
Anne Sacoolas, who is a US citizen, pleaded guilty to causing the death of the teenager, Harry Dunn, in a road crash in Northamptonshire in 2019.
The case was heard in the Old Bailey by Justice Bobbie Cheema-Grubb. The judge said that she could not compel her to appear in court in-person, but nothing is stopping her from attending the sentencing hearing scheduled for the week commencing November 28. She said that attending in-person and surrendering to the court voluntarily would be evidence of genuine remorse. The offence has a maximum sentence of five years imprisonment, which could also vary between three years of custody to a medium-sized community order.
Appearance via Video Link
Anne Sacoolas appeared by video link from the US and has pleaded guilty to causing the death of Harry Dunn by careless driving. She has been requested to appear in-person before the UK court for sentencing after she pleaded guilty. But Sacoolas has not pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving, which was accepted by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) after they consulted with Dunn's family.BREAKING: US citizen Anne Sacoolas, 45, has appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court via videolink accused of causing the death of Harry Dunn by dangerous driving – ending his family’s three-year wait for criminal proceedings to begin. pic.twitter.com/A4wH3xcmXa
— TalkTV (@TalkTV) September 29, 2022
Road Crash in 2019
On August 27, 2019, Sacoolas, 45, killed Dunn, 19, in a road accident outside the RAF Croughton US military base in Northamptonshire. Diplomatic immunity was asserted by the US administration, which protected her. Sacoolas left the UK, and there has been a three-year campaign to bring the case to court.The case was heard in the Old Bailey by Justice Bobbie Cheema-Grubb. The judge said that she could not compel her to appear in court in-person, but nothing is stopping her from attending the sentencing hearing scheduled for the week commencing November 28. She said that attending in-person and surrendering to the court voluntarily would be evidence of genuine remorse. The offence has a maximum sentence of five years imprisonment, which could also vary between three years of custody to a medium-sized community order.
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