logo
Elderly driver yet to be questioned over fatal crash

Elderly driver yet to be questioned over fatal crash

The Advertiser10-07-2025
A woman is dead and a child has been seriously injured after an elderly driver lost control of her car, hitting three pedestrians before ploughing through a fence near a playground.
The Toyota Yaris, driven by the 91-year-old woman, mounted the footpath on Coleman Road at Wantirna South, in Melbourne's east, after noon on Thursday.
Three people - the woman, 59, a man, 60, and a two-year-old boy - were hit by the car after the she lost control.
The woman died at the scene.
Both the boy and the man were taken to hospital with serious or life-threatening injuries.
Superintendent Justin Goldsmith said Victoria Police were yet to confirm the relationship between the victims but it's believed they were related.
The trio was walking in the same direction as the car was travelling when it struck them.
"It came from behind," Supt Goldsmith told reporters.
"It looks like it's (lost control) about 40m or 50m before the collision with the people who were walking on the other side of that road."
The out-of-control car continued down the road for another 200m, hitting a street sign and smashing through a fence before coming to a stop near a playground.
"No one was hit at the park thankfully," Supt Goldsmith said.
The driver, who was "terribly shaken" and had minor scratches, was taken to hospital for assessment and blood testing.
She is yet to be interviewed.
Police would look at whether speed was a contributing factor.
"That will be subject to the investigation, but it is downhill section of road, so if there has been a lack of control to some degree there is a possibility the car would have picked up speed as it's driven further down Coleman Road," Supt Goldsmith said.
The crash happened during the first week of Victorian school holidays, bringing the state's road toll to 14 in the last seven days.
"We're facing a horrific month for road trauma," Supt Goldsmith said.
The state has recorded a number of deadly crashes involving out-of-control vehicles in recent years.
In November, a kindergarten worker and a three-year-old boy was injured when a runaway truck smashed through the gate of Macedon Ranges Montessori Preschool's playground.
Two weeks earlier, an 11-year-old boy was killed and four other students injured when an SUV crashed through a fence at Auburn South Primary School in Melbourne's east.
Five people were killed and six injured in November 2023 when a diabetic driver passed out behind the wheel and crashed into patrons seated outside the Royal Daylesford Hotel.
The driver was charged but the allegations were ultimately struck out after a magistrate found there was not enough evidence to support a conviction.
A woman is dead and a child has been seriously injured after an elderly driver lost control of her car, hitting three pedestrians before ploughing through a fence near a playground.
The Toyota Yaris, driven by the 91-year-old woman, mounted the footpath on Coleman Road at Wantirna South, in Melbourne's east, after noon on Thursday.
Three people - the woman, 59, a man, 60, and a two-year-old boy - were hit by the car after the she lost control.
The woman died at the scene.
Both the boy and the man were taken to hospital with serious or life-threatening injuries.
Superintendent Justin Goldsmith said Victoria Police were yet to confirm the relationship between the victims but it's believed they were related.
The trio was walking in the same direction as the car was travelling when it struck them.
"It came from behind," Supt Goldsmith told reporters.
"It looks like it's (lost control) about 40m or 50m before the collision with the people who were walking on the other side of that road."
The out-of-control car continued down the road for another 200m, hitting a street sign and smashing through a fence before coming to a stop near a playground.
"No one was hit at the park thankfully," Supt Goldsmith said.
The driver, who was "terribly shaken" and had minor scratches, was taken to hospital for assessment and blood testing.
She is yet to be interviewed.
Police would look at whether speed was a contributing factor.
"That will be subject to the investigation, but it is downhill section of road, so if there has been a lack of control to some degree there is a possibility the car would have picked up speed as it's driven further down Coleman Road," Supt Goldsmith said.
The crash happened during the first week of Victorian school holidays, bringing the state's road toll to 14 in the last seven days.
"We're facing a horrific month for road trauma," Supt Goldsmith said.
The state has recorded a number of deadly crashes involving out-of-control vehicles in recent years.
In November, a kindergarten worker and a three-year-old boy was injured when a runaway truck smashed through the gate of Macedon Ranges Montessori Preschool's playground.
Two weeks earlier, an 11-year-old boy was killed and four other students injured when an SUV crashed through a fence at Auburn South Primary School in Melbourne's east.
Five people were killed and six injured in November 2023 when a diabetic driver passed out behind the wheel and crashed into patrons seated outside the Royal Daylesford Hotel.
The driver was charged but the allegations were ultimately struck out after a magistrate found there was not enough evidence to support a conviction.
