Newbury Weekly News

U-turn lorry blocked the road like a brick wall, crash trial told

Father-of-three police officer ‘requires 24-hour care’ after brain injuries

- Report by JOHN GARVEY email john.garvey@newburynew­s.co.uk twitter @johng_nwn

A POLICE officer suffered “catastroph­ic” brain injuries in a devastatin­g collision with an HGV.

The 30-tonne vehicle was blocking both carriagewa­ys like a brick wall, Reading Crown Court was told this week.

As a result, father-of-three Matthew Midwinter “can’t work, can’t live with his wife and children and requires 24 hour care – and will do so for the rest of his life”.

Car passenger Pc Kieren Baker suffered life-changing psychologi­cal trauma, the court heard on Monday, February 22.

Jurors were shown horrific footage from the lorry’s dashboard camera as the police car approached in foggy conditions on the dark A4 Bath Road at Halfway around 11.30pm on February 27, 2019.

The car apparently had no time to brake before ploughing into the huge obstacle.

The collision changed the two officers’ lives irrevocabl­y.

In the dock was 35-year-old Andrei Stan, of Craddock Street, Wolverhamp­ton, West Midlands, who denies driving the 30-tonne lorry and trailer dangerousl­y.

Jurors were told the incident happened after Mr Stan took a wrong turning on his way to Portsmouth and decided to attempt a three-point turn on the unlit, rural A4 in fog – and ended up blocking both carriagewa­ys.

Carolina Cabral, prosecutin­g, said the

HGV would have been invisible to an approachin­g driver, who would have had no chance to avoid a collision.

The lorry was not indicating or showing hazard lights and its side lights were not working, jurors heard.

As a result, it would have been completely invisible to the approachin­g police car which struck it full on, the court was told.

Ms Cabral said: “Pc Midwinter would have had no time to do anything about it.”

She said that after the crash Pc Baker, pinned in the wreckage and stunned, thought he was dying.

His colleague had been struck on the head, through the car’s shattered windscreen, by a bar on the trailer.

Ms Cabral added: “The car was virtually underneath the HGV trailer.

“Pc Midwinter was covered in blood and wasn’t breathing. Pc Baker tried to open his airway.”

Fortunatel­y, the officer’s breathing resumed, but he remained unconsciou­s.

Despite intensive treatment, she said, Pc Midwinter “can’t work, can’t live with his wife and children and requires 24-hour care – and will do so for the rest of his life”.

Pc Midwinter is married to a former Hungerford neighbourh­ood police officer, then known as Pc Claire Drewitt,

Ms Cabral said the court would hear from an expert witness that the HGV blocking both carriagewa­ys like a wall “wouldn’t have been visible and the car drivers would have just seen the cab headlights as if there was an oncoming car”.

She concluded her opening statement by suggesting the manoeuvre was “something no driver should ever have attempted”.

She added: “It was obvious it was dangerous.

“It was obvious someone was going to get hurt.”

The car was virtually underneath the HGV trailer. Pc Midwinter was covered in blood and wasn’t breathing

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