Driver who inhaled laughing gas before crash jailed
Cain Byrne, 20, ignored a red light and was driving at more than 50mph when he crashed into 81-year-old Graham Slinn as he was walking his bike across the A57 near Todwick, in South Yorkshire.
Mr Slinn was thrown at least 15ft (4.5m) in the air and died at the scene of the crash on 4 April.
Jailing Byrne, of Redvers Buller Road, Chesterfield, for 11 year and six months, Judge Jeremy Richardson KC said he had shown "a complete lack of self control" and an "utter disregard for the law".
Byrne, who has never held a driving licence, pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving, driving while disqualified, and driving without insurance at Sheffield Crown Court in May.
At a previous hearing the court was shown CCTV footage of Byrne inhaling nitrous oxide, known as "laughing gas", from a balloon both before and after the crash while driving a Volkswagen Golf.
The court heard after hitting Mr Slinn, who was just weeks away from celebrating his 60th wedding anniversary with his wife Jaqueline - Byrne sped off, with dashcam footage showing his tyres smoking as he appeared to be trying to control the vehicle.
Rebecca Stephens, defending, previously told the court he drove away thinking he had only hit a vehicle with his wing mirror, which Judge Jeremy Richardson KC said showed how "completely inebriated" he had been.
Meanwhile, prosecutor Laura Marshall told the judge that Byrne had 27 previous convictions, including for dangerous driving.
Judge Richardson described Byrne as someone with a "hardened determination to commit repeated dangerous crime".
"There is no sign of this stopping, it is getting worse," he added.
Byrne was told that on release from prison he would serve an additional five years on licence and would be disqualified from driving for 17 years and eight months.
Mr Slinn's daughter, Nicola Timmis, told a previous hearing the loss of her father had left her feeling "hollow".
"How could anybody do that to my dad?," She said.
"My dad isn't somebody who deserved to be treated like that. To have someone drive through him like he's nothing. He's not nothing, he's my dad."
Mr Slinn's widow, Jacqueline Slinn, told the court they had met in1961 through their love of cycling.
She said her husband's death "has had a massive impact on my life".
She added: "Since we've been retired we've done most things together, so I'm finding it really really lonely at the moment."
She described Byrne's decision to not stop the car after hitting her husband as "horrendous".
"We were always together, for 60 years, nearly, and I have to face this all on my own", she added.
Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Driver inhaled laughing gas before fatal crash
Man admits causing 81-year-old cyclist's death
Related internet links
HM Courts & Tribunals Service
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Scottish airport fined £144,000 for failures that led to death of employee
The company that runs Glasgow Prestwick Airport has been fined more than £144,000 for failures that led to a member of airport staff falling to his death when a guardrail gave way. Joseph Dempsey, an experienced member of the airport's ground handling team, died in the incident on January 11 2023. The 59-year-old had been preparing to unload cargo from an aircraft using a pallet loader. He had positioned the loader alongside the aircraft and was repositioning a guardrail when it suddenly gave way and he fell to the tarmac some 10 feet (three metres) below. Mr Dempsey's colleagues immediately went to his assistance and paramedics attempted CPR and advanced life support. However, these efforts proved unsuccessful and Mr Dempsey was pronounced dead at the scene. An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that one of the guardrail posts had completely fractured, and that there were visible signs of significant corrosion, discolouration and flaking white paint around the area. At Ayr Sheriff Court on June 25, Glasgow Prestwick Airport Ltd pled guilty to a breach of health and safety legislation, having failed to ensure the pallet loader was maintained and in good repair. At the same court on Thursday, the company was fined £144,050, including a victim surcharge of £10,050. Debbie Carroll leads on health and safety investigations for the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS). Speaking after the sentencing, she said: 'Joseph Dempsey lost his life in circumstances which could have been avoided if Prestwick Airport had in place a suitable and adequate maintenance and inspection programme to ensure the equipment he was using was in a good state of repair. 