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

  • UK death rate not falling fast enough in The Reported Road Casualties Great Britain Report 2013
    September 26, 2014
    Road safety lobby groups have criticised Britain for pushing down its annual road fatality rate by a further 2% in the past year, the lowest figure since records began in 1926. The Reported Road Casualties Great Britain 2013 (RRCGB) Annual Report, published in September 2014, reveals that 1,713 people were killed in road accidents in the country during 2013, with the number of people seriously injured down by 6% to 21,657 versus 2012.
  • Starting young
    October 12, 2017
    A driver in China started out behind the wheel a little younger than normally expected. The six-year old drove his parents’ car along an urban street in Guangxi Province while being both encouraged and offered tips by members of his family. Police officers spotted the young driver and the father was given a suspension of his driving licence for the offence. When asked by police officers why he had allowed his child to drive the car the father replied that it had merely been a bit of fun. The officers pointe
  • Drug driving a risk in the UK
    March 8, 2021
    Drug driving is a hidden risk in the UK.
  • Safety gains on Europe’s roads with lower KSI rates
    February 19, 2014
    Better road safety is helping to cut KSI rates right across the EC - Mike Woof writes Road safety continues to improve in Europe, with official statistics for 2012 showing a drop in fatalities of 2,661 compared with the figures for 2011. The latest data from Pan-European police body TISPOL shows an encouraging trend towards better road safety. This highlights safety improvements right across the EU. In 2012, a total of 27,700 people were killed in road crashes in the European Union’s 27 member states, eq