A woman is dead and a child has been seriously injured after an elderly driver lost control of her car, hitting three pedestrians before ploughing through a fence near a playground.
The Toyota Yaris, driven by the 91-year-old woman, mounted the footpath on Coleman Road at Wantirna South, in Melbourne's east, after noon on Thursday.
Three people - the woman, 59, a man, 60, and a two-year-old boy - were hit by the car after the she lost control.
The woman died at the scene.
Both the boy and the man were taken to hospital with serious or life-threatening injuries.
Superintendent Justin Goldsmith said Victoria Police were yet to confirm the relationship between the victims but it's believed they were related.
The trio was walking in the same direction as the car was travelling when it struck them.
"It came from behind," Supt Goldsmith told reporters.
"It looks like it's (lost control) about 40m or 50m before the collision with the people who were walking on the other side of that road."
The out-of-control car continued down the road for another 200m, hitting a street sign and smashing through a fence before coming to a stop near a playground.
"No one was hit at the park thankfully," Supt Goldsmith said.
The driver, who was "terribly shaken" and had minor scratches, was taken to hospital for assessment and blood testing.
She is yet to be interviewed.
Police would look at whether speed was a contributing factor.
"That will be subject to the investigation, but it is downhill section of road, so if there has been a lack of control to some degree there is a possibility the car would have picked up speed as it's driven further down Coleman Road," Supt Goldsmith said.
The crash happened during the first week of Victorian school holidays, bringing the state's road toll to 14 in the last seven days.
"We're facing a horrific month for road trauma," Supt Goldsmith said.
The state has recorded a number of deadly crashes involving out-of-control vehicles in recent years.
In November, a kindergarten worker and a three-year-old boy was injured when a runaway truck smashed through the gate of Macedon Ranges Montessori Preschool's playground.
Two weeks earlier, an 11-year-old boy was killed and four other students injured when an SUV crashed through a fence at Auburn South Primary School in Melbourne's east.
Five people were killed and six injured in November 2023 when a diabetic driver passed out behind the wheel and crashed into patrons seated outside the Royal Daylesford Hotel.
The driver was charged but the allegations were ultimately struck out after a magistrate found there was not enough evidence to support a conviction.
A woman is dead and a child has been seriously injured after an elderly driver lost control of her car, hitting three pedestrians before ploughing through a fence near a playground.
The Toyota Yaris, driven by the 91-year-old woman, mounted the footpath on Coleman Road at Wantirna South, in Melbourne's east, after noon on Thursday.
Three people - the woman, 59, a man, 60, and a two-year-old boy - were hit by the car after the she lost control.
The woman died at the scene.
Both the boy and the man were taken to hospital with serious or life-threatening injuries.
Superintendent Justin Goldsmith said Victoria Police were yet to confirm the relationship between the victims but it's believed they were related.
The trio was walking in the same direction as the car was travelling when it struck them.
"It came from behind," Supt Goldsmith told reporters.
"It looks like it's (lost control) about 40m or 50m before the collision with the people who were walking on the other side of that road."
The out-of-control car continued down the road for another 200m, hitting a street sign and smashing through a fence before coming to a stop near a playground.
"No one was hit at the park thankfully," Supt Goldsmith said.
The driver, who was "terribly shaken" and had minor scratches, was taken to hospital for assessment and blood testing.
She is yet to be interviewed.
Police would look at whether speed was a contributing factor.
"That will be subject to the investigation, but it is downhill section of road, so if there has been a lack of control to some degree there is a possibility the car would have picked up speed as it's driven further down Coleman Road," Supt Goldsmith said.
The crash happened during the first week of Victorian school holidays, bringing the state's road toll to 14 in the last seven days.
"We're facing a horrific month for road trauma," Supt Goldsmith said.
The state has recorded a number of deadly crashes involving out-of-control vehicles in recent years.
In November, a kindergarten worker and a three-year-old boy was injured when a runaway truck smashed through the gate of Macedon Ranges Montessori Preschool's playground.
Two weeks earlier, an 11-year-old boy was killed and four other students injured when an SUV crashed through a fence at Auburn South Primary School in Melbourne's east.
Five people were killed and six injured in November 2023 when a diabetic driver passed out behind the wheel and crashed into patrons seated outside the Royal Daylesford Hotel.
The driver was charged but the allegations were ultimately struck out after a magistrate found there was not enough evidence to support a conviction.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Supermarket boss says stores being robbed ‘once a week' as Victorian crime crisis intensifies
Supermarket boss says stores being robbed ‘once a week' as Victorian crime crisis intensifies

