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Replying to Steve of course.This was a dreadful hit and run road collision and the driver was driving a Nissan Note  - a small car - not an HGV.  There are a lot very impatient and bad drivers out there.  Not long ago I saw one one of those suddenly cross to the opposite lane on the wrong side of the central reservation in order to overtake which meant driving over the zebra crossing at speed on the wrong side of the road.  The central reservation is there for a purpose including to stop that and to allow pedestrians to cross one side of the road at a time. We were stopped at lights.  Why?  To save just a couple of minutes?  All road users need to be aware of each other's shortcomings and vulnerabilities on the road.  Pedestrians and cyclists being the more vulnerable and being far more unlikely to have been in an HGV and to have observed and appreciated the lack of vision all around the vehicle as an HGV driver would and how to keep themselves and others safe on the road.  HGV drivers have to or should have taken tests!  The stickers that HGV drivers hopefully ALL have warning cyclists about this lack of vision alerts and warns us ALL.I see the justified moans about cyclists making themselves visible and wish there were more TV adverts showing how invisible unlit cyclists and pedestrians in dark clothing are but would remind drivers that they and their vehicles cannot actually see round corners and far too often launch themselves in their large and far more dangerous box around them at speed.https://www.hounslow.gov.uk/info/20053/transport/1985/cycling_in_hounslowneCycling is a life skill but many may have missed out on Cycling Proficiency and other training.  CouncilS run free cycle training and there is also the free Dr Bike where there are bike checks and advice.  Please encourage these more vulnerable road users to take advantage of it.  No collision is good for anyone.

Philippa Bond ● 97d

Ross Lydall reports on the verdict today - 11 year prison sentence. Driving ban for more than 17 years. Gao Gao's daughter will be 8 when he is released. https://www.standard.co.uk/news/crime/martin-reilly-hackney-hit-and-run-cycling-dangerous-driving-jailed-b1137930.htmlCowardly driver who fled Hackney hit-and-run that killed mum-of-two jailed for 11 yearsMartin Reilly has multiple previous convictions and was driving an uninsured car when he struck Gao Gao as she was cycling homeA dangerous driver who killed a young mother of two in a shocking hit-and-run collision as she cycled home has been given an 11 year prison sentence.Martin Reilly, 29, who has multiple previous convictions and was driving an uninsured car and was on police bail, careered head-first into Gao Gao on Whiston Road, Hackney, on September 21 last year.He was on the wrong side of the road as he lost control of the car, which he was driving at almost 50mph in a 20mph residential street in wet conditions.Gao Gao, a 36-year-old “extraordinary and dedicated” mother of two and “brilliant” professional fundraiser raising millions for research into dementia, suffered extensive multiple traumatic injuries. She died early the following morning in the Royal London hospital.Judge Caroline English, sitting at Snaresbrook Crown Court, sentenced Reilly on Thursday to 11 years and three months after he had previously pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving.She said two-thirds of the sentence - seven and a half years - would have to be served in prison and the remainder on licence, meaning Reilly is at risk of returning to jail if he reoffends.Judge English said: “This offence is quite obviously so serious that nothing other than an immediate and substantial custodial sentence can be justified.”Reilly was also banned from driving for 210 months – more than 17 years.At a hearing last month, Gao Gao’s widower Luke Walker told how their one-year-old daughter still went to the front door to plead for her “mama” to come home.The couple’s four-year-old son was said to be too frightened to continue cycling to school and had asked his father to stop cycling in case he too was killed.Daniel Murray, defending, told the court on Thursday, prior to sentencing, that Reilly felt great remorse at causing Gao Gao’s death.Mr Murray said: “He didn’t set out that day to hurt anyone.“He has also written a letter expressing his deep sorrow and shame for what has happened.”Reilly’s family had laid flowers at the scene of the collision, the court was told. Whiston Road is a notorious “rat run” for speeding motorists on the north side of Haggerston Park.But Mr Murray admitted that any mitigation for causing Gao Gao’s death “may well ring hollow in the ears of some of those listening in court”.The mother and sister of Gao Gao, a Chinese British national, and a number of friends were in court to hear the sentencing.The judge had to reconvene the court after mistakenly saying initially that Reilly would only serve half his sentence in prison. She later changed that to two-thirds.In her summing up, Judge English said: “There is nothing I can say, and no sentence that I can pass, that can possible assuage the enormous impact and grief felt by the family, loved ones and colleagues of Gao Gao.”She said the death of Gao Gao was “nothing less than a personal tragedy” and a “terrible loss” to her family. “Gao Gao is lost to them forever,” she said.She said: “It’s clear from everything that I have heard and read that Gao Gao was a much-loved and highly respected wife, mother, daughter, sister, friend and colleague.“It’s clear that Gao Gao was a highly intelligent, industrious, talented individual. She made an enormously positive contribution to society.”Addressing Reilly as he sat with his head bowed in the dock, she said: “Tragically it was a life that was cut short on September 21, 2023, as a result of your actions, Martin Reilly.”She told Reilly, whose use of a false address had undoubtedly invalidated his seven-day driving insurance policy, that he “had no business being on the road in the first place”.She said CCTV evidence showed he had driven in a “persistently dangerous manner” immediately prior to the crash, and at speeds more than double the legal limit and that were “wholly inappropriate” to the weather conditions and residential roads.She said his driving prior to the crash involved a “number of aggressive, highly perilous, wholly illegal manoeuvres” that included a near miss with a moped rider.Referring to Reilly’s numerous prior driving convictions, the judge said the collision was a “tragic escalation of a pattern of offending involving motor vehicles”.She said his letter of apology was “brief but it says all that needs to be, and can be, said. It rightly expresses your remorse and your deep wish that you could turn the clock back”.Noting Reilly’s previous testimony in the witness box, Judge English added: “I do judge that your remorse is entirely genuine.”Mr Murray said Reilly was a father of six children aged from one to 10, and his wife was pregnant with a seventh child.He said Reilly had been suffering a panic attack at the time and had been driving himself to hospital with his father.Hackney council CCTV footage played to a previous hearing showed Reilly driving the Nissan Note car at speed the wrong way down a one-way street, through traffic lights at red and overtaking at speed immediately prior to the collision.The car’s speed was estimated at 46mph but with a range of 43mph to 49mph. The court ordered the vehicle to be destroyed.Mr Murray said Reilly had a history of mental illness, connected to a near-fatal stabbing four years ago when he was attacked by four men with knives.Reilly was advised by his family not to pursue criminal charges against his attackers. Mr Murray said Reilly was “probably suffering PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder] from the attack.Another factor was that he had been a passenger in a prison van that had overturned, causing him anxiety.But Judge English said “not a single word” of Reilly’s apparent mental ill health had been mentioned to a psychiatrist who carried out a recent pre-sentencing assessment.“What you are saying to me is not consistent with the psychiatric report,” the judge told Mr Murray.Reilly fled the scene with his father but handed himself into police several days later.He declined to plead guilty to causing Gao Gao’s death when the case was first heard at magistrates’ court.However he did plead guilty last year when it was first heard at Snaresbrook Crown Court, Mr Murray said this entitled him to a 25 per cent reduction in the length of his sentence.The judge said she had taken a starting point of 16 years in determining the sentence. She reduced this by one year because of Reilly’s pleas of mitigation and “entirely genuine” remorse, then deducted 25 per cent for the guilty plea, leaving him with a sentence of 135 months.

