Driver jailed over death of 11-year-old girl in Radcliffe
Ruby Cropper died after being hit by a car driven by Andrew Cairns in August 2020
A driver has been jailed after leaving a critically injured 11-year-old girl in the road after a collision and then abandoning his car.
Ruby Cropper died after being struck on New Road, Radcliff, by the Suzuki Alto being driven by Andrew Cairns on 10 August 2020.
The 36-year-old was found guilty of causing death by dangerous driving on 20 January 2022 after a trial at The Hilton Nightingale Crown Court in Manchester.
He was subsequently remanded and appeared at Manchester Crown Court where he was jailed for five years. He has also been disqualified from driving for seven years.
Ruby had been walking along the pavement with a friend and was halfway across the road when she was struck by Cairns' vehicle, estimated by witnesses to be travelling at 'around 50 to 60mph' in a 30mph zone.
Ruby was thrown into the air and suffered severe head injuries. She was treated at the scene by the emergency services and was taken to hospital but, sadly, died two days later.
A post-mortem examination concluded that her death was 'primarily due to brain injury and attributed this to the collision'.
Before the collision, witnesses described how Cairns had overtaken several cars and had cut across traffic, showing 'no caution or regard for other road users'.
Cairns handed himself into police, admitting he was the driver of the car and that he was travelling at excess speed but denied driving dangerously.
PC Laura Drew, a Forensic Collision Reconstruction Officer employed by Greater Manchester Police, filed a report that stated:
"Witnesses estimate Mr Cairns speed was between 50mph and 60mph.
"It is not known as to what exact path or speed Miss Cropper ran at, however research shows her time in the road to be between 0.8 and 1.3 seconds. Mr Cairns could not have avoided this collision at the speed he was travelling.
"However, had Mr Cairns been travelling at the speed limit, Miss Cropper would have had time to pass across the front of his vehicle without him having to take any evasive action."
Lead Investigator, PC Phil Drummond, from GMP's Serious Collision Investigation Unit, said:
"For reasons only known to himself, Cairns chose to drive in a way that would inevitably end in disaster.
"His reckless actions had the most severe of consequences; the life of a young, innocent girl ended and a family torn apart.
"As quickly as he took Ruby’s life, he fled the scene without any thought for her, leaving decent members of the public to rush to her aid.
"While Cairns admitted to causing Ruby’s death at an earlier hearing, he failed to recognise and take responsibility for his sustained, despicable course of driving.
"Furthermore, only six months later and while on bail, he continued to drive without regard for public safety and was caught speeding, showing a complete and utter lack of remorse.
"Thankfully, 17 months after the collision, a jury saw through Cairns' inconsistent account and rightly convicted him of causing Ruby’s death by driving dangerously.
"I wish to thank Ruby’s family for their patience and compassion throughout the entire investigation. I hope this serves to bring them some level of closure.
"Furthermore, I would like to take the opportunity to commend the efforts of the members of public who not only aided Ruby until paramedics arrived but furthermore, appeared in court to give evidence, ultimately reliving their horrific memories.
"I hope this serves to reassure our communities and a reminder those who seek to put them in danger - the Serious Collision Investigation Unit is dedicated to our work and will continue to prosecute them."
Statement from Shelley Booth (Ruby's mum):
"From the very moment I received the call from my husband telling me that our beautiful daughter Ruby had been run over, life has never been the same.
"The shock of seeing her unconscious and dying in front of me is the worst thing I have ever had to deal with in my life.
"I couldn’t understand how my gorgeous, happy girl, who would help anyone, had been run over and left in the road, and that the driver didn’t have the heart to stop and help her, not even ring an ambulance.
"Our world ended at that point. We had lost our ray of sunshine. Our girl was always positive, a kind, caring and funny girl who had her whole life ahead of her.
"We will never get to see her prom, her first day at college and at university. We won’t see her get married or become a mum. We will never see what life she would have had.
"No sentence will ever be enough, as we have to spend the rest of our lives without our beautiful, kind, caring and funny girl. She was the brightest light in the darkest room. We miss her so much.
"Ruby would have died on the 10 August but, because she was an organ donor, we had until the early hours of 12 August to say goodbye.
"We lay with her and played her favourite music, took her hand and foot prints, told her how much we loved her and were there until her last breath.
"Our brave, selfless girl saved three people with her kidneys and her liver. They have frozen her heart valves for possible matches in the future."
Statement from Ian Cropper (Ruby's dad):
"After it all happened, I was angry for a long time. I didn’t care about anything, life just became pointless and my reason for being wasn’t apparent anymore.
"Every day merged into one and they felt endless – no work, no sleep, no one to talk to that could understand the way I was feeling – I was lost in my own bubble of anger that I couldn’t allow anyone in to, it was too hard.
"Ruby was my whole world, she was my best friend and absolute love of my life – Ruby made me the person I am. She made me a Daddy, she made me see the world differently, she made me strong when I didn’t feel it, she made me happy when I was sad – she was my EVERYTHING and it's hard to put into words the loss I feel.
"I am not sure there are enough words in this world to try and describe a world without Ruby in it."