British woman pleads guilty to killing man in Australia e-scooter crash


A British backpacker pleaded guilty to killing a man in Perth, Australia, by striking him while riding an electric scooter drunk.

Alicia Kemp, 25, from Redditch in Worcestershire, admitted to dangerous driving causing death while under the influence of alcohol during an appearance, via video link, at the Perth Magistrates Court on Monday.

Prosecutors dropped a second charge of dangerous driving causing bodily harm to her passenger.

Dangerous driving causing death while intoxicated carries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years in Australia.

Ms Kemp had been drinking with a friend on 31 May before the pair were ejected from a bar. Later that evening, she hired an e-scooter and was travelling at 20-25kmph when she collided with Thanh Phan, a structural engineer, from behind.

Mr Phan, 51, described by relatives as a โ€œbeloved husband, father of two, brother, and dear friendโ€, suffered a serious head injury and died in hospital several days later from a brain bleed.

Ms Kempโ€™s female passenger, 26, sustained a fractured skull and broken nose, but survived. She herself suffered minor injuries.

File. E-scooters for hire are lined up in Melbourne's central business district
File. E-scooters for hire are lined up in Melbourne’s central business district (AFP/Getty)

The court previously heard that Ms Kempโ€™s blood alcohol reading was 0.158 โ€“ more than three times the legal limit of 0.05.

Prosecutors said CCTV footage showed her โ€œinexplicably dangerousโ€ riding moments before the accident.

Speaking outside the court, defence lawyer Michael Tudori said his client, as a โ€œyoung foreign national girl in our prison systemโ€, was โ€œnervous and worriedโ€ but relieved the secondary charge had been dropped.

โ€œSheโ€™s obviously done something stupid at the time,โ€ he said, โ€œthereโ€™s consequences, and she just wants to get on with her life.โ€

The collision made Mr Phan the first pedestrian in Western Australia to die in an e-scooter incident, prompting Perthโ€™s city council and other local governments to suspend hire schemes.

Western Australian law requires e-scooter riders to be over 16, wear a helmet, be sober and not carry any passenger.

Ms Kemp, who was in Australia on a working holiday visa, remains in custody and is scheduled to appear in the court for sentencing proceedings on 31 October. Her lawyer said heโ€™d like the sentencing process to be completed before Christmas, adding that her family in the UK was worried.

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