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Woman, 21, critical after horror police pursuit smash, teen charged

Patrick Begley

Updated ,first published

Three women are in hospital, including a 21-year-old in a critical condition, after their car was crashed into during a police pursuit in Sydney’s south-west on Wednesday night

The horror crash is part of a growing trend, according to new figures, which show the number of collisions related to high-speed police chases have more than doubled in a decade.

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Officers are launching nearly three times as many pursuits as they were in 2014, when one coroner compared the practice to “Russian roulette”.

Over the same period, the police force has rejected seven separate calls from the NSW Coroners Court to restrict the use of pursuits to better protect public safety.

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A 21-year-old passenger of the BMW sedan is in hospital in a critical condition.Nine News

The crash in Liverpool on Wednesday night occurred after police twice pursued a Ford ute, which was allegedly speeding, had failed to stop at a red light and failed to stop for police, NSW Police said in a statement.

Police allege the ute sped through another red light and collided with a BMW sedan and a Toyota hatchback shortly after 11pm. A 21-year-old female passenger of the sedan was taken to Liverpool Hospital in a critical condition, while the 21-year-old female driver and another female passenger were in serious conditions.

The allegedly unlicensed 17-year-old driver of the ute, which police say was stolen, was taken to hospital as a precaution and arrested upon his release on Thursday morning.

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He has been charged with eight offences including two counts of aggravated dangerous driving occasioning grievous bodily harm escaping pursuit, police said in a statement.

Yearly totals for injuries and fatalities related to pursuits have fluctuated, but in the past 10 years NSW has recorded 568 injuries and 24 deaths.

Among those killed was father-of-two Harri Jokinen, who was driving on a stretch of NSW highway just outside the ACT in December 2021 when a speeding driver being pursued by police crashed into his van.

Elisabeth Adamson’s partner Harri Jokinen was killed in 2021 when his car was struck by another involved in a high-speed police pursuit.

“The response from NSW Police is so thoroughly inadequate,” Elisabeth Adamson, Jokinen’s widow, told the Herald. “It’s just crushing.”

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Adamson had told the coroner’s court in a statement, “I am devastated we don’t get to grow old together.” Jokinen’s daughter Lisa testified that she wished she, too, had been killed that day.

Deputy State Coroner Rebecca Hosking found the police pursuit was excessively risky and should not have been authorised.

The coroner recommended that NSW Police should adopt a new standard: chasing only when satisfied that a “serious risk” to health and safety existed before an attempt to stop a vehicle.

But in a response released last week, NSW Police warned that threshold could lead to “unintended adverse consequences”.

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“Several traffic offences may not meet this threshold for pursuits in every circumstance,” Commissioner Mal Lanyon wrote in a letter to Attorney-General Michael Daley. Lanyon said all traffic offences “pose significant risks to the community and efforts should be made by police to stop drivers contravening the law”.

Adamson, who is due to meet the commissioner next week, said the pursuit rules were lax and contradicted the core mission of NSW Police, which is to protect public safety.

NSW Police says it does not keep count of how many police officers and innocent bystanders are hurt or killed as a result of pursuits.

Outside the NSW Coroners Court at Lidcombe, Lisa Jokinen embraces her late father’s partner.Jessica Hromas

Last financial year, NSW recorded 5029 chases, 468 collisions, 36 injuries and three deaths, according to the latest police annual report.

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Media reports indicate at least seven people have been killed as a result of pursuits since January. They include a 19-year-old motorcyclist and a 20-year-old motorcyclist, who crashed in separate incidents after allegedly failing to stop for police.

An officer involved in the pursuit of 16-year-old Aboriginal boy Jai Kalani Wright, who crashed and died in Alexandria in 2022, was found guilty of dangerous driving occasioning death last month.

Andrew Stark, 48, was killed in a crash during a police pursuit in Gunnedah in 2022.

NSW Police are allowed to chase even when the suspected offence would be punishable by a fine. Officers launch most pursuits in response to suspected traffic offences or failures to stop for random breath tests.

Father-of-three Andrew Stark, from Gunnedah in the state’s north, was killed in a crash in 2022 when he failed to stop for police, who had noticed his car was not registered.

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In 2014, Deputy State Coroner Hugh Dillon called for major reforms to what he called a “Russian roulette” pursuit policy after an inquest into the death of Hamish Raj, 21, who crashed his motorbike during a chase.

Police took nine years to officially reject the key recommendations.

“Road safety and public confidence may be undermined if there was a public perception that the road rules are not being enforced,” former commissioner Karen Webb wrote in a 2023 response.

“It could encourage minor traffic offenders not to pull over for police if they think they will not be pursued.”

Webb added that it could lead to resentment from other motorists who might ask “why am I being fined just because I did the right thing and pulled over”.

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Other states have significantly tightened their pursuit rules, including Queensland in 2011. Australian Federal Police officers are allowed to pursue in cases of serious public health and safety risks or offending that has caused serious injury or death.

A spokeswoman for NSW Police declined to say why pursuit and collision numbers had risen sharply, referring only to unnamed “operational factors”.

The spokeswoman said all pursuits were subject to strict oversight and that the safety of the public, the offending driver, passengers, road users and officers was the primary focus of NSW Police.

“Ultimately, police assess and respond to the individual circumstances of the pursuit and offending driver,” she said.

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Patrick BegleyPatrick Begley is an investigative reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via X or email.

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