Pensioner told not to drive due to poor eyesight jailed after killing pedestrian

Neil Pemberton has been jailed after hitting 81-year-old Peter Westwell

Author: Chris MaskeryPublished 6th Dec 2023
Last updated 6th Dec 2023

An 81-year-old man,told by doctors not to drive because his eyesight was so bad, has been jailed after he killed a pedestrian.

Neil Pemberton’s eyesight was so bad he was only able to read a car number plate at a distance of 2.5 metres. The legal requirement is 20 metres.

Pemberton hit pedestrian Peter Westwell on March 17th last year, despite being told to stop driving nine years ago due to his eyesight.

Peter Westwell

80-year-old Mr Westwell from Billington, was crossing the A666 at Langho at the junction with Whalley Road when he was struck by Pemberton’s Honda Jazz. He was thrown into the air and suffered catastrophic injuries and sadly died at the scene.

Pemberton was driving at 48mph in a 30mph zone at the time of the collision.

Neil Pemberton, of Brownhill Road, Blackburn, has today (Wednesday, December 6) admitted causing death by dangerous driving.

He was sentenced today at Preston Crown Court to 32 months in jail.

Judge describes driver as 'selfish'

The judge Simon Medland KC told Pemberton he knew he was suffering from extremely poor eyesight and was told back in 2013 not to drive. When he took a test in 2016 he had no vision in his right eye and very poor vision in his left eye. He had been warned twice and it was obvious that he was not fit to drive.

The judge said Pemberton selfishly prioritised his own convenience by continuing to drive and was repeatedly dishonest when he re-applied for his licence and indicated to the DVLA there was nothing wrong with his eye-sight.

Victim's daughter asks families to have 'difficult conversations'

Peter Westwell’s daughter Hazel paid an emotional tribute to her father and pleaded with people to take responsibility for their fitness to drive.

She said: “I really wanted to thank the people who stopped that day and tried to help my dad, it means I know he wasn’t on his own. They were all so kind.

“Dad was walking that day because he had been told by his doctor and his family that he needed to stop driving so he did. I would ask people to please take personal responsibility when it comes to their health and driving and I would also ask family members to have that difficult conversation should they have any concerns.

“My dad was an active, fit, kind loving family man. He fought and worked hard to stay independent and for him to die as a result of someone else’s selfish actions is almost impossible for us to bear”.

'Sad and ironic'

Detective Sgt Helen Parkinson, of the Serious Collision Investigation Unit, said: “First and foremost, my thoughts today are with Peter Westwell’s loved ones. They have lost a much-loved dad, grandad, brother, uncle and friend in what was an entirely avoidable tragedy.

“Very sadly and ironically Peter was walking that day as he had been told he couldn’t drive for medical reasons.

“Drivers have a personal responsibility to make sure our roads are as safe as possible and making sure your eyesight meets the standards of vision for driving is an important part of that, just like checking your car is in a fit state to drive. Tragically, Neil Pemberton’s failure to meet that personal responsibility had all too obvious catastrophic consequences.”

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