shortened for an early plea etc so surely the starting point in a case of no plea (and no remorse?) should be 10-12 years.

At least here in Scotland we are willing to find these people guilty and jail them, but why will she ever be allowed to drive again, if a licensed gun holder used it dangerously and killed someone they would never be allowed a license again, should be the same for a driver.

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HalfWheeler replied to EK Spinner | 8 years ago
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EK Spinner wrote:

At least here in Scotland we are willing to find these people guilty and jail them

I'm not so sure, the RTA-justice lottery is every bit as erratic up here as it is in England.

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giff77 replied to HalfWheeler | 8 years ago
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HalfWheeler wrote:
EK Spinner wrote:

At least here in Scotland we are willing to find these people guilty and jail them

I'm not so sure, the RTA-justice lottery is every bit as erratic up here as it is in England.

I'm in agreement with HalfWheeler here. Too often do we read about slapped wrists here in Scotland.

This individual will not see parole as her sentence is over 5 years. The driving ban follows on from that which means that she won't hold a set of car keys until she's in her 50's by which time an enhanced driving test will be beyond challenging or all vehicles will be Google vehicles and all she will have to do is sit in the tin can and tell it to take her to her destination. While some of us call for a higher sentence the judge has probably started at a higher level then taken into account the guilty plea etc.

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The Feeder replied to giff77 | 8 years ago
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She did not plead guilty at any point

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The Feeder | 8 years ago
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Alistair, the cyclist, was my brother. I note that some of you have been asking some questions re the sentence, etc. The sentence the driver was given was 5 years for causing death by dangerous driving whilst using the mobile phone and 1 year for defeating the ends of justice. The 2 charges will run at the same time ie total 5 years. As someone already pointed out the driver will not serve the full 5 years. As to the question re if the driver admitted using the phone prior to the trial then the answer is NO.

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HarrogateSpa | 8 years ago
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This was tragic for the victim and his family, and the sentence is deserved.

Yesterday I saw someone driving and using their phone (not hands free), and if I walked along the road today, I'm quite sure I would see someone else doing the same. There are no consequences for those people, and yet their actions are similar to those of the lady in this case.

It's deeply unfortunate that there isn't more action taken to stop this dangerous behaviour, rather than only sanctioning it when it results in tragic consequences.

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Franglaise Amiens | 8 years ago
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Every one is talking about five years "in prison", but that was only her sentence, wasn't it ?
Unless things have changed, she will be on parole in 2 1/2 years.
I certainly think the ban should start on her release from prison, and not whilst she is inside (or do they get weekends off to allow the warders a break ?).
WHOOPS ! I just realised the page was open on my friend's account, and not mine, after we did her TdF team together last night.
She didn't write this. I did.
I'm cisgil23.

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HalfWheeler replied to Franglaise Amiens | 8 years ago
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Franglaise Amiens wrote:

Every one is talking about five years "in prison", but that was only her sentence, wasn't it ?
Unless things have changed, she will be on parole in 2 1/2 years

Hopefully not;

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-33238173

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hectorhtaylor | 8 years ago
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Does the ten year ban start once she is released?

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Simmo72 | 8 years ago
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Why can't the government produce a hard hitting media campaign on the dangers? We are still at the point where awareness of the masses is poor as to the danger using mobiles whilst driving introduces. Its like with seat belts. Sure there are always going to be dim witted exceptions - ie dean gaffney - but the vast majority understand the importance. This was largely down to a media campaign and backing it up with enforcement. We are being failed by our government.

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alansmurphy | 8 years ago
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Good to see at least a custodial sentence however - are they telling us that she mowed down a cyclist causing severe head injuries, took her phone out and instead of swiping unlock and pressing the phone button followed by 3 taps of the 9, swiped unlock, menu, call log, clicked on the call, pressed delete, ok then home, call, 999?

That's manslaughter at the least!

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seven | 8 years ago
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What's not clear from the story is whether she continued to maintain that she hadn't made a call after her arrest. I can *just about* understand (nb: not forgive) actions like that taken in a panic, but to not admit to it after the adrenaline has faded is abhorrent.

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Danger Dicko | 8 years ago
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Kim. I hope you missed the word "dangerous" from your post?

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djcritchley | 8 years ago
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From the sentence she received and the report it appears that she was convicted on both counts and sentenced accordingly.

- For a level 3 offence, i.e. driving whilst "avoidably distracted" the sentencing guideline is 2-5 years with a starting point of 3 years.

- For Perverting the Cause of Justice by concealing evidence in deleting the email the guideline 4-18 months.

So a total of 5 years which must include some aggravating factors seems close to the guidelines.

Even if this was a level one offence, which it doesn't appear to be on face value, then the highest tariff would be 14 years imprisonment.