Sky News AU

time3 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Supermarket boss says stores being robbed ‘once a week' as Victorian crime crisis intensifies

The CEO of a major independent grocery chain has laid bare the grim reality Victorian small business owners face as crime rates soar to record levels putting locals and authorities on edge. Crime rates in Melbourne and Victoria have ballooned in recent years, with the overall crime rate reaching its highest level since 2016. Accounting for population growth the overall crime rate surged by 13.2 per cent in 2024 compared to the year before, with Victoria Police logging a record number of arrests in the past year. In the last ten days Melbourne has been rocked by four horrific random crimes, including a violent home invasion in Albion and Kew East, an armed robbery in the Melbourne CBD and an attempted carjacking in Richmond. The CEO of the Ritchies IGA empire Fred Harrison said the states crime epidemic had made operating a small business almost impossible, and stated the attacks were becoming far more frequent and coordinated. 'We're probably averaging close to once a week, it's happening far too often, and it can be during the day, it can in the afternoon, can be in the evening, there's no pattern to when these robberies take place,' Mr Harrison told Sky News host Andrew Bolt. Mr Harrison, who heads the nation's largest independent supermarket chain said robberies at family-owned grocery stores were almost always violent and that staff were being threatened with weapons. 'The youth will jump out of a car, race into a shop with their bags, they will often pull out a machete, bars, knives, run near the staff and threaten them, if they come near them, they will use the machete or use a bar and knives,' he lamented. 'They then demand cash, they demand tobacco, invariably our liquor stores are close, so they race into the liquor store and steal liquor. 'It's all in and out in two or three minutes.' Youth crime across Victoria has become a significant concern for authorities, with offences committed by children between the ages of 10-17 years old rising by 17 per cent. Youth offenders in Victoria are now responsible for almost 50 per cent of home invasions and robberies and over a third of car thefts. Mr Harrison stated the robberies were 'very Victorian-focused' and said this was due to the Allan government's 'lack of action, leading to these consistent, persistent attacks'. 'We've got stores in New South Wales, Queensland, there are also IGA stores in WA, South Australia and Tasmania - I will say this, and I've been very vocal on it, this is basically only happening in our Victorian stores, it is not happening touch wood interstate,' he said. Mr Harrison said offenders were generally aged 'anywhere between 12 and 17' and that that they typically worked in 'groups of five'. 'They're often known to the police and the police are so frustrated, I recall an incident at Mount Waverley, I popped out to the store within an hour of that robbery, spoke to the policewoman who was running the case, and she said, 'Fred, we know who these thieves are',' he said. He said the crime wave sweeping the state was 'horrendous' and despaired that his 'staff are terrified'. "We're at the point now where we've got a WhatsApp group where there's about 60 retailers, so if one store gets hit, we send a WhatsApp message out and we will put staff on our front door to literally close the store and just allow customers in and out one by one,' Mr Harrison said. 'Our staff are terrified, these are young people often, particularly when it's later in the day who are 15, 16, 17, 18, who are coming to work to earn pocket money and then they're having to face this. Mr Harrison said the 'laws have got to change' and stated, 'that's where the biggest problem is'.

