A drink driver who got behind the wheel of his car after being turned away from a pub for being too intoxicated, causing two crashes — one of which left a cyclist in intensive care for three weeks — has been jailed for more than four years.
Andrew Peter Burns' Christmas night out offences saw him sentenced to 50 months in prison at Cardiff Crown Court yesterday, Wales Online reports, after the drink driver had pleaded guilty to causing serious injury by dangerous driving, dangerous driving, driving without due care and attention, failing to stop, and failing to report an accident.
Burns had been on a work night out on 6 December 2021, part of his colleagues' pre-Christmas celebrations, and visited multiple pubs and a Miller & Carter restaurant where he ate a meal and drank "five or six" alcoholic drinks.
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The court was shown CCTV footage of Burns leaving a pub drunk and then being refused entry when he tried to go back to the Borough Arms as he was too intoxicated.
Burns then got into his Audi A3 and caused two crashes to the east of the city centre, the first on City Road and a second on Metal Street nearby just before 9pm. In the first, he crashed into the back of another vehicle, while in the second he hit a delivery cyclist working in the city.
The drink driver failed to stop at the scene of both incidents, with the cyclist taken to hospital with serious head and leg injuries which required three weeks of treatment in intensive care.
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Having been arrested the following day, Burns pleaded guilty to the aforementioned charges and was in court on Monday for sentencing, during which his barrister said the 47-year-old had panicked and fled the scene of the crashes.
"The defendant is very sorry for what has happened and wishes that he could turn back the clock," he said.
Burns was sentenced to 50 months in prison by judge Jeremy Jenkins and was told he would serve half in custody and the remainder on licence. The drink driver was also banned from driving for four years and one month. He will have to pass an extended retest to resume driving at the end of the ban.
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13 comments
Why let him have his licence back at all?
Anybody drunk driving causing injuries to anyone 5 years mandatory. That person should serve 5 years too if youve ever been in a car with a drunk driver as a child you will know.
Why was a child drunk-driving?
Probably because they can't handle their beer
They should have asked for it in a child's glass - easier for little hands.
Sometimes it's just easier to use a straw
I hope you go on motoring sites to remind drivers of their responsibilities and collective blame and tell them they should behave to gain respect.
Your second sentence makes no sense at all.
Or, he will just drive around without a licence and gamble that he doesn't get caught.
Remember: this is someone who "got behind the wheel of his car after being turned away from a pub for being too intoxicated" so I'm not entirely convinced that he could give two hoots about actually having a valid driving licence or insurance...
But but "otherwise law-abiding"...
I'm not entirely convinced that he could give two hoots about actually having a valid driving licence or insurance...
Audi driver- of course he doesn't! I may be under-suspicious about Vingegard, Pogacar and Yates, A, but I'm decidedly over-suspicious that the 2+ years he's supposed to serve in prison will then be subject to the 50% discount dodge for not being caught law-breaking while inside.
I'll just make my usual comment about the farce that is an "extended retest." It's basically a test of whether he can show up sober for a one hour event on a single day. What a high bar.
The only way an extended retest makes sense as a tool is if there's an actual physical/mental/coordination skills problem that someone has overcome with additional training and practise.
Nothing quite like a slap on the wrist
He'll hold the pint in his other hand so it doesn't spill.