Senin, 05 Juni 2023

Mum with no driving licence killed friend in horror 103mph crash while high on laughing gas - Birmingham Live

A mum killed her friend when she crashed a car into a roundabout. Nasrin Saleh, 26, was clocked going 103mph moments before the horror crash which killed Luqman Mehboob.

She had taken nitrous oxide - known as laughing gas - before the collision, a court heard. When the car burst into flames, the canisters could be heard popping with a witness describing them as like 'gun shots.'

Saleh was sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court on Monday, June 5. She previously pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving, Liverpool Echo reports.

READ MORE: Family pay tribute to 'beautiful' son fatally stabbed outside party as killers 'show no remorse'

Prosecuting, Arthur Gibson told the court that Saleh, of Colville Street in Wavertree, had been on a night out in Manchester on October 9, 2021. She had been with two friends who decided to return to Liverpool at around 1.45am on October 10.

However, Saleh remained to spend time with friend Shujata Begum. Mr Begum, who was with his sister, had agreed to meet Saleh. Shortly after 2am, Mr Begum and Saleh left to go to a corner shop. As they left the store, a Volkswagen Golf GTI pulled up. It was driven by Mr Mehboob, 28.

The car belonged to Mr Mehboob's cousin, but he had borrowed it. The prosecution asserted that the meeting was not by chance and there had been some communication between Saleh and Mr Mehboob before his arrival.

Saleh and Mr Begum got into the car and Mr Mehboob drove them around Manchester city centre as they listened to music.

Mr Begum had said: "There was no cause for concern from me in relation to his driving. He didn’t appear to have been speeding or being under the influence of alcohol. He presented as sober".

They then got onto the motorway to return to Liverpool. It was at this point that Mr Begum realised that Mr Mehboob and Saleh were both using nitrous oxide canisters.

He later told police that Saleh "was having loads of these, approximately two to three boxes which each contained 15 canisters". Mr Begum was dropped off on Upper Stanhope Street at around 4.15am to return to his own car.

Mr Begum saw the Volkswagen drive off with Mr Mehboob still behind the wheel. The car then drove away from the city centre - it was seen on CCTV from a Shell Garage on Liverpool Road, heading outbound.

The car was not seen to have been driven erratically or at excessive speed. However, at some point Saleh swapped into the driver's seat and the car turned around to head towards Liverpool city centre. It is not known when or where the swap took place as Saleh answered "no comment" in a police interview.

Shortly before 4.45am, a witness was driving along East Prescot Road at the 40mph speed limit. He saw the Volkswagen overtake him at high speed, which he estimated to be above 80mph.

He saw the car continue at high speed along the road as it approached the roundabout connecting East Prescot Road and Pilch Lane. The car crashed into the roundabout, taking its front end into the air before it rolled onto its side and then roof. Around ten seconds later, it burst into flames.

A nearby dog walker said he heard the car driving quickly before what he described as "an almighty noise of a collision". A number of loud bangs followed, which he thought were gunshots. In fact, they were the remaining nitrous oxide canisters exploding in the fire.

Further police investigations found CCTV footage from a home on East Prescot Road, 470m from the roundabout. The Volkswagen was caught on camera at 103mph.

Footage taken from the nearby Aldi's CCTV camera showed the car braking around 80m from the roundabout, but the 103mph speed would have required a 252m stopping distance.

Taxi Driver Russell Cooper arrived at the scene as the fire began. He took the fire extinguisher from his car and ran towards the Volkswagen.

He was able to drag Saleh from the wreckage but the fire intensified. While Mr Cooper was carrying Saleh away to safety, she said: "We swapped, we were doing balloons, me baby, me friend, is he still in there".

The taxi driver returned to the fire and tried to reach Mr Mehboob but he was unresponsive. Mr Cooper was forced to step back due to the strength of the fire and smoke.

Merseyside Police, fire and ambulance crews arrived at the scene but nothing could be done to save Mr Mehboob. Saleh suffered injuries – a fracture to her lower left leg and ankle - and was taken by ambulance to hospital.

Mr Mehboob's body was recovered after the fire was extinguished. A post-mortem examination found that he suffered catastrophic head and internal injuries which meant he lost consciousness immediately, ultimately resulting in his death.

Saleh did hold a driving licence, but neither she nor Mr Mehboob were insured to drive the Volkswagen. Traces of drugs administered for medical purposes and a slight trace of alcohol were found in Saleh's blood sample.

Though she had inhaled nitrous oxide, testing for it is not possible. The author of the toxicology report noted, however, that the substance can cause euphoria, sedation, confusion and disorientation, dizziness, loss of coordination and hallucinations, with intoxication lasting typically between 30 seconds and two minutes.

Mr Gibson read a statement to the court from Mr Mehboob's mother. About the day of the crash, she said: "Our nightmare began. The nightmare we never woke up from".

She described her son as "the life and soul of all of our family events" She said he had a "caring and supporting nature" and was a "pillar of the community".

She said: "Every day we are searching for normality" and added: "I break down completely, pleading for him to come back".

In mitigation, Fuad Arshad said that Saleh "fully accepted that it was her actions and her actions alone that resulted in the death of Mr Mehboob." He added that his client acknowledged that she drove at excessive speed and that her driving "caused a substantial risk of danger to other road users".

He pointed to his client's lack of previous convictions and the fact she is a mother to a six-year-old boy. He said she had shown "real sorrow and remorse" and had a "sincere feeling of guilt".

He added that Saleh is "struggling to come to terms with her conduct" and suffers flashbacks to the crash, which often occur in nightmares. She has also developed post-traumatic stress disorder.

Mr Arshad described Saleh as a "broken person carrying now, for the rest of her life, a heavy burden of guilt".

Sentencing, Judge David Aubrey KC said: "Luqman Mehboob was such a special person to so many and a good friend of yours. He had his whole life in front of him and many a dream as to his future.

"All that came to an abrupt end in the early hours of that Sunday morning while members of his closely-knit family are anxiously making phone calls seeking to ascertain his whereabouts. There remains emptiness - a massive hole in his family's hearts."

The judge told Saleh "Mr Mehboob died in the most terrible circumstances". He added: "You chose to drive a powerful car at grossly excessive speeds in a state of euphoria having taken nitrous oxide.

"Your consumption at the very least caused euphoria and must have had an intoxicating effect on you". The judge concluded that Saleh's driving was "without doubt, in my judgement, impaired by nitrous oxide".

Saleh was jailed for four and a half years.

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2023-06-05 18:57:41Z
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