Audio By Carbonatix
A bricklayer died when an Uber driver did not take "reasonable care" and drove off with the man halfway out of the car, a coroner has ruled.
Samuel Thomas, 30, was living in Australia when he died on 17 June 2017.
He was travelling home with friends from a party in Sydney when the Uber driver stopped at traffic lights and Mr Thomas started to leave the car.
Coroner Geoffrey Sullivan said Mr Thomas, from Harpenden, Hertfordshire, fell into the path of a bus.
He said the Uber driver Nazrul Islam had "not exercised reasonable care".
Mr Sullivan, the senior coroner for Hertfordshire, said: "The driver accelerated off when Mr Thomas was half way out of the car.
"He fell into the path of a bus which collided with him and he was killed instantly."
Mr Sullivan recorded the cause of death as "severe catastrophic head injuries" and concluded Mr Thomas died as a result of a road traffic collision.
Image caption: The coroner said the Uber driver Nazrul Islam had "not exercised reasonable care"
Islam, 32, was found guilty of negligent driving causing death at a trial in Sydney, Australia, in November.
In February, Australian broadcaster 9News reported he was sentenced to 200 hours of community service as part of a sentence to be served under supervision in the community.
The driver had argued that he did not notice his passenger's attempts to exit, but a magistrate ruled that he had not kept "a proper lookout" as Mr Thomas exited.
The court heard Mr Thomas and his friends were about five minutes from their destination when Mr Thomas, who was in the back seat, opened a rear door and began to get out.
Security footage showed the car's internal light was illuminated for six seconds before Islam began to accelerate, causing Mr Thomas to fall.
Magistrate Mary Ryan noted that Mr Thomas had opened the door "without a word of warning", but said: "Six seconds of light within the car is a significant warning.
"The only explanation is that Mr Islam was much more fatigued than he admitted."
Image caption: The coroner said the Uber driver Nazrul Islam had "not exercised reasonable care"
Islam, 32, was found guilty of negligent driving causing death at a trial in Sydney, Australia, in November.
In February, Australian broadcaster 9News reported he was sentenced to 200 hours of community service as part of a sentence to be served under supervision in the community.
The driver had argued that he did not notice his passenger's attempts to exit, but a magistrate ruled that he had not kept "a proper lookout" as Mr Thomas exited.
The court heard Mr Thomas and his friends were about five minutes from their destination when Mr Thomas, who was in the back seat, opened a rear door and began to get out.
Security footage showed the car's internal light was illuminated for six seconds before Islam began to accelerate, causing Mr Thomas to fall.
Magistrate Mary Ryan noted that Mr Thomas had opened the door "without a word of warning", but said: "Six seconds of light within the car is a significant warning.
"The only explanation is that Mr Islam was much more fatigued than he admitted."DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ellembelle MP refurbishes Azulenloanu clinic with roofing sheets
6 minutes -
Akonta Mining: Court gives Wontumi last chance to file his witness statement
8 minutes -
FarmMate, MoFA sign PPP agreement to boost tomato self-sufficiency
10 minutes -
Illegal miner in alleged murder case remanded
10 minutes -
NPP to stage ‘Yen Suro Ahunahuna’ demo over alleged harassment of members
11 minutes -
Bawumia urges NPP communicators to stand firm amid ‘rising intimidation’ claims
15 minutes -
Ghana to get Electric Vehicles Centre of Excellence
18 minutes -
Volta Regional Minister leads REGSEC to assess coastal erosion at Fuveme
19 minutes -
Volta Regional Minister swears in 9-member Board for Youth Development Fund
24 minutes -
Abitjack Construction supports GETFund with GH¢450k
27 minutes -
Assemblies told to enforce building code on markets
31 minutes -
Teshie ‘spiritualist’ gets 3 years for fraud
35 minutes -
Firefighters undergo specialised training amid rising attacks at emergency scenes
39 minutes -
NHIA intensifies monitoring of illegal health facility charges
43 minutes -
GES to settle arrears of newly recruited teachers
47 minutes