Girlfriend ‘kidnapped and thrown from 60mph van on A6’
19-YEAR-OLD SUFFERED CATASTROPHIC BRAIN INJURES – BUT ACCUSED SAYS SHE JUMPED
A BOYFRIEND kidnapped his girlfriend before throwing her out of a van travelling at almost 60mph, a jury was told.
The 19-year-old woman suffered a fractured skull and catastrophic brain injuries after rolling 49 metres along the A6, near
Mountsorrel, on September 17, 2020. She is now unable to communicate or say what happened to her.
Chay Bowskill, 20, denies inflicting grievous bodily harm to his then girlfriend, by allegedly throwing her from the van on the Loughborough-bound carriageway.
He was jealous of who she spoke to on the phone and via social media...and of the attention she received.
Prosecution case
A boyfriend kidnapped his teenage girlfriend before throwing her out of a van travelling at almost 60mph, a jury was told.
The woman suffered a fractured skull and catastrophic brain injuries which have left her unable to communicate or say what happened to her.
The 19-year-old was said to have rolled 49 metres (160ft) along the A6, near Mountsorrel, at 10.45am on September 17, 2020.
Chay Bowskill, 20, denies inflicting grievous bodily harm to his then girlfriend, by allegedly throwing her from the van on the Loughborough bound carriageway.
He claims the woman, who is from Loughborough, jumped from the vehicle of her own accord and caused her injuries herself.
Bowskill is also accused of kidnapping his girlfriend shortly before she was injured, by allegedly bundling her into a silver Transit van.
The vehicle was driven away by his co-accused, 20-year-old Rocco Sansome, the crown court heard.
Bowskill, of Empingham Drive, Syston, and Sansome, of Wanlip Lane, Birstall, both deny kidnap.
Bowskill also denies coercive and controlling behaviour during his relationship with the woman and a charge of perverting the course of justice.
Jeremy Janes, prosecuting, told Leicester Crown Court the injured woman was taken by air ambulance to Nottingham’s Queen’s Medical Centre and is unable to make a statement about the incident.
He told the jury: “The prosecution say she had been thrown from a moving van by Bowskill.”
The prosecutor claimed the incident on the A6 was the culmination of Bowskill’s control and coercion during their relationship, causing the alleged victim to fear violence would be used against her.
Mr Janes said the woman’s mental health had already been affected by Bowskill’s behaviour, adding: “He was jealous of who she spoke to on the phone and via social media and was jealous of the attention she received from others.”
On the morning of the alleged incident, Mr Janes said the woman was initially driving the van with both defendants as front-seat passengers.
A third passenger was dropped off at a public house in Rothley.
At one point, Mr Janes said, Bowskill allegedly criticised his girlfriend’s driving and told her to pull over.
She got out of the vehicle, crossed the road and walked off, near Hilltop Garage, and Sansome moved into the driver’s seat.
CCTV footage, played in court, showed Bowskill running up behind the woman, putting both arms around her to pick her up “like a piece of baggage” and carrying her back to the van.
The prosecutor told the jury: “You can’t do that. It’s unlawful, it’s kidnap. It’s the unlawful removal of a person by force. She’d left and was walking away.”
In another clip, as the vehicle crossed the garage forecourt the woman could be seen in the front seat, between the two men, with Bowskill next to the passenger door. Mr Janes alleged that Sansome, who is accused only in relation to the alleged kidnap, was aware of what was happening and drove off “almost before the passenger door was closed”.
The van then joined the A6 towards Loughborough. Mr Janes said: “We say Bowskill threw her from the van. She made contact with the white lines. “The Transit was in the fast, overtaking, lane travelling at the best part of 60mph and anyone who did that must have had the intention of causing serous injury.
“The van pulled over in a layby and they went back to where she was lying in the road.”
Other motorists stopped to help and the emergency services attended.
The prosecutor said: “Bowskill was suggesting to people at the scene that she’d jumped out of her own volition, by choice, and that it wasn’t down to him.
“That remains his case, that she jumped out and caused her own injuries. If you conclude that did happen, you will acquit him of that count.
“You may ask yourself what would possess her to jump?”
The prosecutor said their destination had been Ling Road, Loughborough, which was “not far away.”
In interview, Bowskill denied kidnapping the woman or pushing or throwing her out of the van.
Mr Janes said: “He said they argued pretty much every day, over little things, but she gave as good as she got.
“He said they’d argued on that day and the last thing he said to her was that he hated her.”
Sansome, in interview, denied involvement in the kidnapping and also maintained the young woman had jumped.
No detailed medical evidence has yet been presented in court, but officer in the case Detective Constable Emma Bee told the jury: “She’s not mentally able to make a statement. She cannot communicate.”
The trial continues.