
Northumbria Police said Cliff, 49, from Lindisfarne Road in Hebburn, South Tyneside, was jailed for 27 months after he admitted causing serious injury by dangerous driving.
The plea
was on the basis that he did not realise Mrs Scott’s walking stick was in the
bus doors when he pulled away, and he would not have done so had he seen it.
According
to report, relatives of a pensioner who had a double leg amputation after she
was trapped under a bus have urged people to show more compassion for the
elderly after the driver was jailed.
Joan
Scott, then 83, was trying to get on a double-decker in Wallsend, North
Tyneside, in September 2021 when the driver, Scott Cliff, closed the doors and
pulled away.
He did not
know that her walking stick was trapped in the bus door, which caused her to be
dragged under the tyres, resulting in catastrophic injuries to her legs.
One had to
be amputated at the scene and the other in hospital.
Newcastle
Crown Court heard Cliff mistakenly believed the grandmother-of-three had
previously tried to ride the bus without a bus pass, which is why he closed the
doors on her.
After the
hearing on Thursday, Mrs Scott’s devastated family urged drivers to be more
considerate, or face the consequences.
Her son
Brian said: “I feel that the driver of the bus has, on that day, taken my
mother – taken the head of my family – in such a shocking way.
“She is
trapped in a broken body caused single-handedly by the actions of one person.
“Mr Cliff
held a position to help and protect the vulnerable by providing a place of
safety on the bus.
“But he
didn’t do that for my mother and that kills me.
“This was
so avoidable had Mr Cliff shown more compassion and consideration to my mother.
“He has
destroyed our family – and hope this horrendous incident makes other drivers of
all vehicles sit up and take note.”
Her
grandson Jack said: “My grandma is no longer herself in any way, shape or
form.”
Granddaughter
Sarah added: “The bus driver didn’t even give her the chance to present the bus
pass she had with her, all because he thought he recognised her as not
previously paying a fare or having a bus pass she had with her.
“He
decided to deny her entry on the bus and chose to close the doors in her face.
“How could
someone do that? She is in her 80s, and she meant no harm.”
After the
hearing, Pc Catherine Lloyd, who led the investigation, said: “There is no
doubt that Cliff’s actions have destroyed more than one life forever, and it
should act as a harrowing reminder to everyone as to what can happen if you are
behind the wheel of a vehicle and act carelessly, dangerously or without due
consideration to others.”
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