Boy racer admits living room crash which put two in hospital
A boy racer crashed his car into the living room of a house and put two people in hospital and caused over Ā£41,000 damage, a court heard.
A boy racer crashed his car into the living room of a house and put two people in hospital and caused over Ā£41,000 damage, a court heard. Ross Aitken, 23, ploughed his car into the property in Kirkintilloch when he lost control driving at a speed thought to be around 50 mph. Lindy Wright and a 13-year-old girl in the house had to be treated in hospital for injuries and the total cost of damage was Ā£41,217. Aitken, from Kirkintilloch, pled guilty at Glasgow Sheriff Court to driving dangerously on October 27, 2014, driving at excessive speed, losing control and injuring Mrs Wright to her severe injury and permanent disfigurement, and the schoolgirl to her injury. The court heard Lindy Wright and her husband Stephen were at home and a 13-year-old girl was in the living room with them. Mr Wright went into the kitchen around 7pm when the collision happened - shaking the entire room. The property at Waterside Road is at a junction with Bankhead Road in the area. Procurator fiscal depute Claire Connachan said: āThe accusedās vechicle failed to stop at the give way junction and continued across the carriageway onto Waterside Road. āThe accusedās vehicle then mounted the kerb onto a grass verge, colliding straight through the metal pedestrian railing and straight over the top of a Virgin Media communications box situated on the pavement.ā She said neither the railing or box stopped Aitkenās car and it continued into to the front garden of the Wright home and ādirectly into the living room windowā. As the car crashed into the house it propelled Mrs Wright and the young girl around 12-16 feet into the dining room. Miss Connachan said Mr Wright head an āalmighty bangā and saw his wife staggering towards him when he ran towards the living room. She collapsed in the kitchen with her leg covered in blood. Neighbours took the 13-year-old and another child out of the house. Police arrived at the scene and Aitken told them āIt was me, I was driving. My brakes didnāt work. Are they okay?ā He claimed he was driving around 40 mph but witnesses estimated it was around 50mph. A roadside breath test was carried out and the result was negative. Mrs Wright was taken to Glasgow Royal Infirmary where she underwent surgery to remove tissue from her leg wound and 30 stitches and after four days was allowed home. She will be left with permanent scarring and indentations around her shin and calf muscle. The 13-year-old girl was treated for heavy bruising and scratches to her left leg which were bandaged. However, she developed a blot clot in her left leg which burst and she needed surgery and was attached to a machine for 10 days to help clear the wound of infection. Miss Connachan added that the familyās personal claims specialist reports that the contents part of the claim amounted to Ā£7,103 and the building claim including structural repairs and temporary accommodation amounted to Ā£34,114. Sheriff Martin Jones QC continued Aitkenās bail but told him that custody was āuppermostā in the courtās mind. Sentence was deferred until next month. Speaking days after the incident Mr Wright said: āI stood up from the chair I was sitting at, went through the dining room and into the kitchen and, just at that point, there was a blast. āThis car came through the living room. I didnāt know what it was, I thought a bomb had gone off.ā He also said: āāIt took me 10 seconds to walk from the area I was sitting to the kitchen and those 10 seconds saved my life. āIf I had not got up, I would be dead because the car landed on the chair where I was sitting.ā