Coroner criticises BMW over death of former soldier
A CORONER has criticised BMW and the Government driving agency for failing to take sufficient action over electrical faults in the German manufacturer’s cars before they caused the death of a Gurkha veteran.
Narayan Gurung, 66, of Aldershot, died after driving his Ford Fiesta into a tree on a dark road in Hampshire on Christmas Day 2016 to avoid a car that had cut out because of a total power loss, Woking Coroner’s Court heard yesterday.
Surrey Assistant Coroner Anna Loxton criticised the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) for failing to press BMW for a recall of up to 370,000 cars in the UK, despite envisioning the “exact circumstances” of the former soldier’s death 10 months earlier.
She will issue a prevention of further deaths notice in writing to Transport Secretary Chris Grayling and DVSA chief executive Gareth Llewellyn over her “serious concerns” with the agency.
Mrs Loxton said she agrees BMW was “negligent” in its actions and the DVSA expressed “indolence”, but could not conclude Mr Gurung was unlawfully killed because there was insufficient evidence of corporate manslaughter. Instead she recorded a narrative conclusion criticising the car manufacturer, its UK importer and the agency.
“Despite recognising this risk, the DVSA failed to call for, and BMW AG and BMW UK failed to initiate, a recall until after Mr Gurung’s death,” she said.
She criticised the DVSA for having no protocol for investigating safety-related defects quickly, having no guidance to interpret its own codes of practice over safety defects and for lacking critical analysis of the defect.
She said the agency had been aware of a fault since October 2014 when it started to receive an “unusually high” volume of complaints from drivers, but it did not make a “fundamental shift” until after the veteran’s death.
The DVSA failed to recognise it as a safety defect and accepted BMW’S case that drivers would get a prior warning before a complete outage and even closed down investigations.
Father-of-three Mr Gurung was driving with his wife to the Royal Surrey County Hospital, where they both worked as housekeepers.
Because it was before sunrise, Mr Gurung was unable to see the vehicle until the last moment, when he swerved and hit a tree.
BMW said it would “reflect” on the coroner’s criticisms.