
Shocking moment police officer going too fast crashed into oncoming car captured on camera
Shocking moment police officer going too fast crashed into oncoming car captured on camera
PC Phillip Thomas 'drifted' into the opposite lane while taking a bend at 59mph in his police van - which was faster than he was trained to drive at on that road
A police officer crashed into an oncoming car while pursuing a suspect vehicle at speed in a van, a court has heard. Constable Phillip Thomas crossed the white lines in the middle of the road as he took a bend at 59mph and hit a car coming in the opposite direction before slamming into a lamppost.
The car which PC Thomas hit suffered "extensive damage" in the collision and its driver, minor injuries in the form of cuts and abrasions. Swansea Crown Court heard the officer had passed a police driving course which permitted him to drive at 20mph above the speed limit when necessary, but that at the time of the crash he was exceeding the limit by 29mph.
The officer - who was removed from frontline policing following the incident - will now be subject to a police disciplinary procedure for gross misconduct.
Nik Strobl, prosecuting, told the court that the incident occurred in the early hours of September 29 last year when PC Thomas and a colleague were in a marked police van in Ammanford.
He said at 2.20am a white hatchback car outside the Cottage Inn pub drew the attention of officers, and they began to follow it.
The court heard that the car initially drove at normal speed but when it reached Ammanford College it accelerated away on the 30mph road - the officers illuminated the blue lights on their Vauxhall Vivaro van and pursued it. For the latest court reports sign up to our crime newsletter here.
Article continues below
The prosecutor said that as the defendant followed the car he took a left-hand bend on Dyffryn Road but under-steered and drifted across the white lines into the middle of the road where he came into contact with a car coming in the opposite direction.
He said the car suffered "extensive damage" in the collision but fortunately the female driver did not suffer serious injury, though did attend hospital for checks to be done on her shoulder.
The police van crashed into a lamppost after colliding with the car
(Image: CPS Cymru )
The court heard the defendant had passed a police driving course in 2021 which permitted him to drive at 20mph above the speed limit in the course of his duties, but at the time of the collision had been travelling at 59mph in the 30mph zone. Data from the police van showed he had reached a top speed of 68mph during the course of the pursuit.
Phillip Thomas, of Dafen, Llanelli, had previously pleaded guilty to careless driving when he appeared in the dock for sentencing. He has no previous convictions, and at the time of the collision had a clean driving licence.
James Hartson, for Thomas, said in the course of pursuing a car which may have held "miscreants" the court may feel it was difficult for the defendant to judge his speed exactly.
He said it was a case of "classic under-steer" on a bend in a van not designed to corner at speed which resulted in the defendant "drifting" into the opposite lane.
The barrister said his client had been an officer for four years and had received commendations for his police work as well as letters of thanks from members of the public.
Judge Paul Thomas KC said that in course of his duties following "potential miscreants" in his police van the defendant had encroached on the central white lines and collided with an oncoming car.
He noted in the immediate aftermath of the crash the defendant had been "very apologetic" to the other driver and been "solicitous of her health".
The judge said it was clear PC Thomas was a well-regarded officer adding: "I suspect the greatest punishment is the ignominy and embarrassment of an officer appearing in a crown court".
The judge noted that the defendant had indicated at magistrates court that he would plead guilty to careless driving but that had been rejected by the Crown Prosecution Service and a charge of dangerous driving was pursued. The matter made its way to crown court where the plea to the lesser charge was subsequently accepted.
With a one-third discount for his guilty plea and in accordance with the sentencing guidelines for careless driving Thomas was fined £275 and had six penalty points put on his licence. He will also have to pay a court surcharge of £110. The officer was given 28 days to pay the fine with seven days in prison in default.
Speaking after the sentencing, Dyfed-Powys Police superintendent Phil Rowe, head of the force's professional standards department, said: "PC Thomas is a police response driver and had undertaken training, which included following and attempting to stop vehicles with the blue lights illuminated, but his driving on that day fell below the standard expected of an officer trained in such circumstances. It is only proper that he has been held to account for his actions."
The force said PC Thomas had been re-deployed from frontline duties since the incident and was subject to a parallel gross misconduct investigation by the professional standards department.