Paul Campbell ● 98d

Ross Lydall writes in the comments section of today's Evening Standard about his experience at the trial of Gao Gao's killer and how misplaced rhetoric about a War on Motorists is encouraging dangerous driving in London. Article from here:I cannot escape the horror of seeing cyclist Gao Gao’s terrible hit-and-run death on CCTV.The images enter my sleep, and trouble me awake. A speeding car cannonballs across a wet road, flips and smashes head-on into a female cyclist riding home. This is no Netflix horror show. This was a residential street in Hackney on September 21 last year.Gathered from council CCTV footage, this deeply distressing film was shown in evidence to Court 12 at Snaresbrook Crown Court last Friday. The packed, overheated room was silent but for horrified gasps and sobs from about a dozen of the cyclist’s family and close friends.This was how the life of Gao Gao, by all accounts a quite remarkable young Londoner and devoted mother to two terribly young children, ended.Gao Gao’s family and friends had gathered expecting to see the ill-educated 29-year-old man who had pleaded guilty to causing her death by dangerous driving sent to prison.Instead, they had to wait as he claimed in court that when he fled the overturned car with his father, he was unaware that a woman was dying less than 20ft away.Somehow her widower, Luke Walker, and her sister Ella found the courage to read out their victim impact statements. They told how many lives had been torn apart, not least those of her four-year-old boy and his one-year-old sister, who will grow up motherless.The little girl, who was still being breastfed, now goes to her front door daily to plead for her “mama” to return. In 30 years as a journalist, it’s as distressing as anything I’ve heard.This is the reality of what happens daily on London’s roads. As a cyclist, it’s terrifying. As a parent, doubly so. The selfish lack of regard for other road users runs directly from those who rush red lights or ignore pedestrians on zebra crossings to those who, like Gao Gao’s killer, drive at nearly 50mph in a 20mph zone. Hit-and-runs are soaring. Speeding is at epidemic levels: a million tickets may be issued this year. The so-called “war on the motorist” — LTNs, Ulez and speed cameras — is anything but.But it has inspired the deadliest of vengeance against vulnerable road users. Protected by airbags in ridiculously fast, often unregistered and uninsured cars, many drivers think nothing of the consequences as they turn London into a lawless racetrack.But those in Court 12 know the consequences. The horror of Gao Gao’s last moments cannot be unseen.

