A teenage boy who was driving a car at a minimum speed of 119 km an hour in a 50 km zone when he crashed in Cork city causing the death of a 16-year-old girl and permanent injury to a 17-year-old male, has been detained for four years.
Judge Seán Ó Donnabháin told Cork Circuit Criminal Court that it was in the public interest that Daniel Wyse (17) of Killiney Heights in Knocknaheeny in the city be named as he is subject to a 15 year driving disqualification.
He said by lifting the reporting restriction the public would be aware of the driving ban and able to report Wyse to the Garda if he got behind the wheel of a car.
Mr Wyse appeared before the court in relation to the death of transition year student Kimberly O’Connor (16) in a car crash on Harbour View Road in Knocknaheeny in February 2020.
Judge Ó Donnabháin also lifted the restrictions under the Children’s Act in terms of naming the young victim.
He said that it would be “unjust and unrealistic” that she not be identified. He noted that her mother was happy to have her daughter named in media reports.
Det Garda Brian Holland said the crash in Cork city occurred shortly before 11pm on February 19th, 2020 when Daniel Wyse was driving at high speed in a car he had bought on DoneDeal.
He overtook a taxi on Harbour View Road and crashed in to a bollard and a wall. Ms O’Connor and another teenage boy were passengers in the vehicle.
The court heard that the car hit a kerb, a tree and a utility box before then colliding with a metal bollard which ended up 45 metres away, while the cap on the bollard was catapulted through the upstairs window of a house.
The rear passenger door hit a concrete wall and the car spun around with the front passenger’s door colliding with a gate pillar, killing Kimberly who was less than 50 metres from her home at the time.
Det Garda Holland said that the victims had to be cut from the car.
The now 18-year-old male passenger initially lost the use of his limbs. He can now walk but needs ongoing physical and psychological support. He suffers from post-traumatic amnesia and has no memory of the accident.
Speed limit
Det Garda Holland said that the driver fled the scene. A full Garda investigation was carried out. It was determined that the car was travelling at at least 120km an hour at the time of crash. The road had a speed limit of just 50km.
Mr Wyse had bought the car on DoneDeal three days before the crash but, after the fatal collision, he changed the information on the ad.
Det Garda Holland said that the dead young woman was “in the prime of her life” at the time of the crash and and that the driver had shown a “complete disregard” for the two passengers in the car.
Defence barrister Tom Creed SC said that his client had entered a guilty plea at the earliest opportunity.
He acknowledged that a custodial sentence was a given but appealed for leniency given the genuine remorse of Wyse and his lack of previous convictions.
The teenager, who appeared by video link from Oberstown, told the court that he would forever regret his actions on the night which led to the loss of his “beautiful friend” Kimberly. He apologised to the family of the deceased and said that his friend would be “in his thoughts forever”.
His mother Margaret O’Sullivan said that her son was genuinely remorseful for his actions. She offered her condolences to the family of the deceased.
‘Bright, happy girl’
Jennifer Haynes, the mother of the deceased, said in her victim impact statement that she heard the noise of the collision. She tried to call her daughter’s phone but it rang out.
“I was waiting for my daughter to come home and I jumped with horror from the bang outside my door – with severe fright, we ran to the front door to discover the fatal car crash,” she said.
“I rang my daughter’s phone to see where she was – her phone at this stage was ringing out – little did I realise at that point that my child lying dead in the car that had crashed in front of our house.
“When we found out it was my child dead in the car, my whole world came crashing in on top of me – from that point on I wanted to die – I will never be able to come to terms with my child’s death.”
Ms Haynes described the incident as “every mother’s worst nightmare”.
“Kimberly was a bright, bubbly happy girl with an infectious smile. She didn’t deserve to die like that.”
Ms Haynes said her kind-hearted daughter had been chosen by her school to go to Kolkata in India in order to undertake charity work. Kimberly went on the trip just four weeks before her death and had planned to return when she was 18.
A gifted singer, Kimberly played lead roles in dramatic performances at her school. Her mother said she was destined for great things.
“I told her ‘when you were born a star was born’. She had big dreams. She had a beautiful singing voice.”
Mr Wyse pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing the death of a Ms O’Connor in the car and causing serious bodily harm to another male passenger. He also pleaded guilty to failing to stop, driving without a licence and insurance and failing to give gardaí appropriate information.
In sentencing, Judge Ó Donnabháin said that he had to take in to account that Mr Wyse fled the scene and did not present to gardaí for weeks if not months.
Judge Ó Donnabháin described the crash as “appalling” and said that it was like a bomb had gone off under the car.
He added that Kimberly’s promising life was “cut off against a pilar in Knocknaheeny” because of high speed by a driver who was underage and without a licence. He imposed a sentence of eight years with four years suspended having taken the guilty plea and lack of previous convictions in to account.