A pedestrian convicted of killing a cyclist by waving at her to ‘get off the f**king pavement’ has lost a bid to appeal against her three-year prison sentence.
Auriol Grey, 49, was caught on CCTV shouting and waving her arm aggressively at Celia Ward, 77, as she approached on her bicycle in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire.
Moments later the retired midwife veered off the kerb and fell into the path of an oncoming car. She was declared dead at the scene shortly after on October 20, 2020.
Grey, who is partially blind and has cerebral palsy, denied manslaughter but was found guilty after a retrial at Peterborough Crown Court.
Grey’s lawyer argued at the Court of Appeal that the sentence was ‘excessive’ and that an autism diagnosis secured after her trial may have made a difference in her case.
But Mr Justice Griffiths, sitting with Lord Justice William Davis and Judge Neil Flewitt, refused to grant permission for Grey to appeal against her sentence, concluding it was ‘not arguably manifestly excessive’.
Judges expressed their condolences to Mrs Ward’s family, with Mr Justice Griffiths concluding: ‘A blameless woman had been killed by the unlawful act of the applicant (Grey) with devastating impact upon the family she left behind and upon others including the entirely blameless driver of the car.’
He said the sentence passed ‘had to mark the gravity of the unlawful killing’ while taking into account mitigating factors, such as Grey’s disabilities.
Miranda Moore KC, representing Grey, in the ‘very unusual’ case, earlier told the court that a suspended sentence would have been ‘appropriate’.
The court heard that the issue of autism ‘only raised its head’ after Grey’s sentencing, with a subsequent psychologist report placing her within the ‘autism spectrum’ and saying she had a ‘limited understanding of her own emotions’.
Ms Moore said autism can give someone ‘fixed views’ and that an autistic person does not like people being close to them.
‘This was a lady being sentenced as an aggressive and territorial pavement user and it was her aggression and territoriality which made her behave in the way that she did,’ Ms Moore said.
‘Having read this report with her diagnosis that is so much more understandable.’
She also said criticisms of Grey for ‘showing no empathy’, ‘leaving the scene’ and over what she said to police were ‘less than fair… knowing what we know now’.
Ms Moore also challenged the way Grey’s sentenced was calculated, including the judge’s findings over evidence in the case and the weight given to mitigating factors.
Prosecutor Simon Spence KC, said the sentencing judge had applied legal guidelines ‘entirely properly’, arguing that the new psychologist report did not reduce Grey’s culpability.
Mr Justice Griffiths rejected Grey’s appeal arguments but noted she had expressed remorse for her offence and never intended to cause harm.
‘The judge placed very strong emphasis on the applicant’s (Grey’s) disabilities and their effect on her as mitigating features.
‘We do not consider that the recent psychology report calls for a greater reduction than was already given in this respect by the judge.’
Judge Sean Enright, sentencing Grey, of Huntingdon, previously said her actions were ‘not explained by disability’.
He said that Grey had no mental disorder or learning difficulties and he said the pavement was 2.4 metres wide at the relevant point, describing it as a ‘shared path on the ring road’.
In a statement released through police after Grey was sentenced, Mrs Ward’s widower David Ward said: ‘After 53 years of happy marriage, Celia was taken from me in a most horrific way, leaving me with my memories.
‘She was kind, calm, careful, cheerful and competent in all that she did.
‘Her death has caused me great suffering. We relied on each other, shared the same sense of humour and outlook on life, and enjoyed each other’s company.
‘I miss her terribly.’
Her daughter Gillian Hayter added in a statement released through police: ‘Her untimely death has turned our world on its head and there isn’t a day that goes by when I don’t wish I could pick up the phone to ask her advice, celebrate the special events in our lives or just tell her how much I love her.’
Speaking after Friday’s hearing, Ms Moore told reporters: ‘The law of manslaughter needs to change because the perception of risk does not cater for people who are mentally challenged as Auriol is.’
Speaking outside court, Alisdair Luxmore, Grey’s brother-in law, offered condolences to Mrs Ward’s family, adding: ‘Our actions today must diminish nothing from the suffering they’ve had to endure.’
He said: ‘We don’t believe that prison is the right place for someone in Auriol’s circumstances and frankly it’s a complete waste of taxpayers’ money. It’s doing no benefit to society and really it’s difficult to understand the point of it.
‘I think there are mitigating circumstances, her mental and her physical (conditions) and her eyesight, those issues all taken together mean she acts in a certain way that’s different from everybody else and it appears the law doesn’t take account of that or allow for that.’
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