Wales On Sunday

JOSHUA’S BRAVE CHOICE

How this 22-year-old victim of a catastroph­ic death crash made the decision to have his leg amputated to help rebuild his life as well as his shattered body

- JAMES MCCARTHY Reporter james.mccarthy@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE victim of a road crash caused by two drivers says he would be dead if paramedics had reached the scene 15 minutes later. Joshua Deguara suffered brain damage, multiple shattered bones, major organ failure and a severed main artery in the incident, last August.

The 22-year-old is still waiting for a number of operations, including surgery to amputate one of his legs.

Speaking publicly for the first time since the crash, which caused the death of his friend Sophie Taylor, Joshua is having to be rebuilt, both physically and emotionall­y.

Michael Wheeler, 23, from Harlech Road, Cardiff, pleaded guilty last December to causing the death of his ex-girlfriend Sophie Taylor and serious injury to Joshua Deguara by driving dangerousl­y.

His former partner Melissa Pesticcio, 24, from Marshfield Road, Cardiff denied the offences, but was convicted by a jury following a two-week trial.

Earlier this month the pair were sentenced to a total of 14 years. Pesticcio was jailed for six and a half years and Wheeler for seven and a half.

“I used to be like any other 21 or 22-year-old and do what I wanted, play football, and I can’t do anything like that now,” said Joshua.

“But we’ll get there, whatever we have to do to get my life back to as normal as we can.”

The fatal collision occurred at 12.35am on August 22 last year at a city junction.

Prosecutor­s said Wheeler and Pesticcio gave a “joint pursuit” which ended in Wheeler’s Vauxhall Corsa colliding with Ms Taylor’s black BMW One Series, causing it to spin into a building.

The collision caused a catastroph­ic brain injury that killed Sophie – her passenger was lucky to survive.

After the crash he was left with bruising, swelling and bleeding on the brain.

He suffered brain damage that has left him prone to mood swings.

Joshua’s pelvis was shattered at the front and back.

It had to be reconstruc­ted with three metal pins and a cage to keep it all together.

His femur was broken. That severed the main artery in his leg.

Some of Joshua’s ribs were broken, which left him with a punctured lung.

After the accident his kidneys started to fail because of toxins in his blood.

He was left using a catheter to go the loo.

“I’m waiting for an operation in London to reconstruc­t my urethra,” Joshua said.

“Once I have had that done I will have an operation to amputate below my left knee,” he said.

“I’ve made the decision to get rid of my left leg.”

Joshua, who had been about to start a job at Tesco, cannot use his foot and has no feeling below his knee.

“I’ll have a prosthetic leg,” he said. “It is the hardest operation for me to have because it’s the scariest.

“But two or three months down the line I will think it’s the best thing I’ve done.

“I’m hoping I’ll be as I was before, the only difference being I will be putting my leg on in the morning.

“I’m not going to be able to play football, but I will be able to go to my friends, jump in the car and go for a drive and do all the little things that people take for granted.”

He added: “I loved playing football with my mates, being out of the house and having a laugh.”

For four or five weeks after waking up he could not remember what had happened.

“I was so confused I did not know why I was in hospital,” he said.

“I thought I had been beaten up really badly.”

His dad, Kevin Deguara, helped piece things together.

“My dad said, ‘ Do you know where you are?’ and I said, ‘No.’

“A few days later I still could not remember, and he said ‘Do you remember Sophie’s ex-boyfriend Michael?’ and that triggered some memories.”

Kevin, who makes heating ele-

That Christmas was the best ever just because I was able to say ‘Merry Christmas’ to my family

ments for a living, told him he had been in a serious car accident. Joshua assumed it was in his own car.

“We mentioned Sophie Taylor and that he was in her car,” Kevin, 42, from Llanedeyrn, Cardiff, said.

“Straight away he asked how Sophie was.”

His parents told him she was dead on the day of Sophie’s funeral.

“He was getting a lot better and we did not want him finding out through social media,” his mum, Leanne Marshall, said. It was “a massive shock”. “I had been lucky with close

friends,” Joshua said. “I had not experience­d people passing away, that was the first time.

“There were very nearly two fatalities that night.

“It’s still shocking the fact that I nearly died.

“I was 15 minutes from dying.”

Doctors told him if the emergency services had arrived any later he would not have survived.

“I nearly lost my life, everything,” Joshua said.

“My family nearly lost me. When I first got home it was the first of December.

“That Christmas was the best ever just because I was able to say ‘Merry Christmas’ to my family.

“My outlook has changed so much now. I learned not to take anything for granted because anything could be around the corner.

“It’s a shame it took all this for that to happen. I had to learn to swallow again and to sit up.

“You think you’ll wake up the next morning as you went to sleep, but you might not.”

Every night he tells his parents he loves them. “I never really said that before,” he said.

“I could have died without saying goodbye or anything.”

He and Sophie used to have “such a good laugh” when they went out. “It’s hard now she is gone,” Joshua said.

“They are memories I cannot make any more. Sophie was lovely, such a nice girl. I miss her.”

In sentencing, Judge Thomas Crowther QC told Sophie’s killers they were “consumed with a selfrighte­ous and jealous rage”.

“Words cannot even describe how I feel about them,” Joshua said. They killed my friend and they nearly killed me.

“The word hate does not even come near to how I feel.

“I don’t think there is a word made to say how I feel toward them.”

He added: “I hope I never see them. I hope my mum doesn’t for their sake.”

Leanne said: “I don’t think they have come close to understand­ing what they did.

“She refused to plead guilty, so she does not think she is responsibl­e, and she’s showed no remorse.

“There was no apology from either of them.”

Sophie died after her black BMW 1 Series hit a block of flats after Pesticcio and Wheeler chased them in separate cars.

“That they have shown no remorse shows what kind of people they are,” Joshua said.

“Whether they intended to do this or not does not change the fact that they did.

“And it could have been easily avoided.

“I’m glad the verdict was guilty. But it should be a life for a life.

“If they had used a knife as a weapon they would have got more. What is the difference between them using a knife and using a car?”

A fundraisin­g page has been set up to pay for a plot and headstone for Sophie. If you can help visit: https://www. gofundme.com/k7q6ub

 ??  ?? Parents Leanne Marshall and Kevin Deguara visiting Joshua in hospital
Parents Leanne Marshall and Kevin Deguara visiting Joshua in hospital
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 ??  ?? Joshua Deguara, aged 22, back home after his devastatin­g crash alongside Sophie Taylor, above
Joshua Deguara, aged 22, back home after his devastatin­g crash alongside Sophie Taylor, above

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