Scottish Daily Mail

This isn’t justice

Lawyer in crash that killed own family walks free with £1k fine

- By David Love

A JURY’S decision to clear a lawyer of causing a horror smash on the A9 that claimed three lives was last night condemned as a denial of justice.

Andrew Houston had been accused of causing the death of his wife and daughter as well as a German tourist by careless driving.

But he was cleared of that charge after a harrowing four- day trial and found guilty of the lesser charge of careless driving. Houston was fined £1,000 and banned from driving for a year.

His wife Abigail, 42, daughter Mia, seven, and German doctor Mohammad Hayajneh, 62, died in the crash.

Speaking outside Inverness Sheriff Court after the verdict yesterday, Dr Hayajneh’s grieving wife Ursula, 59, and son Jonas, 22, condemned the decision.

The family, from Duisburg, Germany, read from a statement on the steps of Inverness Sheriff Court after the jury of eight women and six men returned their verdict following two hours and 20 minutes of deliberati­on.

Jonas Hayajneh said: ‘We are shocked at this verdict and believe justice has not been done. We don’t feel hatred towards Mr Houston and at no point did we want him to go to prison.

‘But we wanted him to be found guilty since all the evidence suggested he was and we are convinced this tragedy could have been avoided.

‘We now face the prospect of never gaining proper closure. The j ury concluded that Mr Houston was on the wrong side of the road due to careless driving but that he didn’t cause the accident because of careless driving since he unsuccessf­ully tried to get back on the proper side of the road at the last moment.’

He added: ‘ This verdict irrational and illogical.’

Now the family will pursue a civil

is action against Houston, of Edinburgh. The solicitor advocate, who is the sole partner of McSporrans solicitors in the capital, made no comment as he left the court.

He was accompanie­d by the mother and sister of his late wife.

Defence counsel Frances McMenamin said after the verdict: ‘His mother and sister-in-law have been fully supportive of my client since the tragedy and it hardly needs saying that Mr Houston will always carry the burden of the loss of all those lives and knows the grief and loss to others.

‘It has taken its toll on him both emotionall­y and physically and he has f ound i t psychologi­cally difficult to cope with. He expresses his inevitable sadness for what this loss has meant to others.’

Miss McMenamin said Houston’s 12-year- old daughter Lily, who was badly hurt in the crash, had recovered from her injuries.

The four- day trial heard that Houston crossed into the opposite carriagewa­y on the A9, near Newtonmore, Inverness-shire, on July 9, 2013. His Audi A4 collided headon with a silver Jeep Cherokee being driven by Mrs Hayajneh.

There were daily emotional scenes in the courtroom, as Houston and t he German doctor’s widow frequently broke down while the evidence was outlined.

Mrs Hayajneh could not control her anger on Wednesday afternoon and leapt to her feet after Miss McMenamin had asked the jury to solely find her client guilty of careless driving.

She shouted: ‘He has killed three people,’ before being calmed down by her son.

Miss McMenamin also suggested that Mrs Hayajneh was driving too close to a Peugeot in front of her before it suddenly swerved to the left, off the road, to avoid hitting the Audi.

A video of Houston reliving the horrific moments after the crash

‘Verdict is irrational

and illogical’

‘He will always carry the burden’

was also played to the court during the trial.

He told officers he had tried to free himself from the wreckage to help his dying wife and daughter.

He wept as he told police officers: ‘I have no idea what caused the collision. I wish I knew.’

He told police he held his wife’s hand, watching as two men gave Mia CPR as her then ten-year-old sister Lily comforted her.

Seconds earlier, the children had been watching a DVD in the back of the car.

Houston spent two weeks in hospital with cracked ribs and a broken foot.

Because of his fragile mental state it was five months before police interviewe­d him.

But yesterday the jury agreed with Miss McMenamin’s submission that Houston’s careless driving by crossing into the opposite carriagewa­y ended when he tried to return to the correct lane before crashing into the Jeep.

 ??  ?? Horror: Aftermath of the A9 accident
Horror: Aftermath of the A9 accident
 ??  ?? Killed: The lawyer’s wife, Abigail Houston, 42, above, lost her life along with daughter Mia, aged seven
Killed: The lawyer’s wife, Abigail Houston, 42, above, lost her life along with daughter Mia, aged seven
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Cleared: Andrew Houston yesterday
Cleared: Andrew Houston yesterday

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