Article continues below

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
5 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
'I lived with Maddie McCann prime suspect – I'm sure he left evidence somewhere'
Thomas Hertel, the former flatmate of Madeleine McCann prime suspect Christian Brueckner, says 'pieces of evidence must be somewhere' as the convicted paedophile 'kept all sorts of things' A former flatmate of Madeleine McCann prime suspect Christian Brueckner has called on German police to carry out more searches. Thomas Hertel, who lived with the convicted paedophile in the same children's home, believes the fiend has buried crucial evidence yet to be found and wants the authorities to search all of his previous addresses. He spoke after German and Portuguese officers concluded their latest seemingly fruitless search near Praia da Luz, where she disappeared in May 2007. Thomas, 51, told the Sunday Mirror: 'I am sad. The parents deserve that Maddie is found. I didn't think they would find anything in Portugal, but I do think they might find something if they dig more in Germany. 'I would like to see them search everything in all the places where Christian lived. Brueckner doesn't say the truth, so it's really important that they find some proof so they know what really happened.' This week's search by both Portuguese and German police was carried out a 50 hectare site around two miles from Brueckner's former home on the outskirts of Praia da Luz, where Madeleine disappeared while on holiday with her parents Kate and Gerry and her two siblings 18 years ago. It involved a digger, pickaxes and drones, as well as fingertip sweeps of bushes in a desperate hunt for clues. German prosecutors previously searched an abandoned farmhouse Brueckner, 48, still owns and discovered a trove of items, including buried USB sticks, memory sticks and sickening fantasies written by him. They are convinced the former drifter was involved in Madeleine's disappearance and are desperate to find evidence that could implicate him before he is due to be released from jail this September after serving a seven year sentence for rape. However, despite dramatically first naming him as their suspect in 2020, they appear no closer to a charge. Thomas said: 'These pieces of evidence must be somewhere. And of course, Christian's either buried or preserved everything. I know what I am talking about. When I lived with him, he never ever let anyone in his bedroom. 'But I knew that he secretly kept all sorts of weird things and conserved them, because I could see down into his balcony. He used to have loads of preserving jars filled with what seemed to be organs or intestines.' Thomas added: 'I was sure that he was killing local animals and dismembering them and putting their organs into these jars, because there was no other way to make sense of it. We knew what provisions were bought for us by the home, and they never bought us organs or intestines or anything like that.' Thomas and Brueckner lived in the same German children's home, a flat-sharing community run by an evangelical welfare charity, when they were both teenagers between 1992 and 1995. In a previous interview with the Sunday Mirror he told how he believes Brueckner is a 'ticking time bomb' who should never be freed. He spoke out after shock reports emerged in Portugal on Friday claiming police were told Madeline may have been run over by a drink driver and her body taken out to sea. Her parents have vowed to never give up the search and said last month: 'No matter how near or far she is, Madeleine continues to be right here with us, every day.'


South Wales Guardian
2 days ago
- South Wales Guardian
Footballer Jay Emmanuel-Thomas jailed for four years over drug smuggling plot
Jay Emmanuel-Thomas was arrested after officers from the National Crime Agency seized an estimated £600,000 of cannabis as it was being brought through Stansted Airport by two women he had recruited – his girlfriend and her friend. An earlier hearing at Chelmsford Crown Court in Essex was told the women believed they were importing gold. But Border Force officers detected roughly 60kg (132lb) of the drug in two suitcases, which had arrived in the UK from Bangkok, Thailand, via Dubai. The 34-year-old striker, of Cardwell Road in Gourock, Inverclyde, was arrested in the town in September 2024. He pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to fraudulent evasion of the prohibition on the importation of cannabis between July 1 2024 and September 2 2024. Emmanuel-Thomas was sacked by Scottish Championship side Greenock Morton after his arrest last year. Prosecutor David Josse KC told Chelmsford Crown Court the 'interception' of the two women – Emmanuel-Thomas's girlfriend Yasmin Piotrowska and her friend Rosie Rowland – happened at the airport. He said it 'became apparent this defendant, Jay Emmanuel-Thomas, had been involved in their recruitment to travel to Thailand'. He noted Emmanuel-Thomas 'had played a few games, 11 in total, for a club in Thailand'. The barrister said Emmanuel-Thomas had 'some awareness and understanding of the scale of the operation' and was acting in an 'operational management function' in the plot. He pointed out the defendant's 'relationship with Ms Piotrowska' when describing the recruitment of the two women. The footballer, whose former clubs include Ipswich, Bristol City, QPR, Livingston, Aberdeen and Thai side PTT Rayong, was sentenced on Thursday. The bearded defendant wore a grey suit jacket and black shirt, with his long hair swept back as he listened to proceedings from the secure dock. Ms Piotrowska sat in the public gallery and wept for much of the hearing. Alex Rose, for Emmanuel-Thomas, said: 'The financial gain in this case for Mr Emmanuel-Thomas was £5,000.' Mr Rose said the defendant was a father-of-two and had made a 'catastrophic error of judgment'. He said a 'period of being out of contract led to very significant financial hard times' and he 'succumbed to temptation'. 'Although he had previously experienced periods of being in between contracts or – putting it another way – being unemployed as a footballer, they had largely been on the back of fairly lucrative long-term contracts,' said Mr Rose. He said the 'situation was rather different in the background to this'. 'Having been out of contract prior to signing for Greenock Morton, he had a brief contract with Kidderminster Harriers but that was very much a short-term contract, almost to try to assist someone he had a good relationship with,' he said. Mr Rose continued: 'His football career is finished and that's something he has brought entirely on himself. 'It's a devastating blow for somebody who had such promise and such an impressive football career.' Judge Alexander Mills, jailing Emmanuel-Thomas for four years, said: 'It's through your own action that you will no longer be known for playing professional football. 'You will be known as a criminal. A professional footballer who threw it all away.' The judge said Emmanuel-Thomas had played five games for Greenock Morton and was on a £600 per week contract at the time of the incident. He said the defendant 'recruited' his girlfriend and her friend and was 'essentially turning the importation of cannabis into an all-expenses paid holiday in the Far East', arranging business class flights, hotel costs and discussing in messages how to maximise their time on the Thai island of Ko Samui. Emmanuel-Thomas looked straight ahead as the judge read out his sentence. He nodded towards the public gallery as he was led to the cells. Ms Piotrowska, 33, of Purves Road, Kensal Rise, north-west London, and Ms Rowland, 29, of Southend Road, Chelmsford, Essex, denied the charge and at an earlier hearing prosecutors offered no evidence in their case. Mr Josse said at an earlier hearing that the women 'said they thought they were importing gold not cannabis', and the judge directed that not guilty verdicts be recorded for them.