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Pavery1 | 8 years ago
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I think 5 years is long enough. She has to live with that and it is going to haunt her forever.
I firmly believe that most people don't understand the risks they take when driving. Small shunts can kill and mame.
There has to be better education to reduce these kind of incidents.

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webster | 8 years ago
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The 10 year driving ban is simply arbitrary. She'll be back behind the wheel as soon as she's out of prison. For those wondering how, it's easy. Pay cash for a second hand car from some guy on auto trader and drive away. No need for insurance, just drive it until you're caught then the court will simply hand you another driving ban. Rinse and repeat.

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Pavery1 | 8 years ago
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I think 5 years is long enough. She has to live with that and it is going to haunt her forever.
I firmly believe that most people don't understand the risks they take when driving. Small shunts can kill and mame.
There has to be better education to reduce these kind of incidents.

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Simon E replied to Pavery1 | 8 years ago
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Pavery1 wrote:

I think 5 years is long enough. She has to live with that and it is going to haunt her forever.
I firmly believe that most people don't understand the risks they take when driving. Small shunts can kill and mame.
There has to be better education to reduce these kind of incidents.

Agree with all that.

I think those 'baying for blood' have probably never seen the inside of a prison and think it's a holiday camp.

How could locking this woman up for longer help anyone? Is 5 years not long enough to be deprived of one's liberty in such circumstances? A 10 year driving ban is good, there should be a lot more of those.

For comparison the hit-and-run lorry driver who mowed down a cyclist on the A49, later denied it all and showed no remorse, only got a suspended sentence last month.
http://road.cc/154742
In my mind THAT is a more serious injustice.

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JohnMartin replied to Simon E | 8 years ago
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Simon E wrote:
Pavery1 wrote:

I think 5 years is long enough. She has to live with that and it is going to haunt her forever.
I firmly believe that most people don't understand the risks they take when driving. Small shunts can kill and mame.
There has to be better education to reduce these kind of incidents.

Agree with all that.

I think those 'baying for blood' have probably never seen the inside of a prison and think it's a holiday camp.

How could locking this woman up for longer help anyone? Is 5 years not long enough to be deprived of one's liberty in such circumstances? A 10 year driving ban is good, there should be a lot more of those.

For comparison the hit-and-run lorry driver who mowed down a cyclist on the A49, later denied it all and showed no remorse, only got a suspended sentence last month.
http://road.cc/154742
In my mind THAT is a more serious injustice.

I work in Scottish prisons every week, trust me they are holiday camps, bring back hanging for some of the cases in there, I would like to see a life time ban from driving if you kill some one while driving(other than if they walk out in front of you).

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Kim | 8 years ago
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The custodial sentence is appropriate and should be used more frequently in these cases. But a 10 year ban?

If you cause a death while driving, you should not be allowed drive again, no ifs, no buts, a life time driving ban. There is NO right to drive, it is a privilege granted under licence, if that privilege is abused then it should withdrawn. It is time to end the culture of the Sacred Driving Licence.

The scary thing is this woman could be back on the roads and allowed to kill again in five years time.

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usedtobefaster | 8 years ago
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So was the jail sentence because she killed Mr Speed, or because she "was also found guilty of attempting to defeat the ends of justice" ?

I suspect the court took the later charge more seriously.

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oozaveared replied to usedtobefaster | 8 years ago
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usedtobefaster wrote:

So was the jail sentence because she killed Mr Speed, or because she "was also found guilty of attempting to defeat the ends of justice" ?

I suspect the court took the later charge more seriously.

Well yes it's a combination of the two. Trying to delete evidence is an aggravating factor when it comes to sentencing. I think 5 years is a low sentence but I don't know the full facts. But there's always a starting point for sentencing which is roughly half of the maximum. That's 14 years in this case. Then the judge considers the mitigating and aggravating factors. So if the otherwise good driver stops, renders assistance, calls the police and ambulance, gives a proper account, helps the police, pleads guilty and is genuinely remorseful the courts treat them better than if they have previous convictions, aren't insured, maybe in a stolen car, try to drive off, claim it wasn't them, give a no comment interview, were drunk, on drugs, try to blame the victim, and plead not guilty.

and quite right too.

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jasecd | 8 years ago
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This is closer to justice but still not enough. Considering she tried to hide her blatant guilt I think fifteen years imprisonment and a lifetime driving ban would be apt.

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multifrag replied to jasecd | 8 years ago
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jasecd wrote:

This is closer to justice but still not enough. Considering she tried to hide her blatant guilt I think fifteen years imprisonment and a lifetime driving ban would be apt.

I think that 5 years is enough as you don't want to overflow all prisons like in USA. You have to give another chance. But that thought only comes after UK begins to imprison drivers like her for 5 or more years. Now families battle in court for any justice...So, I'm happy that shed got sentenced and hopefully made an example to other drivers.

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