Lucy Barnard struck a pothole on the way home – but the impact damaged her car exhaust.
A pregnant mum was nearly killed by a pothole after it damaged her car exhaust – and filled the vehicle with deadly gases.
Lucy Barnard, 26, was driving home on Walney Island, Cumbria, when her black Ford Fiesta hit a pothole and she heard a rattling sound.
Lucy had a carbon monoxide (CO) detector fitted in her car after her brother died from the colourless and odourless gas in 2023 and noticed the number on the screen begin to rise.
After getting home with partner Callum Legge, 25, and their two children, she decided to test to see if the exhaust was leaking, by opening and closing her windows to allow and restrict oxygen in the car.
To their terror, carbon monoxide levels inside the car were as high as 180 parts per million, which can be deadly to humans.
The mum is super aware of carbon monoxide dangers after an inquest ruled her brother Michael Barnard, 36, unwittingly died after his car filled up with the deadly colourless gas in August 17, 2023.
She is now campaigning for a legal requirement for cars to be fitted with carbon monoxide detectors.
Lucy said: “It’s given me a bit of PTSD in a way. It is heartbreaking to have experienced how my brother died. I feel so lucky that we had the detector and that I followed my own advice of not travelling in a car unless it has one in it.
“If we didn’t know it could have killed us. It is all a strange coincidence that it happened to my family. I knew exactly what was happening when we were doing the test, and it really was scary.
“You see this kind of thing happening and think it’ll never happen to you – but then it does, and it puts it all into perspective. This just proves it can happen to anyone at any time in any car model.”
An inquest at Cockermouth Coroners’ Court in February 2024 heard Michael’s carboxyhemoglobin levels were at 63 per cent, which was consistent with death.
The average level for a non-smoker is between 1 to 2 per cent, and in smokers it is 5 to 10 percent, according to the NHS.
It was revealed the toxic gas had entered into his white Volkswagen Scirocco through his faulty heating system when he was parked in his favourite spot on Walney Beach in North Scale, Cumbria.
He was later found by a dog walker, who had raised the alarm after she saw Michael slumped in the driver’s seat at around 6:35 am the next morning, August 18.
Lucy has said that after they suspected their car was leaking carbon monoxide, the first test they did was opening their car windows to see if it will lower, which it did.
Then they decided to pull the windows up and turn the heating system on full, which caused it to spike 180 particles per million (ppm). Around 200 ppm or greater will cause physical symptoms and is fatal in hours, according to co2metre.com
Lucy is currently six months pregnant and during pregnancy, exposure to high levels of carbon monoxide can reduce the amount of oxygen reaching the baby in the womb, potentially affecting its growth and development, according to the NHS.
Lucy revealed her dad, Terry, 63, looked at the car and said the exhaust was badly damaged from the pothole.
Lucy said: “We shot out of the car and haven’t used it since. We plan to scrap it, to fix it will cost almost as much as we bought it for so there was no point.
“We also don’t feel comfortable if we did get it fixed, getting inside or somehow having it just in case it was to leak again.”
The mum is now calling for greater awareness of carbon monoxide risks in vehicles, warning that the “silent killer” could be affecting more people than realised.
Cars are not legally required to carry carbon monoxide detectors but she wants to change that. Last year, she started a petition.
She needs 100,000 signatures for the UK Parliament’s Petition Committee to consider whether the issue should be debated.
Lucy said: “This could be happening to so many. It’s absolutely crazy. I think there will be more deaths if this isn’t addressed.”
She is urging people to invest in carbon monoxide detectors. Reflecting on the incident, she believes the presence of the detector ultimately saved her family.
“It was me, my partner and my children in the car,” she said. It could have taken all of our lives. This is definitely not spoken about enough.”
A link to Lucy’s petition can be found here.
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE.




You must be logged in to post a comment Login