The 7-year-old died after being knocked down in April 2021
A witness to an accident that claimed the life of a seven-year-old girl in West Belfast five years ago told an inquest that a noise he heard at the time still “haunts” him to this day.
Deirdre Crawford left home at 5.50pm on April 3, 2021, to bring a present to a work colleague’s house for their 30th birthday. As she drove up Springhill Avenue, Mrs Crawford’s blue Renault Captur car hit Kaitlin McCoubrey-Fullerton, who sadly died at the scene. No prosecution was taken against her by the PSNI after the incident.
An inquest into the young girl’s death took place this week at Belfast Laganside Court, with the evidence focused on the circumstances before Kaitlin entered the road, what happened as she did so, and the layout and condition of Springhill Avenue.
READ MORE: ‘Our blue-eyed girl’: Belfast parent’s tribute to schoolgirl who died after being struck by carREAD MORE: ‘I was numb’ – Driver who hit child in fatal West Belfast crash gives evidence at inquest
Additionally, the inquest has examined the presence of parked vehicles and a speed ramp, as well as the driver’s control.
When the hearing resumed on Wednesday, witness Martin McGahan recalled calling to the home of his friend Gerard McGivern and his wife, Carmel for a barbecue at Springhill Avenue that evening. He said it was a “beautiful, dry and sunny” Easter Saturday, adding, “It felt like summer had arrived.”
“There were a lot of people in the street, mostly sitting in their gardens and plenty of kids in the street. The play park on Springhill Avenue was packed with children. I could smell barbecues as I walked up the street. The atmosphere was amazing, it felt really lively,” he said.
“There were cars parked on either side of the street, partly on the road and pavement, which made it very narrow for traffic. Because of all the cars and children, it meant that anyone driving on the street had to go very slow.”
Mr McGahan said he was sitting in the front garden and had just drunk his first couple of mouthfuls of beer when, shortly after 6pm, he saw a sky blue car pass in front of the house.
He added: “The car didn’t appear to be doing any speed as it passed. Around the same time, I remember hearing the sound of a car suddenly stopping or braking, although it wasn’t a skidding sound.
“It also sounded like something being sucked under a car. There was a gasp from the street and then silence. From the noise I heard, I knew something had been hit by a car. I thought it was possibly a child.”
Mr McGahan added that as soon as he heard the noise and saw the car pass, he jumped up and rushed out of the garden.
“We were all worried it was one of Gerard’s children that had been hit. I ran around a car and saw a young girl with red hair lying on the road. She was completely still. I thought she had no chance, that she was dead.
“There were two young women near the car. One of them said there’d been in an accident and that they’d just seen a flash of her hair.”
Mr McGahan then rang 999 and paramedics arrived soon after: “They didn’t seem to do much. I asked one of them if there was anything I could do to help, but they indicated she was beyond help.
“Then the parents of the child arrived. The girl’s father, who was really distressed, lifted her shoe, which had been lying on the road and threw it up the street in the direction of the Springfield Road. Both of them were shouting at the girl to wake up.”
He added: “The family of the driver were in a complete panic. They were asking me if the girl was OK. When I told them she had died, they were distraught.”
Under cross examination by David Reid, counsel for the coroner, Mr McGahan said he also recalled hearing a scraping noise when the car hit a speed ramp.
“That noise still haunts me to this day,” he added.
In her evidence, Carmel McGivern recalled being in her garden with Mr McGahan and others when she heard what “sounded like a wheelie bin or someone’s wing mirror being struck by a car”.
“I knew a vehicle had hit something. It was loud enough to make my stomach turn. When I heard voices, I knew from their tone that something serious had happened. Someone had been knocked down,” she added.
When Mrs McGivern got up and ran straight out through the garden gate onto the street, she observed a stationary car and a young girl lying in the middle of the road.
She recalled: “There was no sign of life at all. My immediate thought was that she was gone. I knelt down beside her and said, ‘I’ve got you, sweetie, I’m here for you’ – ‘you’ve been in an accident, there’s help coming’.
“I lightly stroked her back and pulled her hair back from her face to behind her ear. I held her hand and just kept whispering soothing things to her, calling her by her name and telling her she was loved”.
When questioned about the conditions on the road in terms of how busy it is for traffic, Mrs McGivern replied: “Springhill Avenue is a very busy street, and very active with kids and cars constantly going up and down the street. Some of them respect the speed and some don’t. A lot of people are on their mobile phones. It’s still like that today.”
She added: “I think if the drivers were made aware that maybe there was a camera watching, they might slow down and not use their phones as much. I do see a lot of people on their phones.”
Sean Dodds, who was driving behind the blue Renault Captur, after collecting his own daughter, when it hit Kaitlin recalled: “There were cars parked on either side of the road, meaning it was very tight for traffic getting through. It was Easter weekend, so there were loads of people in the area. I remarked to my partner that it was crazy how busy it was.
“The road is a long straight with a couple of speed bumps along it. My partner’s car had new alloy wheels, which I did not wish to damage, so I took it very slowly over the speed bumps.
“I volunteered to take my daughter home before returning to pick up my partner. I left at about 6:10pm with my daughter in a child seat in the rear of the car. I didn’t have the radio on and the windows were closed.”
Mr Dodds said the car in front driving at a constant speed and not fast: “All of a sudden there was a sharp movement towards the road. I distinctly remember a young girl with red hair running out straight across the road. I’m not sure where she was looking when she ran out.
“The car in front of me had either reached the speed bump or was just before it when the girl ran out immediately in front of the car.
“I don’t recall seeing the car in front brake or swerve prior to impact. It all happened very quickly. The car seemed to hit her as soon as she came out. She was struck by the front of the car in the front of the passenger side.”
He added: “I didn’t hear any noise prior to impact and don’t recall hearing the impact itself. She went straight under the car. I had a clear view of her under the car and that’s the image I can remember to this day. She was like a wee doll, not like a person.
“I could hear shouting and screaming outside. I was in shock and didn’t want my daughter to be exposed to what had happened. I reversed into a cul-de-sac and drove back up to where I’d come from. I told the people in the house what had happened and a while later, police came and took my details as a witness.”
A forensic scientist who attended the scene afterwards also gave evidence on Wednesday, saying an examination of the Renault car revealed no pre-collision defects and that the road surface was in good condition with no irregularities.
When questioned on driver perception-response time, he told the inquest: “I’m not aware of what the driver could have done differently, unfortunately.”
The inquest has now concluded its evidence and the coroner will deliver her findings in due course.
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