Driver mistakenly hit wrong pedal in fatal crash
PA MediaA driver who killed a student when he mistakenly pressed the accelerator pedal instead of the brake of an electric van has been jailed for eight years.
Aalia Mahomed, 20, who was in her second year of studying a physics and philosophy degree at King's College London, died at the scene of the crash on the Strand on 18 March 2025.
Christopher Jackson, 27, from Southampton, had not previously driven an electric vehicle when he crashed into a metal gate seriously injuring two people before hitting the bench Aalia was sitting on.
He was sentenced at the Old Bailey after admitting causing death by dangerous driving and two counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving at a hearing last month.
In her victim impact statement read to the court, Aalia's mother Samira Shafi said losing her "most amazing daughter" had left an "unbearable void".
"We were like sisters and best friends," she said.
"We would watch TV, cook together, go to concerts together, we travelled the world together, had dinner together.
"When you lose a child, you don't just lose a presence of someone in your life, you lose a part of yourself."
Referring to Jackson, she said: "This man brought her bright future to an end.
"Instead of celebrating her graduation I'm choosing words for her gravestone."
Aalia's brother Zain described his sister as a "genius with a smile that could cut through steel".
"She was more than a sister, she was my best friend... my hero," he added.
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Met PoliceOn the morning of Aalia's death, Jackson had been instructed by his employer to pick up the electric Ford Transit van from Bush House, Aldwych, the Old Bailey heard.
As he left the site, he drove the vehicle at speed towards a set of iron gates leading to a pedestrian zone near King's College.
As the gates were forced open, bystanders Irem Yoldas and Yamin Belmessous were seriously injured by the impact.
The van then mounted a flower bed and briefly took off before hitting Aalia as she sat on a bench.
'Genuine remorse'
When confronted immediately after the crash, Jackson said he had "had no control" and the van "just took off", the court heard.
Judge Philip Katz KC told the court he was satisfied the defendant was "taken by surprise" as soon as he put the vehicle in motion, and added it was accepted he used the accelerator, believing it was the brake.
He also said he accepted the defendant's remorse was "immediate and genuine", adding: "You've been a hard working father of three young children, they and your partner will also be impacted by your prison sentence."
Jackson was jailed for eight years for causing death by dangerous driving, and three years each for the two counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving, which will run concurrently.
Jackson was told he would serve two-thirds of his sentence before being released on licence.
Roy Pershad, for the Crown Prosecution Service, said: "This was a catastrophic crash which claimed the life of Aalia, a young woman with her whole future ahead of her, and left two other people with life changing injuries."
He said although the crash resulted from "pedal confusion", Jackson's driving fell "far below the standard expected of a competent and careful driver".
Det Ch Supt Donna Smith, from the Metropolitan Police, said: "Our thoughts, as always, remain with Aalia's family and friends.
"We would also like to share our thoughts with the two other victims, whose lives have been forever changed. They continue to show remarkable courage, and we know their lives will never be the same."
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