logo
Wigan man jailed for causing 'life changing injuries' in e-bike crash

Wigan man jailed for causing 'life changing injuries' in e-bike crash

ITV News23-07-2025
Warning this article incudes distessing images.
Two men from Wigan have been sentenced for their part in an e-bike crash that left a pensioner with life-changing injuries.
On 1 August 2023, Margaret Scaldwell was crossing Orrell Road in Wigan when she was hit by an e-bike being driven by Kian Monks at about 40 mph in a 30 mph zone.
CCTV shown to Bolton Crown Court showed Mrs Scaldwell, 70 being knocked off her feet and thrown down the road after the collision.
The impact broke her spine, pelvis, both arms, and 19 ribs and she needed steel plates fitted in her face.
The court also heard the emergency calls made in the minutes after the collision where nearby drivers described the horrific collision.
Kian Monks, who used to play Wigan Athletic's Youth team was 19 at the time of the crash.
He had previously admitted to causing serious injury by dangerous driving. Today he was sentenced to 2 years and 3 months in prison.
Joel Pilling, who was 20 at the time of the collision had pleaded guilty to dangerous driving and aiding and abetting serious injury by dangerous driving.
In her victim impact statement Mrs Scaldwell said she was an "independent lady who always had a smile on my face" but is now "no longer living and is just existing".
As a result of the collision she relies on medication for the constant pain and to sleep at night. She said she has "nightmares and constant earache" after the collision.
Mrs Scaldwell said in her statement that was read to court that she has to sleep downstairs in the dining room as she cannot climb stairs.
She has limited use of her hands and struggles to eat as she lost her teeth in the collision and cannot hold a knife and fork.
The court heard she has been left with "multiple life changing injuries" which means she has no social life or confidence and is on anti-depressants, she cannot leave the house on her own.
Joel Pilling had bought the Talaria Sting e-bike from a friend for £3,200. It was not taxed or insured and the breaks were faulty.
Judge Jon Close said that even if the breaks were in working order it could not have stopped in time when it was travelling at least 10 mph over the speed limit. The e-bike was made even more unsteady as it was carrying a passenger at the time.
On the day of the crash Joel Pilling had picked up Kian Monks on the bike, but later they had swapped so Monks was driving and Pilling was the passenger. Monks insisted that he had no memory of swapping drivers, so he believed he was the passenger at the time of the collision.
Both Monks and Pilling fled the scene immediately after the crash. Monks was arrested at a nearby taxi rank and Pilling turned himself into Police several hours after the crash.
Monks told the court that "I woke up in a pool of my own blood, I thought I was going to die and needed to get home to my Mum and sister". He said he had "no recollection" of hitting anyone.
Mobile phone footage showed to the court saw him riding the bike away from the scene.
Kian Monks said he has written a letter of apology to Mrs Scaldwell and said "I feel horrendous about my actions and never set out to hurt anyone" saying he is "sincerely sorry"
Monks played as a centre-forward for Wigan Athletic's Youth Team during 2020/21 season. He has been without a club since July 2022.
He was described in court as having a "promising football career" that also included some time as an academy player at Bolton Wanderers.
He suffered a "career ending injury to his ankle" and then started to get in with the wrong crowd and make "stupid decision" when his future in football came to an end.
The court was told by Joel Pilling's defence team that the now 22 year old is a reformed character who was in with the 'wrong crowd' at the time of the collision.
He has shown genuine remorse for his behaviour and has good prospects for rehabilitation as he is working towards an apprenticeship and a career as a tradesman.
Joel Pilling, who was 20 at the time of the collision had pleaded guilty to dangerous driving and aiding and abetting serious injury by dangerous driving.
He was given a 22 months jail sentence suspended for two years plus 250 hours unpaid work. He was also disqualified from driving for two years .
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tragedy as bus carrying mourners home from funeral crashes in Kenya, with 10-year-old girl among 21 killed
Tragedy as bus carrying mourners home from funeral crashes in Kenya, with 10-year-old girl among 21 killed

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tragedy as bus carrying mourners home from funeral crashes in Kenya, with 10-year-old girl among 21 killed

