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Distracted driver sentenced to imprisonment

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Date: August 4, 2021 Author: Eleonora Malacarne

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Derek Holland, a 59-year-old lorry driver from Sutton Avenue, Seaford, was sentenced last week for dangerous driving and three counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving for a collision dating back to August 2020.

The incident, with the lorry driver distracted by his mobile phone crashing into the back of a van on the A27, seriously injuring three people, was captured by two cameras fitted to the vehicle and reviewed by detectives, who recorded 42 separate incidents of poor driving during his four-hour journey prior to the collision near Lewes, at about 10.55 am on 10 August 2020.


This included almost persistent use of his mobile phone while not wearing a seatbelt, and taking both hands off the wheel to peel a banana and to wave at traffic lights. Throughout the journey, he even used a replica seatbelt buckle in the socket to prevent the alarm from activating, and only put his actual seatbelt on when he pulled up behind a police car at a set of traffic lights. As soon as the police vehicle was out of sight, he removed the belt again.

The collision involved a security van which had broken down in lane one of the westbound dual carriageway. The three occupants – the driver, a prison escort and a prisoner, all sustained injuries.

Holland was subsequently arrested and charged with dangerous driving, and three counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving and pleaded guilty to all four charges and appeared before Hove Crown Court on Tuesday 27 July, where he was sentenced to three-and-a-half years’ imprisonment and disqualified from driving for 57 months, he will have to take an extended re-test if he wishes to drive again.

Detective Sergeant Rob Baldwin, of the Serious Collision Investigations Unit, said: “It was fortunate that the company had installed cameras on their lorry, which allowed us to examine the driver's actions. The company fully co-operated with our investigation.

“We reviewed the video footage from just the morning of the collision, and found 42 separate incidents of very poor driving. These were mostly where Holland was interacting with his mobile telephone, but also where he had taken his hands off of the steering wheel to eat, and was not in proper control of his vehicle.

“We strongly advise drivers not to engage with any activity that distracts them from the driving task – this could still lead to an offence of not being in proper control of a vehicle. Even if a device is not being held in the hand, distracted driving can lead to devastating consequences and will likely result in a prosecution for dangerous or careless driving, as this case demonstrates.”

 

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Photo by Val Britaus on Unsplash

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