'This prosecution should remind duty holders that a failure to fulfil their obligations can have fatal consequences and they will be held accountable for this failure.' Metallurgical examination of the guardrail posts carried out during the investigation found differences in chemical composition, manufacturing, and wall thickness which indicated the posts were manufactured from two different tubing sections. The HSE found these welded sections were not a feature of the manufacture's original design, and appeared to have been modified while the loader was under the ownership of Prestwick Airport. The investigation also found the welds on both the guardrail posts contained defects which would allow moisture in, creating a corrosive environment and speeding up deterioration. It was also found that the maintenance programme in place at the time did not cover the parts of the guardrail where failure or deterioration could lead to health and safety risks. Graeme McMinn, HM principal inspector of health and safety, said: 'Employers have an absolute legal duty to ensure that equipment they use at work is maintained in an efficient state and in good repair and full working order. 'This incident is a tragic reminder of what can result when that does not happen.' Since the incident, Prestwick Airport has undertaken a review of all work at height, and checks of the guardrails on the platform loaders have been made part of the regular service and inspection schedule.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Dad guilty of murdering premature baby in hospital
Warning: This article contains details that some may find distressing, including details of severe injuries. A father has been found guilty of murdering his two-week old baby on a neonatal ward. Brendon Staddon, who was born prematurely at 33 weeks, suffered multiple injuries including a fractured skull, a broken neck, a broken jaw and broken legs in Yeovil District Hospital's special care baby unit on 5 March 2024. His father Daniel Gunter, 27, of no fixed address, denied harming him, but was convicted of murder at Bristol Crown Court earlier. He will be sentenced on 3 October. Brendon's mother, Sophie Staddon, was acquitted of a lesser charge of causing or allowing the death of a child and was told by the judge she "was free to go". A female juror was visibly upset as the foreman returned the verdicts and as she wiped tears away, she was comforted by two fellow jury members. The defendants showed no emotion as the verdicts were returned. Following the verdict, Brendon's grandfather Simon Gunter said his grandson - who the court was told weighed "less than a couple of bags of sugar" - had been "so tiny, but so beautiful". "As a family, we were so happy and excited," he said, explaining that the family had bought toys and clothes in their excitement for his arrival. "But, we have been robbed of a life of memories of Brendon," he added. "We won't get to see his first steps, hear his first words, take him on his first holiday and see him grow into a young boy then a man. We will never have those memories. They have been taken from us and he will never be replaced. "I hope Daniel gets what he deserves for what he did to Brendon but, whatever the outcome, it will never bring him back." 'Evil' During his short life, nursing staff at the Somerset hospital said they had many concerns about Brendon's parents' behaviour, particularly Gunter's repeated rough handling of him, Bristol Crown Court was told. The jury was told that while in hospital, Gunter repeatedly ignored the advice of nurses, taking Brendon out of the incubator without asking, overstimulating the child to the point of causing him distress, and removing his nasal gastric tube. A medical expert told the trial that Brendon's injuries were consistent with his head being swung against a hard surface "more than once" while he was held by his ankles. Ch Insp Nadine Partridge, of the major crime investigations team at Avon and Somerset Police, said the case was one of the most challenging of her 22-year career as a detective and described Gunter's actions as "evil". She said having to view the post-mortem injuries had been very distressing for investigators. "The extent of the injuries are nothing I've ever seen before. Brendon's little tiny precious body at just two weeks old, there wasn't any part of him that wasn't harmed," she said. The jury heard Gunter was seen getting angry with Brendon while changing his nappy and threatened to make formal complaints about nursing staff when they tried to intervene. Nurses also feared Ms Staddon was being controlled by Gunter because he would speak for her and order her meals, jurors were told. Brendon was born on 20 February, but the couple left the hospital on 29 February and did not return until the afternoon of 4 March. At about 04:00 GMT the following morning, Ms Staddon told nurses she had awoken to find Brendon "cold". Doctors think he would have been dead for at least 30 minutes before the alarm was raised. While doctors tried to resuscitate him, Gunter said he and Ms Staddon were going outside "for air" and they both went to smoke, the court heard. 