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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Suzy Gibson & Shannen Headley & Alahna Kindred

Lorry driver left with life-changing injuries from crash forgives man who caused them

A lorry driver who was left with life-changing injuries after a horrific crash says he forgives the man who was jailed for causing it.

David Lewis was driving his light goods vehicle on an unlit stretch of a road in Lutterworth at about 1.50am in March 2020 when a box van on the wrong side of the road hit him head-on.

Both drivers had to be cut free from the crash, and David suffered fractures to his spine, neck, rib and sternum, along with brain injuries, internal bleeding and optical nerve damage, LeicestershireLive reports.

Constantin Muscalu, the other driver, suffered fractures to both arms, his spine and shoulder, after driving more than 1,000 miles from Northern Spain in the space of 34 hours.

David Lewis was left with life-changing injuries after a horrific smash (Leicester Mercury / BPM Media)

He was jailed for 20 months and banned from the road for two years and 10 months after he admitted a charge of causing serious injury by dangerous driving.

David has not fully recovered from his injuries and says sometimes he is in so much pain that he wishes he died in the crash.

However, he does not carry a grudge against Muscalu.

He said: "I'd have shaken his hand, if I'd been allowed in court, to let him know there's no bad feeling.

"It was an accident, a serious mistake and I know he didn't mean to cause what happened.

This was the scene of the crash on the A426 south of Lutterworth (Alex Hannam)

"It's a miracle I've recovered enough to be able to attend court."

David's partner, Hayley Bethel, was his carer for many months and both of them are receiving counselling following the incident.

She said: "Our lives have been ruined, but we didn't want him to go to prison. We've both got families."

David has been unable to return to the lorry driving job he loved and the future remains unclear, with ongoing treatment.

He is still suffering from back pains and is waiting for another operation on his shoulder, mentioning his brain injury is also "making things harder than it used to be".

He added: "I just want to get my life back really. The support I've had from family and friends has been amazing. The support from my partner Hayley has been out of this world.

"I've closure from it so we want to move on with our lives hopefully."

Constantin Muscalu, the other driver, was jailed for 20 months and banned from the road for two years and ten months after he admitted a charge of causing serious injury by dangerous driving (Alex Hannam)

David, then aged 45, was delivering NHS supplies on his way from a Rugby depot to make deliveries to Leicester's Glenfield and General hospitals at the time of the crash.

A GPS history of the Muscalu's van showed he left Spain 34 hours before the crash and during that time was driving for 22 hours and 17 minutes, covering 1,063 miles.

His longest continuous spell of driving was for four hours and 34 minutes and his longest break was two hours and 44 minutes - which the judge suggested might have been the ferry crossing to the UK.

A crash investigator's report showed Muscalu failed to see road markings near Lutterworth Golf Club or an illuminated 'keep left' bollard before the collision.

David was found to be no way at fault for the crash.

David said that he hopes his case will lead to a change in the rules surrounding breaks that need to be taken by drivers of smaller commercial vehicles, who do not face the same strict regulations as LGV drivers and may be tempted to press on with long journeys and ignore tiredness.

David Lewis was driving his light goods vehicle on an unlit stretch of road when a box van on the wrong side of the road smashed into him head on (Leicester Mercury / BPM Media)
David said he forgives the driver who smashed into him (Leicester Mercury / BPM Media)

Neil Bannister, prosecuting Muscalu at Leicester Crown Court, said: "The defendant was on the wrong side of the road, creating a substantial risk of danger, for a few seconds, or more.

"He must have been tired after a 1000-plus mile journey from Northern Spain with no evidence of any proper sleep."

Chloe Ashley, mitigating, said Muscalu offered his "sincerest apologies" to David, his partner and their son for the harm caused, physically and psychologically.

She said the defendant was the sole provider for his wife and four children and going into custody would put the family's rented accommodation at risk in Prahova, Romania.

Miss Ashley said: "He accepts it was a gross error of judgement. His employer has described him as a model employee."

Sentencing, Judge Ebrahim Mooncey said: "This is a very sad case and you're a hard-working family man.

"On this occasion, you worked more hours than you should have done and it clearly affected your concentration.

"Mr Lewis is also a hard working person, doing important duties on that morning and he suffered terrible injuries, from which he clearly still suffers.

"I accept your remorse is genuine. This case is too serious for anything other than immediate custody."

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