
Cameron and David Walsh died in car test drive crash near Grimsby
A teenage footballer and his father drowned in a canal after the car they were test driving hit a telegraph pole and "flew off the road" an inquest was told. Cameron Walsh, 16, and his father, David Walsh, 40, died on 6 January when a Mercedes GLC 300 went into Louth Canal close to Tetney Lock, near Grimsby.Eyewitness Roberta Smith made a 999 call at 13:48 GMT to report that a car with people inside had "gone into a dike" after it "appeared to be airborne", the inquest heard.Assistant coroner for Greater Lincolnshire Marianne Johnson concluded the father and son died in a road traffic collision and said she would file a prevention of future deaths report.
Mr Walsh hired the hybrid, automatic Mercedes and was travelling with his son along Tetney Lock Road when it left the road and entered the canal.On arrival, emergency services said the car was upside down and "fully submerged" apart from the two rear wheels.Mr Walsh was removed from the car by fire crews at 14:18 and Cameron at 14:23.Ambulance crews were sent to the incident as well as Derbyshire, Leicestershire & Rutland Air Ambulance.Dr Ewan Barron, an emergency medical consultant who attended, said Mr Walsh and Cameron had been under water for a "prolonged time of 40 to 45 minutes".Both were pronounced dead at 14:58 after paramedics had made resuscitation attempts but there were "no signs of life", the court heard.
'Lost control'
In a statement read to the court, a friend of Cameron's said they received a Snapchat message from him telling "how much his dad liked the car" they were test driving and that they were "taking it down backroads".The inquest also heard Cameron's girlfriend received a Snapchat photo from him at 13:28 which showed Mr Walsh in the driver's seat.PC Nick Prestwich, collision investigator with Lincolnshire Police, said he was "not able to say definitively" who was driving the car at the time of the crash.He told the court the vehicle had "lost control and entered the verge adjacent to the canal" and "hit a telegraph pole which caused the vehicle to rotate".Ms Johnson said on the "balance of probabilities" it was Mr Walsh driving at the time of the collision.The inquest heard there was no mechanical or related defect of the vehicle.
PC Prestwich confirmed there was a sign on the stretch of road with a speed limit of 60mph (96km/h) warning drivers it was "undulated and uneven"."It's my belief that the car was driven too fast for the road conditions," he said.Richard Fenwick, head of highways asset and local management services at Lincolnshire County Council, confirmed the car would have driven past a warning sign about 650ft (200m) before the location of the crash.He said the warning signs were "appropriate" and there were "no immediate works required".A family tribute read out at the inquest described the father and son as "two beautiful people" who were "full of life".Cameron, who played for Grimsby Town's academy team, and Mr Walsh were described by the League Two side as "part of the family".Ms Johnson confirmed she would send a prevention of future deaths report to Lincolnshire County Council.
Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
13 minutes ago
- BBC News
Jacob Zuco jailed for knife murder of Leon Penman in Bedford
A judge has called for society to take a stand again the "scourge" of knives as he jailed a teenager convicted of Zuco was found guilty of killing Leon Penman, 20, in Bedford in May 2024 following a trial at Luton Crown Michael Simon handed Zuco, 19, of Kimble Drive in the town, a mandatory life sentence and said he must spend 20 years in jail before parole could be heard he stabbed Mr Penman with a "hunting-style" knife bought from a website called " A teenager got a friend to buy two knives from the website when he was 17, the court jury also found Zuco guilty of wounding Mr Penman, who was also from Bedford, with intent to cause grievous bodily harm following a previous incident in March trial heard Zuco had sold drugs to friends and that Mr Penman had convictions related to drug use and violence and had been serving a suspended prison sentence. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Guardian
26 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Missing diamond-encrusted Rolex may be linked to London stabbing, police say
A missing diamond-crusted Rolex watch may be linked to the stabbing of a 69-year-old woman who was found dead in her north London flat, the Metropolitan police has said. Jennifer Abbott, who was known professionally as Sarah Steinberg, was discovered fatally injured with tape on her mouth. She was last seen three days earlier walking her pet corgi in Camden on 10 June. An ambulance crew was called to her home in Mornington Place, Camden, at about 6pm on 13 June and she was pronounced dead at the scene. Her pet corgi had been shut in the bathroom for three days, but survived. Police said a postmortem examination was carried out on Sunday and gave the cause of death as sharp force trauma. Detectives are keeping an open mind about the possible motive for the murder but are appealing for information about the watch, which they believe is missing from Abbott's address. A neighbour, who did not want to be named, told PA Media that her son went out to help Abbott's niece and the pair discovered her body. The neighbour said: 'My son broke the door down. We heard her niece shouting: 'Somebody help me, somebody help' and we went out and asked: 'What's wrong?' 'She said: 'I haven't heard from my aunty in four days. Something's wrong – break the door down'. 'I was holding the door open downstairs and my son was upstairs and then I heard her niece screaming and saying: 'Oh my God, she's been murdered'. She had tape across her mouth. 'Her corgi was locked in the bathroom for three days. That poor dog, he couldn't even drink any water, it's amazing he was even still alive.' The neighbour added Abbott 'had done a lot of things in her life'. 'She was a doctor but she was also an actor and director in America,' they said. 'She'd directed a movie and I looked at it on YouTube and saw her interviewed in Los Angeles. She was a character. She was lovely.' No arrests have been made in connection with her death. Met chief superintendent Jason Stewart said the force was working closely with their colleagues in the homicide team to establish exactly what happened and were appealing for information from the public. He said: 'Were you out in Camden on Friday? Perhaps you had been coming home from work, or at an event nearby? Did you see or hear anything around Mornington Place that struck you as being unusual? 'Someone must have seen or heard something and no piece of information is too small. It could be the crucial clue that leads us to identify Jennifer's murderer.' Stewart added: 'Extra patrols continue in the area while my officers remain at the crime scene. I would urge anyone who has any information, or who may be worried, to speak to them.'


BBC News
37 minutes ago
- BBC News
Five teens accused of murdering boy in Bedford go on trial
A 17-year-old boy was "effectively left for dead" after being stabbed in a pedestrian street near a bus station, a prosecutor has told Taylor died after being attacked in Bedford in January, barrister Mark Heywood KC told a trial at Luton Crown Court on said "sudden" and "ugly" violence involving two groups of "young men" had broken Adam, 18, Bennett Ndenkeh, 19, Riaz Miah, 18, She'ma Dixon, 18, and a 17-year-old boy, who cannot be identified, all deny murdering Thomas. Police had said Thomas died after being stabbed in Greenhill Street, Bedford, just before 18:00 GMT on 8 Heywood told jurors how Thomas had been walking with other boys near Bedford bus said the group was approached by members of a larger had been attacked, brought to the ground and fatally stabbed, Mr Heywood said youths involved had "fled" and passers by were "left to deal with the aftermath". Mr Heywood added: "He [Thomas] was effectively left for dead on the pavement."He said the "background" to the attack "almost certainly" related to an incident some days earlier involving Mr suggested that Mr Miah had been assaulted by two people associated with Thomas and the incident had become an "issue". Mr Heywood said messages had been exchanged between Mr Miah and said the attack on Thomas was "deliberate"."This was no chance encounter," he told jurors. "The focus of the attack was on a single individual." A judge had previously made orders barring Mr Miah and Mr Dixon from being named in media reports of the trial judge Mr Justice Martin Spencer has said that reporting restriction orders are no longer in place because both Mr Miah and Mr Dixon have turned said an order barring the 17-year-old boy, who will not turn 18 until February, from being named in media reports remained in Heywood showed jurors photographs of the teenagers and told where some of them lived in Bedford. He said Mr Adam lived in Mardale Close, Mr Ndenkeh, in Midland Road, and Mr Dixon, in Baldur Miah - and the 17-year-old boy - also lived in Bedford, he trial continues and is expected to last several weeks. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.