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Cyclist wins £5m compensation

View Full Version : Cyclist wins £5m compensation




Guy Chapman
  
Not a word about helmets. Amazing.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/tyne/3158588.stm

A cyclist from Northumberland, who suffered serious head injuries when he was knocked off his bike
four years ago, has been awarded damages up to £5m. Richard Harrison, 35, was hit by a car near his
home in Hexham on Monday 3 May 1999.

The accident left him with severe brain damage, paralysis in his legs and arms and unable to speak
coherently.

But thanks to constant care from his family and friends, Mr Harrison can now swim, eat and drink
unaided and has started to rebuild his social life.

He was given up to £5 million compensation in an out-of-court settlement on Thursday.

Richard was simply out of it for a long time and this was terrible to see, but we always knew that
with help he would get back

John Harrison, father

It followed an interim compensation payment of £450,000 in 2002 by the driver's insurers.

The latest will see a one-off payment of £1.3m and then annual payments of £180,000 for the rest
of his life.

The compensation is calculated to meet the cost of Mr Harrison's ongoing medical and therapeutic
care and could reach up to £5m or more.

Mr Harrison's father, John, said: "Pursuing this award, which means so much to Richard, has been a
long, exhausting process.

"Richard was simply out of it for a long time and this was terrible to see, but we always knew that
with help he would get back.

The accident happened near Mr Harrison's home

"We would like to thank all of the people who have helped Richard and us over the last four and a
half years."

"He has shown immense courage and we now need to move on."

John Davis, of law firm Irwin Mitchell, who represented Mr Harrison said: "This compensation award
brings great relief to Richard's family.

"Richard can now receive the very high level of care that he needs. His new house can be fully
equipped and the funds are there to pay for the nursing staff needed to assist him with many of his
daily tasks."

Before the accident, Mr Harrison worked for the Analytical Environmental Services, testing for toxic
gases in air for the Environmental Agency.

Soup
  
Guy Chapman wrote:
> Not a word about helmets. Amazing.
>
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/tyne/3158588.stm
>
> A cyclist from Northumberland, who suffered serious head injuries when he was knocked off his bike
> four years ago, has been awarded damages up to £5m. Richard Harrison, 35, was hit by a car near
> his home in Hexham on Monday 3 May 1999.
<snip>

First thought was lucky b**£$^% but then I saw the state he was in. I bet he would give all the
money back to not have been hit. I have a disabled son we get DLA and we have been moved to a
front and back door house (we lived in a flat before ) it is much better out here and the money
comes in handy, but we would give up the money and move back into the centre of town if only my
son was "well" again.
--
yours S (addy' not usable[not that you would try it anyway]) Illegitimi non carborundum
www.killies.co.uk/forums/index.php

Zog The Undenia
  
Guy Chapman wrote:

> Not a word about helmets. Amazing.

He wasn't wearing one.

http://www.cobr.co.uk/e-cobr_information/newsdesk/february/third_insurer.htm

Doubt it would have done a whole lot of good in a bike-car collision though, especially as Subaru
Imprezas tend to be driven by lunatics who think they're Colin McRae. Basically, no-one can prove
their efficacy, hence the full £5m.

Stephen \
  
Soup wrote:
> Guy Chapman wrote:
>> Not a word about helmets. Amazing.
>>
>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/tyne/3158588.stm
>>
>> A cyclist from Northumberland, who suffered serious head injuries when he was knocked off his
>> bike four years ago, has been awarded damages up to £5m. Richard Harrison, 35, was hit by a car
>> near his home in Hexham on Monday 3 May 1999.
> <snip>
>
> First thought was lucky b**£$^% but then I saw the state he was in. I bet he would give all the
> money back to not have been hit. I have a disabled son we get DLA and we have been moved to a
> front and back door house (we lived in a flat before ) it is much better out here and the money
> comes in handy, but we would give up the money and move back into the centre of town if only my
> son was "well" again.

Absolutely. It's not £5m for him to play with - it's simply to help him recover and allow his
parents to help him do so. Good luck to him - and to your family.

Just Zis Guy
  
Zog The Undeniable wrote:

>> Not a word about helmets. Amazing.
> He wasn't wearing one.

I guessed wrong, then ;-)

> Doubt it would have done a whole lot of good in a bike-car collision though, especially as Subaru
> Imprezas tend to be driven by lunatics who think they're Colin McRae. Basically, no-one can prove
> their efficacy, hence the full £5m.

I know they can't - I am a CTC member, we get occasional news from the Cyclists' Defence Fund who
help fight the Axis of Weasels in cases like this.

--
Guy

Marvin is dead, long live Zaphod!

Zog The Undenia
  
Just zis Guy, you know? wrote:

> I know they can't - I am a CTC member, we get occasional news from the Cyclists' Defence Fund who
> help fight the Axis of Weasels in cases like this.

Me too - as well as the people who make money from selling helmets, the road lobby would love us all
to wear them to help demonstrate how unsafe cycling is, then they can finally legislate us off the
roads and onto the pavement where we belong.

Nick Kew
  
In article <e883f4a5.0310020657.d54d698@posting.google.com>, one of infinite monkeys
at the keyboard of spamdump@chapmancentral.com (Guy Chapman) wrote:

> The accident left him with severe brain damage, paralysis in his legs and arms and unable to speak
> coherently.

IOW, well and truly buggered.

> He was given up to £5 million compensation in an out-of-court settlement on Thursday.

For a road casualty that's a lot.

look so much at all. Especially when you consider this victim's family are actually having to spend
lots of money on him.

> It followed an interim compensation payment of £450,000 in 2002 by the driver's insurers.

Well, it does look like an insurer doing the Right Thing. Lets have some more awards like this, and
stop the despicable practice of road victims subsidising motor insurance.

--
Axis of Evil: Whose economy needs ever more wars? Arms Exports $bn: USA 14.2, UK 5.1, vs France 1.5,
Germany 0.8 (The Economist, July 2002)

Simon Brooke
  
spamdump@chapmancentral.com (Guy Chapman) writes:

> Not a word about helmets. Amazing.

Presumably he was wearing one; otherwise, they'd have said.

--
simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/

' ' <------- this blank intentionally spaced left

Zog The Undenia
  
Simon Brooke wrote:

> Presumably he was wearing one; otherwise, they'd have said.
>
Bzzzzt, thank you for playing.

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