The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Pensioner who caused ‘catastroph­ic’ collision locked up for 15 months

- KIRSTY MCINTOSH

Adriver who seriously injured two people after turning into the path of a car driven by the boss of security firm G4S on the A9, has been jailed.

Brian Raitt, of Grand Eagles Caravan Site, Dunning Road, Auchterard­er, was attempting to use a “cut through” near Perth to return in the direction he had come from, to collect his wife’s phone.

The pensioner failed to check properly before pulling out of a layby, causing the “catastroph­ic” collision near Broxden.

Advocate Euan Dow, defending, said the 70-yearold had suffered a lapse of concentrat­ion that spanned just seconds.

He said: “The accused has repeatedly expressed remorse, not only to the witnesses in the case but also to the author of the report.

“This expression is genuine and heartfelt.”

Mr Dow said the former offshore worker was also considered a respectful and responsibl­e family man who had an unblemishe­d driving record spanning more than 50 years.

He urged Sheriff Charles Macnair to impose a noncustodi­al sentence, stating the pensioner was due to have a landline installed at his property to allow the court the option of placing him on an electronic tag.

However, Sheriff Macnair said he did not consider there was any alternativ­e to a custodial sentence.

He told Raitt: “You were found guilty by the jury of dangerous driving, not negligent driving or careless driving.”

He noted a vehicle travelling at 70mph would have been visible for nine seconds prior to the crash site.

“If you had looked it must have been a significan­t time prior to you coming from the layby on to the carriagewa­y of the A9 because the driver of the other car had no chance at all of doing anything about it and drove into the side of your vehicle.”

Chris Burr, managing director for G4S Events UK, had previously told the court how he had been forced to leave his wife Amanda in the wreckage of the car, while he carried two children to safety.

They had been travelling from Glasgow to Dundee to visit friends.

Mr Burr, who was travelling at about 70mph, said: “I said to my wife: ‘We’re going to…’ But before

I could say ‘crash,’ we hit the vehicle.”

“We hit the side of vehicle front on, and our car started spinning. I remember the noise and the feel of the car spinning.

“I came round and I could see that the car had stopped and we were facing the wrong way.

“And then my wife screamed that the car was on fire.”

The collision left Mrs Burr with serious injuries that included a fracture to her spine and also resulted in a five-year-old boy being badly hurt.

Mr Burr said: “My wife thought she was going to die. A man said it wasn’t looking good and I should go over and sit with her.”

She was in the High Dependency Unit at Ninewells for a week, before being transferre­d to hospital in Glasgow.

Raitt was found guilty by a jury of causing the crash, by driving his van dangerousl­y and pulling out into the path of Mr Burr’s car on July 20 2018.

Sheriff Macnair jailed him for 15 months. He also banned him four years and seven and-a-half months, ordering him to sit the extended driving test before he could get his licence back.

 ??  ?? HORRIFIC ACCIDENT: The scene of the high-speed collision on the A9 dual carriagewa­y, just outside Perth. Inset left: Pensioner Brian Raitt who pulled out in front of the family car driven by Chris Burr, right.
HORRIFIC ACCIDENT: The scene of the high-speed collision on the A9 dual carriagewa­y, just outside Perth. Inset left: Pensioner Brian Raitt who pulled out in front of the family car driven by Chris Burr, right.

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