Man jailed for causing nitrous oxide fuelled crash on Teesside

A man has been given a jail term of three years and 11 months after seriously injuring a passenger in a collision fuelled by nitrous oxide.

Author: Ellie KumarPublished 5th Sep 2024

A man has been given a jail term of three years and 11 months after seriously injuring a passenger in a collision fuelled by nitrous oxide.

21-year-old Mason Thornton, from Ingleby Barwick, was driving a vehicle carrying four other passengers who had been to a party together, on the A1027 Billingham interchange on 23rd October 2022 when it was involved in a collision.

Thornton inhaled nitrous oxide whilst driving, moments before the collision happened.

One of the passengers, 25-year-old Harlan Moon from Billingham, suffered serious injuries in the collision which have left him in need of life-long care.

Thornton was charged with causing serious injury by dangerous driving and supplying a psychoactive substance. He appeared at Teesside Crown Court on Wednesday 4th September for sentencing, where the Judge jailed him for a total of three years and 11 months.

Harlan’s father, Allan Moon, said in a victim impact statement read to the court, “On 23rd October 2022 everything changed for us and our family. Harlan now requires 24/7 care and still is not home.

“I see my son laid in hospital and looking at him, it’s Harlan but I know that it isn’t my son that I knew before the collision. I struggle to comprehend this and worry that I will not get my son back.

He continued: “Harlan had his whole future ahead of him and would often speak about marriage, children and the plans that he had. It was also time for Deb and I to enjoy time together again as a couple, our children were grown up, independent and have their own lives to live. This will not happen now, our time will be helping Harlan and hoping that he will recover more and more each day so that he can have quality of life.”

Senior Investigating Officer, Inspector Stephen Clyburn, said: “Today has highlighted the tragic consequences of taking nitrous oxide whilst driving; a young man with his whole life ahead of him has been left with serious injuries and will now be in need of life-long care, changing his and his families’ lives forever.

“The aftermath of taking nitrous oxide, which is a class C drug, and driving can be catastrophic and I welcome the sentence handed to Mason Thornton today, though this is nothing compared to the life sentence Harlan and his family will now have to suffer.

“I hope this sends a clear message to others, particularly young drivers, that nitrous oxide is like any other drug and if you inhale it at the wheel you take a huge risk with not only your life, but the lives of others. You will be prosecuted and put before the courts.”

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