Driver that killed his best friend is spared jail time

The judge deemed it "no public interest" in locking him up.

Author: Clyde NewsPublished 21st Aug 2024

A retired accountant who killed one of his best friends in a tragic motorway crash has been spared a jail-term.

Paul Shrubsole was told by a judge he was one of the most "broken" people he had seen in the dock.

The 60-year-old had been on a holiday to Scotland with friends of 40 years Julian Wiseman and Paul Allum on July 24, 2021.

All three men had met while at Kent University - one of them was Shrubsole's best man.

Shrubsole was behind the wheel of his Nissan Qashqai with the two other men on motorbikes.

He got distracted by his hands-free phone and failed to react in time to the road ahead.

He hit dad of two Mr Wiseman, 57, and also collided with Mr Allum's bike on the M74 near Lesmahagow in Lanarkshire.

Maths lecturer, Mr Wiseman never recovered while Mr Allum now left wheelchair bound as a result.

Shrubsole was sentenced at the High Court in Glasgow. He had earlier been convicted of causing death and serious injury by careless driving.

The lawyer for Shrubsole, of Essex, had asked Lord Arthurson not to send him to prison.

Lord Arthurson said: "As I observed you in the dock (at trial), rarely have I seen such a broken individual in the courtroom.

"Your remorse is genuine and profound. There is no public benefit in sending you to prison.

"You are serving your own indefinite sentence of grief and remorse."

Shrubsole instead was made subject of a two-year community payback order.

He will be supervised during that period and has to do 300 hours of unpaid work.

Shrubsole - who has vowed never to get behind the wheel again - was banned from driving for five years.

The judge said Shrubsole should use this opportunity to "dedicate the years to serving others and rehabilitate himself".

Prosecutor Christopher Wilson told jurors in his closing speech: "20 seconds. That's the period of time he failed to react to the lights of the flowing traffic ahead of him."

Jurors were told that Shrubsole sent a text message to a contact on his mobile.

It read: "I've killed Julian and Paul. I ploughed into the back of them."

Shrubsole later said to police: "I accept full liability. I was on the phone, it was hands free, I pressed dial, and it was it."

Mr Wiseman suffered a string of injuries including multiple fractures.

Mr Allum suffered a serious spinal injury, is now in a wheelchair and needs the help of support workers.

Defendant Tony Graham KC said: "In July 2021, three men - with four decades of friendship - set off on what should have been a holiday, a road trip.

"It was perhaps the first relief after what the (covid) lockdown imposed.

"Julian Wiseman died and Paul Allum's life changed forever.

"From that day, a journey began taking Mr Shrubsole - a middle-aged accountant - to the dock of a high court in another part of the UK."

Mr Graham added Shrubsole would be "happy" to be disqualified from the road for life as he had never driven since the incident.

Tributes were paid to Mr Wiseman following his death.

A statement from his family said: "We would like to extend condolences to all of those affected by his loss, particularly to all of his students who always meant so much to him.

"Words cannot express what a kind, caring, compassionate and supportive person Julian was, and he will be sorely missed by everybody who had the pleasure of knowing him."