A bus carrying mourners back home from a funeral in southwestern Kenya overturned and plunged into a ditch, killing at least 21 people. The bus was travelling from the western town of Kakamega to the city of Kisumu, where the accident happened, on Friday evening, police said. The driver lost control of the bus as it approached a roundabout at high speed and plunged into a ditch, according to Peter Maina, a regional traffic enforcement officer for the province of Nyanza, where Kisumu is located. The victims include 10 women, 10 men, and a 10-year-old girl, he said. Road accidents are common in Kenya and the wider East African region, where roads are often narrow and in poor condition with many potholes. Police often blame road accidents on speeding drivers. In another accident on Thursday, nine people were killed in a bus crash in the town of Naivasha in the county of Nakuru. The victims were among 32 workers going to work when the bus crashed at a railway crossing, police said. It comes after a British woman has been killed alongside her friend in a horror head-on crash with a lorry hours after arriving in Kenya for a holiday last year. The woman died on February 8, 2024 in a road accident on the Nairobi-Nakuru highway. A male friend who had collected her from the airport also died at the site of the crash, while their driver sustained serious injuries during the incident, which took place at 4am along the busy road, Nairobian newspaper the Star reports. The car was making its way to Nakuru and hit a lorry. The driver was taken to Naivasha subcounty hospital in critical condition, while those inside the lorry were unharmed. Police officer Stephen Kirui said the British woman was collected at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi by the driver and her friend. He said initial investigations showed that the car driver swerved from the lane and made a head-on collision with the lorry that was on its way to Nairobi. Kirui said: 'In the process, the British national who was visiting the country and one male died on the spot while their driver was seriously injured and is admitted to the sub-county hospital.' The two bodies were transported to the Naivasha sub-county hospital mortuary. The damaged car was towed to the police station and an inquiry was launched.

Met Police officers brawl in street after drunken boat party
Met Police officers brawl in street after drunken boat party

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Met Police officers brawl in street after drunken boat party

A group of Metropolitan Police officers have been found guilty of fighting with a group of Romanians after the force's Christmas boat party. Kellsey Millar, 32, Alex Fackerell 31, Jack Sparkes, 34, Max Michaels-Dubois, 33, and Daniel Dean, 38, had been drinking heavily before they boarded a river boat in London for their Christmas party on December 1, 2023. The officers, all attached to the Met's Territorial Support Group, have been on 'restricted duties' since the incident. The Met said that 'misconduct proceedings' will be progressed now that convictions have been issued. Officers became 'aggressive' and started fighting The five officers had headed to the South Bank after their boat docked, where Fackerell got into a fight with a group of people waving Romanian flags, Inner London Crown Court heard. While he was being treated at a nearby restaurant after the fight, a different group of Romanians walked past and asked if he was alright in a mocking tone. Fackerell's colleagues then became aggressive and began fighting the group, with CCTV showing some of the officers throwing punches and pushing a man, causing him to fall backwards. Millar was blocked from entering the restaurant and grabbed Jheanelle Samuels, a female security guard, and kneed her in her left thigh, jurors were told, causing Samuels to punch the officer in self-defence. Sparkes, Michaels-Dubois and Dean were convicted of one count of affray. Millar was found guilty of one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, but was acquitted of affray. Fackerell was found not guilty of affray. Judge Rosina Cottage ordered pre-sentence reports and said 'all options are open, including imprisonment'. The four convicted officers were released on bail and will be sentenced at the court on October 22. Men 'presented no threat' to officer When cross-examined, Millar said she had an altercation with two males because she believed that they were threatening her and her friends, but she couldn't recall how drunk she was. She said: 'I then have a memory of having an interaction with a male and pushing him back and shouting at him to go away. I was scared.' Millar explained that she had felt threatened by the two men that the CCTV showed that she had an altercation with. She said: 'He was quite unsavoury to me. He displayed threatening body language. On the same basis as before I did push the male back to make space between myself and him.' Philip Stott, prosecuting, pointed out that on the CCTV the two men can be seen with their hands up and claimed that they 'presented no threat' to Millar. She said that she did not remember striking Ms Samuels with her knee, but she accepts that she did have an altercation with the guard. Mr Stott asked her if she had failed to call the police because she knew that it was her and her colleagues who had started the fight. 'Is it because you and your colleagues knew you had gone over the line? You also knew that you had been injured and you wanted to record them to protect yourself if things went any further?' Millar replied: 'I don't believe that was the case, no.' She said that her supervisor called her the next day to tell her that she knew she had been injured, and so she thought it would be dealt with. 'No excuse for their actions' None of the Romanians gave evidence in the trial, which relied on CCTV footage. Earlier Rebecca Dagett, who is defending Michaels-Dubois, asked DC Michaela Pearce if the police had taken steps to identify anyone else involved in the brawl, who said that no one came forward as part of an appeal. Chief Superintendent Colin Wingrove, who leads the Met's Task Force, said: 'What was supposed to be a celebratory Christmas social event turned into a protracted altercation that saw officers involved in drunken fighting with numerous members of the public. 'The court did not dispute that before and during the incident, a number of officers were themselves assaulted and injured. But that is no excuse for their subsequent actions which showed a serious lack of self-control and fell well below the standards that we and the public rightly expect officers to hold themselves to, both on and off duty. 'The officers have all been on restricted duties, with misconduct proceedings paused, pending this trial. Those proceedings will now be progressed and the officers' status reviewed in light of the convictions.'

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