UK says fatal crash suspect doesn’t have diplomatic immunity

UK says fatal crash suspect doesn’t have diplomatic immunity
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A road sign asking drivers to drive slowly is pictured in the villgae of Croughton in Northamptonshire, central England on October 10, 2019, near to where British motorcyclist Harry Dunn was killed as he travelled along the B4031 on August 27. (AFP)
UK says fatal crash suspect doesn’t have diplomatic immunity
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Tim Dunn, (R), father of teenage motorcyclist Harry Dunn who was killed in a collision with a car, arrives for a meeting with Britain's Foreign Secretary and First Secretary of State Dominic Raab at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in central London on October 9, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 14 October 2019
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UK says fatal crash suspect doesn’t have diplomatic immunity

UK says fatal crash suspect doesn’t have diplomatic immunity
  • British police say the 42-year-old woman is a suspect in an Aug. 27 collision between a car and a motorcycle near RAF Croughton

LONDON: British media are reporting that the wife of an American official who left the UK after being involved in a fatal road accident no longer has diplomatic immunity.
BBC and Sky News said Sunday that UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab had told the family of Harry Dunn that “immunity is no longer pertinent” because the suspect has left the UK The Foreign Office declined to comment.
Dunn, 19, was killed in August when his motorcycle collided with a car outside a British air force base in southern England used by the US military. The alleged car driver, Anne Sacoolas, who is married to a US official, subsequently left Britain.
Sacoolas’ lawyer, Amy Jeffress of Arnold and Porter, said: “Anne is devastated by this tragic accident” and wants to meet Dunn’s parents.