A driver was found guilty of causing the death of the daughter of the Ecuadorian former presidential candidate Carlos Sagnay de la Bastida.
Vanessa Sagnay de la Bastida, 28, was struck by Octavian Cadar‘s Mercedes while he was driving at 48mph in a 20mph limit on the approach to Wandsworth Bridge in London in March 2022. The impact was so severe that Sagnay somersaulted in the air before landing on a railing and suffering a fatal head injury, The Guardian reported.
Sagnay and her partner, Michael Williams, were holding hands as they began to cross the road at a pedestrian crossing after checking it was clear.
As Cadar’s speeding car approached, they fled in different directions. Williams told the court, “At first I froze. I was so confused. And then I took a couple of steps forward to get towards the central reservation.” Sagnay ran back the way they had come and was hit on the left-hand side by Cadar’s car in the bus lane.
“She fell on the front of the car. She went on to a street sign. There was a loud bang. I screamed and I crossed the street. I tried to call the ambulance… I was on the phone to the emergency services and that is when the driver of the car came out,” he said.
“He was shouting. He was angry and he was saying: ‘Why did you freeze? Why didn’t you keep walking?’… I said to him, ‘Because we were terrified,’” he added.
Cadar initially claimed he was trying to avoid the couple and accused them of “messing around in the road.” However, he later admitted to jurors that he had wrongly tried to blame the couple in a subsequent police interview. A forensic expert estimated that had Cadar been driving at 30mph, the couple would have been able to safely complete their crossing to the traffic island.
The judge, Anuja Dhir KC, acknowledged the pain the tragedy had caused Sagnay’s mother and Williams, who were holding hands in court as they showed relief when the unanimous verdict was delivered. Cadar will be sentenced at a later date.
Vanessa Sagnay de la Bastida, 28, was struck by Octavian Cadar‘s Mercedes while he was driving at 48mph in a 20mph limit on the approach to Wandsworth Bridge in London in March 2022. The impact was so severe that Sagnay somersaulted in the air before landing on a railing and suffering a fatal head injury, The Guardian reported.
Sagnay and her partner, Michael Williams, were holding hands as they began to cross the road at a pedestrian crossing after checking it was clear.
As Cadar’s speeding car approached, they fled in different directions. Williams told the court, “At first I froze. I was so confused. And then I took a couple of steps forward to get towards the central reservation.” Sagnay ran back the way they had come and was hit on the left-hand side by Cadar’s car in the bus lane.
“She fell on the front of the car. She went on to a street sign. There was a loud bang. I screamed and I crossed the street. I tried to call the ambulance… I was on the phone to the emergency services and that is when the driver of the car came out,” he said.
“He was shouting. He was angry and he was saying: ‘Why did you freeze? Why didn’t you keep walking?’… I said to him, ‘Because we were terrified,’” he added.
Cadar initially claimed he was trying to avoid the couple and accused them of “messing around in the road.” However, he later admitted to jurors that he had wrongly tried to blame the couple in a subsequent police interview. A forensic expert estimated that had Cadar been driving at 30mph, the couple would have been able to safely complete their crossing to the traffic island.
The judge, Anuja Dhir KC, acknowledged the pain the tragedy had caused Sagnay’s mother and Williams, who were holding hands in court as they showed relief when the unanimous verdict was delivered. Cadar will be sentenced at a later date.