The mother of motorcyclist Harry Dunn broke down in court as her teenage son’s killer avoided jail after a three-year fight for justice.
US citizen Anne Sacoolas (45) declined to come to the Old Bailey in person on Thursday when she was handed eight months in prison suspended for 12 months for causing the 19-year-old’s death by careless driving.
Earlier, Mr Dunn’s mother Charlotte Charles had said she was left “absolutely fuming” on learning the US government had advised her not to travel to the UK to face justice, making the sentence effectively unenforceable.
Speaking in a packed Court One of the Old Bailey, Mrs Charles wept as she said: “Harry just disappeared out of my life that night, shattering my existence forever.
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“His passing haunts me every minute of every day and I’m not sure how I’m ever going to get over it.”
“I made a promise to Harry in the hospital that we would get him justice and a mother never breaks a promise to her son.”
In her sentencing, Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb paid tribute to the Dunn family.
She told Sacoolas: “There is no doubt that the calm and dignified persistence of these parents and family of that young man has led through three years of heartbreak and effort to your appearance before this court and acknowledge your guilt.”
The judge said Mr Dunn’s death was the “highest degree of harm” but added: “I bear in mind this was a short period of driving and you were not familiar with English roads.
“I accept you feel genuine remorse.”
She told Sacoolas that while she was in the US, the sentence could not be enforced.
The mother-of-three was also disqualified from driving for 12 months.
Speaking outside court, Mrs Charles told reporters: “Job done, promise complete. Properly, properly complete now.
“Anne Sacoolas now has a criminal record. Yep, Harry, we’ve done it. We would have been happy with anything – for us, it was just about doing the right thing.”
Mr Dunn was killed when Sacoolas drove her Volvo on the wrong side of the road outside US military base RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire on August 27th, 2019.
Outlining the facts, Duncan Atkinson KC said Sacoolas was taking two of her children home from a barbecue at the airbase.
Mr Dunn had spent the afternoon with his best friend and was on his way home on his Kawasaki motorbike.
Mr Atkinson said: “He was described as being his normal self, happy and joking.”
Sacoolas had driven just 350 metres for some 26 seconds on the wrong side of the road when she crashed into Mr Dunn’s motorbike head on.
The prosecutor said: “Harry Dunn was thrown on the front of the Volvo, then over the vehicle, striking the rear window before coming to rest behind it.
“[The Volvo’s] rear window had been smashed and its airbags had been activated. The motorbike itself had extensive fire damage.”
Afterwards, Sacoolas appeared shocked and distressed, with her head in her hands.
She said: “I’ve had a head-on collision with a motorbike. It’s all my fault, I was on the wrong side of the road. I’ve only been here a couple of weeks.”
Mr Dunn was lying injured on the verge at the side of the road and said repeatedly: “Don’t let me die.”
He was taken to the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, where he died later that night.
Sacoolas had diplomatic immunity asserted on her behalf by the US government and was able to leave the UK 19 days after the incident.
In October, she appeared in court by video link from the US to plead guilty to causing Mr Dunn’s death by careless driving.
Sacoolas wiped away tears as she attend her sentencing on Thursday, remotely, from her lawyer’s office in Washington DC once again.
In mitigation, her lawyer Ben Cooper KC read a statement on her behalf in which she said she was “deeply sorry for the pain I have caused”.
He said Sacoolas had been subjected to death threats via email and telephone and her family had been forced to relocate. – PA