Child safety warning signs ignored for too long
Child safety warning signs ignored for too long

The Advertiser

time7 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Child safety warning signs ignored for too long

A childcare safety overhaul is a step in the right direction but warning signs have been ignored for too long, allowing predators to slip through the cracks. A sweeping and damning review of Victoria's childcare sector found the state's childcare watchdogs are failing to keep kids safe. Poor information sharing, legal constraints, chronic underfunding and a system that places the privacy of educators and the pursuit of profits over child safety were just some of the revelations made public on Wednesday. An overhaul is under way, with the government accepting all 22 of the review's recommendations, including the ability to pull a childcare worker's clearances based on unproven allegations. The review was set up in early-July after authorities lifted the lid on Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged with more than 70 sexual abuse offences. He had a valid working with children check. The review said the state's permit regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, should no longer sit within the separate entities of the Department of Government Services and Commission for Children and Young People. The systems should be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator as the trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in "too many places". Child protection organisations have welcomed the recommendations but say gaps have been exploited by predators for too long. "For too long, warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate, and predators have slipped through the cracks," Bravehearts CEO Alison Geale said. The leading child protection organisation said the reforms "will not just plug gaps, they will fundamentally shift the culture toward one where child protection is proactive, not reactive". "Why have we ended up in a system where we need explicit rules?" early childhood education and care policy expert Caroline Croser-Barlow of The Front Project told AAP. "Children's safety should always be the number one priority." Victorian opposition leader Brad Battin also accused the the Labor government of delaying reforms. "It shouldn't have taken the horrific abuse of Victorian children in childcare to force this government to act," he said. Mr Battin said the government ignored a 2022 warning from the Ombudsman to close dangerous loopholes in the Working With Children Check system. "They were told to fix a broken system and did not. That's a disgrace," he said. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will also be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 A childcare safety overhaul is a step in the right direction but warning signs have been ignored for too long, allowing predators to slip through the cracks. A sweeping and damning review of Victoria's childcare sector found the state's childcare watchdogs are failing to keep kids safe. Poor information sharing, legal constraints, chronic underfunding and a system that places the privacy of educators and the pursuit of profits over child safety were just some of the revelations made public on Wednesday. An overhaul is under way, with the government accepting all 22 of the review's recommendations, including the ability to pull a childcare worker's clearances based on unproven allegations. The review was set up in early-July after authorities lifted the lid on Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged with more than 70 sexual abuse offences. He had a valid working with children check. The review said the state's permit regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, should no longer sit within the separate entities of the Department of Government Services and Commission for Children and Young People. The systems should be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator as the trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in "too many places". Child protection organisations have welcomed the recommendations but say gaps have been exploited by predators for too long. "For too long, warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate, and predators have slipped through the cracks," Bravehearts CEO Alison Geale said. The leading child protection organisation said the reforms "will not just plug gaps, they will fundamentally shift the culture toward one where child protection is proactive, not reactive". "Why have we ended up in a system where we need explicit rules?" early childhood education and care policy expert Caroline Croser-Barlow of The Front Project told AAP. "Children's safety should always be the number one priority." Victorian opposition leader Brad Battin also accused the the Labor government of delaying reforms. "It shouldn't have taken the horrific abuse of Victorian children in childcare to force this government to act," he said. Mr Battin said the government ignored a 2022 warning from the Ombudsman to close dangerous loopholes in the Working With Children Check system. "They were told to fix a broken system and did not. That's a disgrace," he said. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will also be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 A childcare safety overhaul is a step in the right direction but warning signs have been ignored for too long, allowing predators to slip through the cracks. A sweeping and damning review of Victoria's childcare sector found the state's childcare watchdogs are failing to keep kids safe. Poor information sharing, legal constraints, chronic underfunding and a system that places the privacy of educators and the pursuit of profits over child safety were just some of the revelations made public on Wednesday. An overhaul is under way, with the government accepting all 22 of the review's recommendations, including the ability to pull a childcare worker's clearances based on unproven allegations. The review was set up in early-July after authorities lifted the lid on Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged with more than 70 sexual abuse offences. He had a valid working with children check. The review said the state's permit regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, should no longer sit within the separate entities of the Department of Government Services and Commission for Children and Young People. The systems should be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator as the trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in "too many places". Child protection organisations have welcomed the recommendations but say gaps have been exploited by predators for too long. "For too long, warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate, and predators have slipped through the cracks," Bravehearts CEO Alison Geale said. The leading child protection organisation said the reforms "will not just plug gaps, they will fundamentally shift the culture toward one where child protection is proactive, not reactive". "Why have we ended up in a system where we need explicit rules?" early childhood education and care policy expert Caroline Croser-Barlow of The Front Project told AAP. "Children's safety should always be the number one priority." Victorian opposition leader Brad Battin also accused the the Labor government of delaying reforms. "It shouldn't have taken the horrific abuse of Victorian children in childcare to force this government to act," he said. Mr Battin said the government ignored a 2022 warning from the Ombudsman to close dangerous loopholes in the Working With Children Check system. "They were told to fix a broken system and did not. That's a disgrace," he said. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will also be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 A childcare safety overhaul is a step in the right direction but warning signs have been ignored for too long, allowing predators to slip through the cracks. A sweeping and damning review of Victoria's childcare sector found the state's childcare watchdogs are failing to keep kids safe. Poor information sharing, legal constraints, chronic underfunding and a system that places the privacy of educators and the pursuit of profits over child safety were just some of the revelations made public on Wednesday. An overhaul is under way, with the government accepting all 22 of the review's recommendations, including the ability to pull a childcare worker's clearances based on unproven allegations. The review was set up in early-July after authorities lifted the lid on Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged with more than 70 sexual abuse offences. He had a valid working with children check. The review said the state's permit regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, should no longer sit within the separate entities of the Department of Government Services and Commission for Children and Young People. The systems should be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator as the trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in "too many places". Child protection organisations have welcomed the recommendations but say gaps have been exploited by predators for too long. "For too long, warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate, and predators have slipped through the cracks," Bravehearts CEO Alison Geale said. The leading child protection organisation said the reforms "will not just plug gaps, they will fundamentally shift the culture toward one where child protection is proactive, not reactive". "Why have we ended up in a system where we need explicit rules?" early childhood education and care policy expert Caroline Croser-Barlow of The Front Project told AAP. "Children's safety should always be the number one priority." Victorian opposition leader Brad Battin also accused the the Labor government of delaying reforms. "It shouldn't have taken the horrific abuse of Victorian children in childcare to force this government to act," he said. Mr Battin said the government ignored a 2022 warning from the Ombudsman to close dangerous loopholes in the Working With Children Check system. "They were told to fix a broken system and did not. That's a disgrace," he said. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will also be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