Leader Live
2 days ago
- Leader Live
Footballer Jay Emmanuel-Thomas jailed for four years over drug smuggling plot
Jay Emmanuel-Thomas was arrested after officers from the National Crime Agency seized an estimated £600,000 of cannabis as it was being brought through Stansted Airport by two women he had recruited – his girlfriend and her friend. An earlier hearing at Chelmsford Crown Court in Essex was told the women believed they were importing gold. But Border Force officers detected roughly 60kg (132lb) of the drug in two suitcases, which had arrived in the UK from Bangkok, Thailand, via Dubai. The 34-year-old striker, of Cardwell Road in Gourock, Inverclyde, was arrested in the town in September 2024. He pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to fraudulent evasion of the prohibition on the importation of cannabis between July 1 2024 and September 2 2024. Emmanuel-Thomas was sacked by Scottish Championship side Greenock Morton after his arrest last year. Prosecutor David Josse KC told Chelmsford Crown Court the 'interception' of the two women – Emmanuel-Thomas's girlfriend Yasmin Piotrowska and her friend Rosie Rowland – happened at the airport. He said it 'became apparent this defendant, Jay Emmanuel-Thomas, had been involved in their recruitment to travel to Thailand'. He noted Emmanuel-Thomas 'had played a few games, 11 in total, for a club in Thailand'. The barrister said Emmanuel-Thomas had 'some awareness and understanding of the scale of the operation' and was acting in an 'operational management function' in the plot. He pointed out the defendant's 'relationship with Ms Piotrowska' when describing the recruitment of the two women. The footballer, whose former clubs include Ipswich, Bristol City, QPR, Livingston, Aberdeen and Thai side PTT Rayong, was sentenced on Thursday. The bearded defendant wore a grey suit jacket and black shirt, with his long hair swept back as he listened to proceedings from the secure dock. Ms Piotrowska sat in the public gallery and wept for much of the hearing. Alex Rose, for Emmanuel-Thomas, said: 'The financial gain in this case for Mr Emmanuel-Thomas was £5,000.' Mr Rose said the defendant was a father-of-two and had made a 'catastrophic error of judgment'. He said a 'period of being out of contract led to very significant financial hard times' and he 'succumbed to temptation'. 'Although he had previously experienced periods of being in between contracts or – putting it another way – being unemployed as a footballer, they had largely been on the back of fairly lucrative long-term contracts,' said Mr Rose. He said the 'situation was rather different in the background to this'. 'Having been out of contract prior to signing for Greenock Morton, he had a brief contract with Kidderminster Harriers but that was very much a short-term contract, almost to try to assist someone he had a good relationship with,' he said. Mr Rose continued: 'His football career is finished and that's something he has brought entirely on himself. 'It's a devastating blow for somebody who had such promise and such an impressive football career.' Judge Alexander Mills, jailing Emmanuel-Thomas for four years, said: 'It's through your own action that you will no longer be known for playing professional football. 'You will be known as a criminal. A professional footballer who threw it all away.' The judge said Emmanuel-Thomas had played five games for Greenock Morton and was on a £600 per week contract at the time of the incident. He said the defendant 'recruited' his girlfriend and her friend and was 'essentially turning the importation of cannabis into an all-expenses paid holiday in the Far East', arranging business class flights, hotel costs and discussing in messages how to maximise their time on the Thai island of Ko Samui. Emmanuel-Thomas looked straight ahead as the judge read out his sentence. He nodded towards the public gallery as he was led to the cells. Ms Piotrowska, 33, of Purves Road, Kensal Rise, north-west London, and Ms Rowland, 29, of Southend Road, Chelmsford, Essex, denied the charge and at an earlier hearing prosecutors offered no evidence in their case. Mr Josse said at an earlier hearing that the women 'said they thought they were importing gold not cannabis', and the judge directed that not guilty verdicts be recorded for them.