Sheffield Crown Court: Driver jailed after reversing into 81-year-old pedestrian and killing her

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A motorist has been jailed for just over a year after causing the death of an 81-year-old woman after carelessly reversing his car into her.

Victim Ann Cassidy’s husband, Eric, said the collision had cost him ‘the love of his life’. Her daughters said they had lost their ‘best friend’.

Sheffield Crown Court heard how uninsured driver Harrison Buckley, aged 24, of Pingles Crescent, Thrybergh, Rotherham, reversed a Seat vehicle into great grandmother Mrs Cassidy as she was crossing Park Lane, Thrybergh, on May 27, 2021.

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Prosecuting barrister Laura Marshall said Buckley’s partner Jordie Stokes, 27, also of Pingles Crescent, Thrybergh, lied to police at the scene by claiming that she had been the driver and had not realised what had happened.

Pictured is Harrison Buckley, aged 24, of Pingles Crescent, at Thrybergh, Rotherham, who was sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court to 59 weeks of custody after he pleaded guilty to causing the death by careless driving of pedestrian Ann Cassidy on Park Lane, at Thrybergh, Rotherham, after a collision. He also admitted perverting the course of justice after he had persuaded his partner to claim she had been the driver of the vehicle.Pictured is Harrison Buckley, aged 24, of Pingles Crescent, at Thrybergh, Rotherham, who was sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court to 59 weeks of custody after he pleaded guilty to causing the death by careless driving of pedestrian Ann Cassidy on Park Lane, at Thrybergh, Rotherham, after a collision. He also admitted perverting the course of justice after he had persuaded his partner to claim she had been the driver of the vehicle.
Pictured is Harrison Buckley, aged 24, of Pingles Crescent, at Thrybergh, Rotherham, who was sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court to 59 weeks of custody after he pleaded guilty to causing the death by careless driving of pedestrian Ann Cassidy on Park Lane, at Thrybergh, Rotherham, after a collision. He also admitted perverting the course of justice after he had persuaded his partner to claim she had been the driver of the vehicle.

Ms Marshall explained the Seat was a mobility vehicle that had been provided for Ms Stokes because of her grandfather’s disability but Buckley had taken the car without permission and had later persuaded Stokes to come to the scene of the collision and lie on his behalf.

Judge Rachael Harrison told Buckley: “Ann Cassidy was 81. Her loss has been felt physically and emotionally. No sentence I can pass will alleviate that.”

Ms Marshall said Buckley who had been seen by police holding an open bottle of Desperados alcohol at the scene was not breath-tested because it was not thought at the time he had been the driver.

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The collision was initially deemed to have been a minor incident so Stokes was allowed to take her vehicle, according to Ms Marshall, but after Mrs Cassidy’s condition deteriorated she was taken to Rotherham District General Hospital where it was found she had suffered a fractured skull and bleeding on the brain and she died the day after the collision.

Pictured is Ann Cassidy who suffered a serious head injury and died aged 81 after she was struck by a careless driver reversing a vehicle on Park Lane, at Thrybergh, in Rotherham, near Park Close, on May 27, 2021.Pictured is Ann Cassidy who suffered a serious head injury and died aged 81 after she was struck by a careless driver reversing a vehicle on Park Lane, at Thrybergh, in Rotherham, near Park Close, on May 27, 2021.
Pictured is Ann Cassidy who suffered a serious head injury and died aged 81 after she was struck by a careless driver reversing a vehicle on Park Lane, at Thrybergh, in Rotherham, near Park Close, on May 27, 2021.

Ms Marshall said that after CCTV revealed a male had been driving the vehicle, Stokes admitted she had not realised Buckley had taken her car, that she had not been the driver and that she had attended the collision after Buckley had phone her.

Buckley attended a police station the following day, according to Ms Marshall, and he accepted he had been the driver after he had gone to buy cigarettes and pain killers.

Harrison Buckley, formerly of of Foljambe Drive, Dalton, Rotherham, who has two convictions for 10 offences, pleaded guilty to causing death by careless driving and to perverting the course of justice. Jordie Stokes, who has no previous convictions, pleaded guilty to perverting the course of justice.

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Mrs Cassidy’s widower Eric, who had come to the scene of the collision to find his wife injured, stated: “Ann was my life. We did everything together. I miss her so much. I talk to her and see her everywhere in the house then I realise she is not there. I have lost the love of my life.”

Mrs Cassidy, who was also a mother, grandmother and great grandmother, was regarded by her daughters as their ‘best friend’.

Defence barrister Richard Barradell, representing Buckley, said: “He cannot believe how stupid he has been. He is bitterly disappointed in himself. He is very, very sorry for what he did. He has written a letter which encapsulates exactly how he feels about this.”

Mr Barradell added: “He roped his partner into this in the heat of the moment and he got her to say she was driving and he got her to take a breathalyser test. At the scene he had no idea how serious this was going to end up. By the time he was being interviewed by police a few days later he was full of remorse and full of apologies for the family.”

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Mr Barradell added that Buckley has been struggling to cope after his brother had been involved in a car crash and had died in his arms.

The court also heard that at the time of the collision involving Mrs Cassidy, Buckley had needed painkillers because he had been suffering from the effects of an old assault which had involved two stab wounds and a bleed on the brain.

Defence barrister Andrew Pickin, representing mother-of-two Stokes, said: “Ms Stokes is deeply remorseful for her part in the offending and accepts it is a very serious matter and that she could face a custodial sentence.”

Mr Pickin added that Stokes’ grandfather had lost a leg and that was why she was registered to drive the mobility vehicle and at the time she had been scared that she might lose the vehicle.

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Judge Harrison told Buckley: “You were in your partner’s vehicle without her permission and without insurance when you hit Ann Cassidy when reversing.”

She sentenced Buckley to 59 weeks of custody and banned him from driving for 18 months and 29 weeks. Stokes was sentenced to six months of custody suspended for 12 months with 100 hours of unpaid work.