Manawatu Standard

Mum ‘shattered’ by driving error

- SIMON HENDERY

Kim Crous was driving her children to a play date when a momentary glance at her phone cost her son his life and left two families devastated.

Crous cried in the dock of the Napier District Court yesterday as her lawyer Scott Jefferson told Judge Geoff Rea she was ‘‘shattered by her own actions’’.

Judge Rea agreed, saying any sentence he imposed would be insignific­ant compared to the ‘‘lifelong penalty’’ she was already facing as a result of losing her son.

The Hastings mother made the fatal mistake in April last year of checking Google Maps when asked by her children how far they were from their friend’s house.

Driving along the Hawke’s Bay expressway at about 100kmh with phone in hand, Crous missed seeing a long line of cars stopped for road works ahead of her. She ploughed into the vehicle at the back of the queue.

The crash killed her 8-year-old son James and injured his 5-yearold sister.

An 11-year-old in the other vehicle was also injured.

Everyone was seatbelts.

At an earlier court appearance, she had pleaded guilty to a charge of careless driving causing death and two counts of careless driving causing injury.

Yesterday, Jefferson described Crous’ actions as ‘‘a moment’s inadverten­ce in an otherwise blame-free existence’’ to date.

Crous was a dedicated mother and a ‘‘fully-contributi­ng member of society’’ whose family wearing immigrated from South Africa so they could have a better life in this country, Jefferson said.

The crash also changed the lives of the family in the other car.

In a victim impact statement read to the court, the driver recounted her horror at seeing Crous’ car approach, and telling her children to hold on because she realised it would not stop in time.

She continued to suffer from anxiety and panic attacks, which had woken her up at night ‘‘time and time again’’ since the incident, she said.

It prompted her and her husband to abandon a sharemilki­ng contract and leave Hawke’s Bay.

A recent return trip to the crash scene brought back traumatic memories.

In the statement she expressed her sadness over James’ death, saying ’’I think you, Kim, have suffered enough.’’

Police declined to make any submission­s at the sentencing.

Judge Rea said cases such as this were among the hardest sentencing exercises the judiciary had to deal with, where a ‘‘low level of fault’’ resulted in an ‘‘horrendous’’ outcome.

Hand-held phone use by drivers was illegal, and authoritie­s worked hard to push that message in order to avoid the type of ‘‘catastroph­ic result’’ that had occurred in this case, he said.

He ordered Crous to undergo six months of supervisio­n and disqualifi­ed her from driving for a year.

The supervisio­n sentence should be used to offer Crous any help she needed, the judge said.

– Fairfax NZ

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