Child safety warning signs ignored for too long
Child safety warning signs ignored for too long

Perth Now

time8 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Child safety warning signs ignored for too long

A childcare safety overhaul is a step in the right direction but warning signs have been ignored for too long, allowing predators to slip through the cracks. A sweeping and damning review of Victoria's childcare sector found the state's childcare watchdogs are failing to keep kids safe. Poor information sharing, legal constraints, chronic underfunding and a system that places the privacy of educators and the pursuit of profits over child safety were just some of the revelations made public on Wednesday. An overhaul is under way, with the government accepting all 22 of the review's recommendations, including the ability to pull a childcare worker's clearances based on unproven allegations. The review was set up in early-July after authorities lifted the lid on Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged with more than 70 sexual abuse offences. He had a valid working with children check. The review said the state's permit regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, should no longer sit within the separate entities of the Department of Government Services and Commission for Children and Young People. The systems should be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator as the trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in "too many places". Child protection organisations have welcomed the recommendations but say gaps have been exploited by predators for too long. "For too long, warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate, and predators have slipped through the cracks," Bravehearts CEO Alison Geale said. The leading child protection organisation said the reforms "will not just plug gaps, they will fundamentally shift the culture toward one where child protection is proactive, not reactive". "Why have we ended up in a system where we need explicit rules?" early childhood education and care policy expert Caroline Croser-Barlow of The Front Project told AAP. "Children's safety should always be the number one priority." Victorian opposition leader Brad Battin also accused the the Labor government of delaying reforms. "It shouldn't have taken the horrific abuse of Victorian children in childcare to force this government to act," he said. Mr Battin said the government ignored a 2022 warning from the Ombudsman to close dangerous loopholes in the Working With Children Check system. "They were told to fix a broken system and did not. That's a disgrace," he said. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will also be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store