Paul Campbell ● 114d

The Evening Standard today publishes the horrific account of the killing of Gao Gao by an uninsured hit and run driver in Hackney in September last year.Ross Lydall reporting says on X that the CCTV footage is too harrowing for publication.  Report follows - warning - this is harrowingFamily's lives 'completely torn apart' by cyclist's hit-and-run death.The devastating harm caused by dangerous drivers has been laid bare as the family of a young London mother told how their lives had been “completely torn apart” by her death in a hit-and-run crash.Gao Gao died after she was hit by a driver speeding at almost 50mph in a 20mph residential street in Hackney as she cycled home.Gao Gao, a 36-year-old mother of two and “brilliant” professional fundraiser raising millions for research into dementia, suffered extensive multiple traumatic injuries when she was hit by a driver speeding at almost 50mph in a 20mph residential street in Hackney as she cycled home.Her one year old daughter, who was still being breastfed at the time, still goes to her front door daily to plead for her “Mama” to come home, according to victim impact statements read in court.Her son, four, is too frightened to continue cycling to school and asked his father, freelance photographer Luke Walker, to stop cycling in case he too is killed.Last week the Standard revealed the number of hit-and-run collisions had hit a record high in London, with more than 7,700 in the most recent year. A City Hall investigation this week will ask the Met police why more is not being done to tackle a growing “epidemic” of lawlessness on the capital’s roads.Full details of the horror of Gao Gao’s death, and the impact it has had on her family, emerged at Snaresbrook Crown Court last Friday.CCTV played in court showed how the driver, Martin Reilly, 29, lost control of his uninsured Nissan Note car in wet conditions, causing it to overturn and sending it barrelling head-on into Gao Gao in Whiston Road around 6.40pm on September 21 last year.Prior to the collision, he had driven the wrong way up a one-way street, driven through a red light and had crossed to the wrong side of the road to overtake two cars immediately before crashing into Gao Gao, who was wearing bright clothing and had a flashing light on the front of her bike.Reilly, who had 20 previous convictions and was on police bail at the time, fled the overturned vehicle with his father, James Reilly, who was a passenger in the car.Gao Gao, a Chinese British national, was lying fatally wounded less than 20ft from the overturned car but Reilly insisted he did not see her. Whiston Road, near Haggerston park, is notorious for speeding.The entire incident – including Reilly and his father fleeing the scene through housing estates - was caught on Hackney council CCTV. Reilly handed himself in to police two days later.He has pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving and is facing a 12-year prison sentence, though this will be reduced by 25 per cent because of his guilty plea.Anna Dutka, prosecuting, told the court that the car’s speed was estimated at 46mph, with a range of 43mph to 49mph.Victim impact statements read by Mr Walker and Gao Gao’s sister Ella spoke of “intense shock and despair” caused by the death.They described Gao Gao as an “extraordinary and dedicated mother”. Mr Walker said of his wife: “She was everything to them, she was their joy, their warmth, their security.”The children had been left with an “immeasurable and unquantifiable void in their lives” and were showing signs of “emotional abandonment”.Mr Walker said: “The children will now grow up motherless, carrying the pain and trauma of that for a lifetime. Having very few, if any, memories of their mother to cling to.“Every day since Gao Gao died, her daughter has stood by the front door saying ‘Mama’ and hoping that the next person to walk through the door will be her mummy.“How do you ever adequately explain to a four and one-and-a-half year old that their mummy died due to the negligent and dangerous actions of stranger, and how do you ever adequately explain to them when they are older that this man then ran off leaving their mummy to die in the street?”Mr Walker has had to quit work to care for his children. His sister-in-law plans to relocate from Beijing to London with her family to help.Gao Gao’s parents were unable to get from China to London in time and had to say goodbye to their daughter “via a pixelated video call”. Ella said: “There is a Chinese saying that white hair should never bury black hair.”She paid tribute to her elder sister’s “charisma, elegance, intelligence and wit”. Gao Gao worked in fundraising for Oxford university, UCL and latterly the London School of Economics, “working tirelessly to raise millions of pounds to ensure that life-changing research into areas including Alzheimer’s and dementia could be funded”, Ella said.“At her funeral, her former boss described her as ‘one of the best fundraisers and advancement professionals any of us will ever meet’.”Judge Caroline English said: “Can I thank Gao Gao’s husband and sister for their courage. I understand it takes immense courage to read the statements out in person.”The case was adjourned until next month for sentencing.

Paul Campbell ● 115d