Skip to main content

Police said to be considering pursuing landmark corporate manslaughter charge against highways authority

The Metropolitan Police in London, England is reported to be considering the option of pursuing the first ever corporate manslaughter charge against a highways authority. Twenty-four-year-old cyclist Deep Lee was killed in a collision with a lorry at the junction of Pentonville Road and York Way in King’s Cross last October. An independent consultants’ report on pedestrian safety in 2008 had warned the capital’s highways authority, Transport for London (TfL), that the junction at York Way needed prope
April 19, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The 5059 Metropolitan Police in London, England is reported to be considering the option of pursuing the first ever corporate manslaughter charge against a highways authority.

Twenty-four-year-old cyclist Deep Lee was killed in a collision with a lorry at the junction of Pentonville Road and York Way in King’s Cross last October.

An independent consultants’ report on pedestrian safety in 2008 had warned the capital’s highways authority, 2387 Transport for London (TfL), that the junction at York Way needed proper calming measures and should be redesigned. The section where Ms Lee was killed was identified as an “absolute priority”.

Quoted in The Times, the Metropolitan Police’s Road Death Investigation Unit head Detective Chief Inspector John Oldham said: “There is a portfolio of offences that might have occurred. Obviously corporate manslaughter is one of them.”

However, DCI Oldham said there were problems associated with bringing a successful prosecution under the appropriate legislation, the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007, which he described as “a badly drafted Act; there are loopholes everywhere.”

TfL’s London Cycling Design Standards state that widths of less than 4metres to 4.5metres per lane “should be avoided except on narrow quiet roads”.

Last month, London Assembly members quizzed the city’s mayor Boris Johnson on whether the junction met TfL’s own safety standards. In reply, he highlighted that the junction’s layout had been put in place prior to the publication of the Standards document which was a “best practice document intended to ensure that consistently high standards are applied to new schemes in order to reduce barriers to cycling”.

A design for cycle improvements at the York Way-Pentonville Road junction is due to be completed before the Olympics in London this summer

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Q-Free solution for Glasgow
    September 3, 2021
    For the HI-TRAC CMU bicycle detection solution, in-road piezo-electric sensors are located around 25m away from every road leading to a major junction.
  • European police cracking down on drink driving
    August 19, 2014
    Police in Europe have been cracking down on drink driving with a major joint operation in 30 countries. Close to 1.2 million breath tests were carried out as part of this recent European operation. Police forces achieved 1,168,631 roadside breath tests for alcohol, of which 18,391 were positive. Motorists were also checked for drugs in the operation, and 2,976 offences were detected. President of pan-European police body TISPOL Koen Ricour said, “It is disappointing that so many people still think the law
  • Clearview of London traffic
    June 19, 2012
    Clearview Traffic Group (CTG) has secured a contract for the installation and maintenance of automatic traffic monitoring equipment on behalf of Transport for London (TfL), the integrated body responsible for the capital’s transport system. As part of the contract, CTG will install a number of additional Automatic Traffic Counter (ATC) sites, as well as continue to maintain and repair nearly 200 existing ATC locations in and around the city of London. The ATC sites include equipment, ancillary devices and s
  • India’s IRTE wins top Prince Michael of Kent Safety Award
    July 4, 2019
    India’s Institute of Road Traffic Education (IRTE) was among the international winners at the annual Prince Michael International Road Safety Awards in London. IRTE picked up the Premier Award for its road injury prevention programme and for being a key partner in the Safer Cars for India project established by Global NCAP, an independent certification body that evaluates the safety of vehicles. Part of IRTE’s strategy has been the setting up of what is believed to be Asia’s first Masters of Science i