Three men jailed over horror crash which killed four after driver boasted to police 'I'll get out and do the same again'

Three men have today been jailed over a car crash which killed four people, including a 16-month old baby.
Declan Bower, 23 (upper left), Mason Cartledge, 18 (Bottom left) and Elliot Bower, 19 (right) have all been jailed over the crash on November 9 last yearDeclan Bower, 23 (upper left), Mason Cartledge, 18 (Bottom left) and Elliot Bower, 19 (right) have all been jailed over the crash on November 9 last year
Declan Bower, 23 (upper left), Mason Cartledge, 18 (Bottom left) and Elliot Bower, 19 (right) have all been jailed over the crash on November 9 last year

And the teen driver, who killed the four people and injured three other when he ploughed a stolen car into a people carrier, told police after his arrest: ‘You can remand me if you like, I’ll get out and I’ll do, bang, the same thing again’.

Brothers Elliott and Declan Bower, and Mason Cartledge, were brought before Doncaster Crown Court this morning to be sentenced for their involvement in a crash that claimed the lives of three adults and a baby boy on November 9 last year.

They were collectively jailed for over 27-years.

Three men have now been jailed for over 25 years over the crash in South YorkshireThree men have now been jailed for over 25 years over the crash in South Yorkshire
Three men have now been jailed for over 25 years over the crash in South Yorkshire
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Elliott Bower, now 19, of Harborough Avenue, Sheffield, pleaded guilty to four counts of causing death by dangerous driving, three counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving and possession of cannabis. Today he also entered a guilty plea to failing to surrender to bail. He was jailed for a total of 11 years and six months and banned from driving for a decade.

Declan Bower, 23, also of Harborough Avenue, Sheffield, entered guilty pleas to aggravated vehicle taking, death caused by an accident with aggravating factors, two counts of driving while disqualified, two counts of driving without insurance, possession of a bladed article and possession of cannabis. He was jailed for a total of seven years and ten months and banned from driving for seven years.

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Mason Cartledge, now 18, of Severnside Place, Sheffield, entered guilty pleas to aggravated vehicle taking and death caused by an accident with aggravating factors, as well as possession of cannabis. He was jailed for a total of seven years and ten months and banned from driving for five years.

Emergency services at the scene of the crash in Darnell in which four people diedEmergency services at the scene of the crash in Darnell in which four people died
Emergency services at the scene of the crash in Darnell in which four people died

The collision took place in Main Road, Darnall and caused the deaths of Adnan Ashraf, 35, his 16-month-old son Mohammed Osman Mustafa Bin Adnan; and husband and wife Miroslav Duna, 50 and Vlasta Dunova, 41.

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Prosecutor, Richard Wright QC, told the court how at the time of the collision the Bower brothers were wanted for questioning by the police in respect of ‘serious offences’ and intended to evade arrest by ‘any available means’.

Police officers searching for the brothers located them on the Sheffield Parkway on the night of the collision, driving a stolen VW Golf with cloned license plates.

Elliott, 19, was driving the vehicle, Declan, 23, and Cartledge was in the passenger seat.

“Having noted the police vehicle, Bower left the Parkway at speed. He crossed a double solid white line and drove at speed on the wrong side of the road on a blind bend.

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“It was driven the wrong way around a roundabout and then doubled back onto the parkway. The Golf was driven at massive speeds far in excess of 100 mph whilst on the Parkway in wet conditions with many other road users present,” said Mr Wright.

He told the court that Elliott left the Parkway at speed and is estimated to have been travelling at speeds in the region of 79 miles per hour when he ‘ploughed’ the stolen vehicle into the VW Touran that was carrying the four killed and three seriously injured in the collision.

Mr Wright said the ‘first thought’ of Elliott and the third defendant was to ‘make a run for it,’ not only leaving behind the four killed and three injured in the collision, but also leaving Declan in the back seat with a broken leg.

He said: “They did not get far and were all detained at the scene. Declan Bower was seemingly unconcerned by the severity of the collision and was casually smoking a cigarette when arrested in the rear of the Golf.”

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Elliott was interviewed by police in the days following the collision, and initially denied being the driver of the vehicle.

He told officers: “You can remand me if you like, I’ll get out and I’ll do bang the same thing again and you lot will have to chase me.”

The third defendant told police during his interview: "That was no ones intention what happened, I cried when I heard last night". But when he was asked to sign the officer’s notebook to confirm this reply, he instead repeatedly swore at the officer and refused to sign.

Mr Wright said all of the defendants had failed to express any remorse for their actions.

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Adnan’s wife and Mohammed’s mum, Erika Kroscenova, 32, was seriously injured in the collision along with Miroslav and Vlasta’s 22-year-old daughter, Nikola Dunova and her three-year-old daughter Livia Matova.

Erika sustained multiple fractures to her limbs and a lacerated liver, while Nikola sustained a traumatic brain injury, fractures to her spine, to her ribs, a collapsed lung, tears to her liver, pelvic and tibial fractures.

Mr Wright said: “She remains gravely unwell and there is no clear prognosis of how or if her significant brain injury will recover.

“Livia was just three. She was a happy healthy child with development consistent with her age. In the collision she sustained a massive brain injury.

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“It is far too early to predict how she will progress. She has impaired vision and may lose her sight completely, she cannot stand or walk, she has to be tube fed and may never improve her ability to feed, she is unable to speak more than one or two words.

“There is a very real risk she will develop post traumatic epilepsy.”