Yorkshire Post

‘Utter carnage’ of lorry crash tragedy

Truck also hit cars and house, court told

- GEORGINA MORRIS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

COURT: A stolen lorry left “utter carnage” when it ploughed into cars and then a house, killing a woman who was out powerwalki­ng near her home.

A jury has heard how Jacqueline Wileman, 58, died when she was hit by the tractor unit of a truck after the driver lost control as he was being followed by a police car.

A STOLEN lorry left “utter carnage” when it ploughed into cars and then a house, killing a woman who was out power-walking near her home.

A jury has heard how Jacqueline Wileman, 58, died when she was hit by the tractor unit of a truck after the driver lost control in the village of Brierley, near Barnsley, as he was being followed by a police car.

The lorry then ploughed into a house, leaving the building extensivel­y damaged, Sheffield Crown Court heard.

Prosecutor Jason Pitter QC yesterday said: “The scene was one of utter carnage, indicating the dangerous way the vehicle was being driven.”

Mr Pitter said the truck was travelling at least twice the 30mph speed limit and on the wrong side of the road.

CCTV footage played to the jury shows Mrs Wileman walking briskly along the pavement.

Moments later, a white truck is seen speeding past and debris rises from a violent collision with a car just out of shot.

The prosecutor told the jury that Mrs Wileman had been power-walking near her home at the time of the crash on September 14 last year.

He said her desire to maintain her fitness “tragically and ironically led to her death”.

The barrister told the court: “She was dragged along the road causing extensive injuries and she was immediatel­y killed, such was the speed and dangerous way the vehicle was being driven.”

Mr Pitter told the jury that the 23-year-old driver of the truck, Karn Hill, had already admitted causing the death of Mrs Wileman by dangerous driving.

The three men standing trial – David Mellor, Wayne Carroll and Alan Mawhinney – all deny the same charge.

Mr Pitter said these men were all in the cab with Hill at the time of the fatal collision.

“It’s tempting to say this was simply a case of Mrs Wileman being in the wrong place at the wrong time,” Mr Pitter told jurors. “But that would be to mistake the reality. She was exactly where she should have been.

“It was these defendants, along with Mr Hill, who were doing the wrong thing at the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Mr Pitter explained how Mellor had taken the tractor unit from his employers and, on the day of the crash, the lorry had driven dangerousl­y around the area all morning.

He said those inside had made off from a number of petrol stations without paying.

The prosecutor said those travelling in the truck appeared to be laughing and joking. He said: “It was, in short, a laugh.”

He went on to tell the jury how the truck had been spotted by a police officer as it approached Brierley on Common Road in the early afternoon.

Mr Pitter said the officer took the decision to follow the vehicle to keep it in sight rather than begin to chase it.

He said the truck then appeared to drive in a “fast and aggressive way”.

The trial continues.

She was dragged along the road causing extensive injuries. Prosecutor

Jason Pitter QC.

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