'No remorse' Neither Gunter or Ms Staddon gave evidence during the trial. Ch Insp Partridge said Gunter had been more concerned about his phone and vape being taken when he was arrested, and had never asked after Brendon. "Daniel's not shown any remorse whatsoever on his arrest or during his police interviews," she said. Following the verdict she added: "Brendon was failed in life. In death, justice is the only protection we can still offer him. "Cases where both the victim and the defendant are related in some way are among the most challenging for us as police. "I would like to firstly give my condolences to Brendon's grandparents and their wider family, who we have supported through specialist family liaison officers." Following the verdict a spokesperson for Somerset NHS Foundation Trust said it has been an "incredibly distressing" case in which its colleagues gave evidence about their interactions with Gunter and Ms Staddon. "We are part of the Child Safeguarding Practice Review, along with other agencies, that will thoroughly examine the circumstances around baby Brendon's death," they added. "It is well underway and will be published in the autumn." Follow BBC Somerset on Facebook and X. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630. Related internet links HM Courts & Tribunals Service
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Baby murdered by his father in hospital was ‘failed in life'
A two-week-old baby who was 'brutally murdered' by his father was 'failed in life', the officer who led the investigation has said. Brendon Staddon suffered catastrophic injuries at the hands of his father, Daniel Gunter, 27, just weeks after he was born, with multiple broken limbs and his skull crushed. Speaking with the PA news agency, Chief Inspector Nadine Partridge, of the major crime investigation team at Avon and Somerset Police, said Brendon had been failed in life and 'the only way not to fail him in death is to get justice for what's happened to him'. She described Brendon's mother, Sophie Staddon, 21, who was cleared of causing or allowing the death of a child, as a 'vulnerable young girl' who was controlled by Gunter. Brendon, who was born prematurely at 33 weeks, was found in his hospital cot at the Yeovil District Hospital in Somerset on March 5 last year. While doctors attempted to resuscitate him, Brendon's parents went outside for a cigarette. 'Brendon Staddon was born at just 33 weeks' gestation at Yeovil District Hospital,' Ms Partridge said. 'He lived only two short weeks when he was brutally murdered by his dad, Daniel Gunter, in the hospital. The injuries he sustained were catastrophic. 'He had a shattered skull, he had a broken neck, multiple broken limbs and extensive bruising to his limbs and torso.' She added: 'The extensive injuries caused are something I've never seen before in my 22 years as a detective. 'The brutality of the murder – and to such a young, vulnerable, tiny baby – is not something, thankfully, that happens all too often.' She described Gunter as 'very quick to anger', and controlling and coercive towards his partner. Multiple people have spoken of how he would become violent when frustrated, throwing things. After the birth of his son, Gunter would 'blatantly ignore' the advice of medical staff, causing Brendon distress by jiggling and poking him. 'Despite multiple times being told this, he ignored it, thinking that he knew best,' Ms Partridge said. 'He would dictate what (Staddon) ate, when she smoked, who she spoke to, where she stayed. 'After Brendon was born, social services offered Sophie a placement in a mother and baby unit and, as such, Daniel would not be welcome there and would lose control over Sophie and Brendon. She refused to take up that support.' The officer said the parents had shown little emotion during the trial, but Staddon was visibly distressed when she alerted nursing staff at the hospital that Brendon was cold. 'She was quite visibly upset at that point, bent over hysterically crying in the cot space next to where Brendon lay,' she said. 'He was swiftly taken into the resuscitation room, and after a few minutes, both of them left the unit to go outside. 'We can see that on arrest, on the bodyworn footage, that Sophie is quite visibly upset, and she's crying about her baby being dead.' Ms Partridge thanked the medical staff at the hospital for their work. 'They did everything they could to save Brendon. 'Unfortunately, his injuries were too severe, and the small comfort I can take is that he wouldn't have suffered for long. 'My thoughts are that Brendon was failed in life, and the only way not to fail him in death is to get justice for what's happened to him.' A child safeguarding and practice review will be held to examine whether there were any missed opportunities to save Brendon and to identify lessons that can be learned.