
Lillie Clack: Mum calls for law change after drink-driving crash
A mother has called for changes in the law after her daughter was killed in a drink-driving crash where she was a passenger.Lillie Clack, 22, of Morden, south-west London, was injured in the crash in the early hours of Christmas Day 2021 and died three days after.She was among six people in a Mercedes that hit a tree following a police chase, flipped over and burst into flames in Carshalton. The driver, Charlie Hilton, was jailed in 2023 for causing Lillie's death by dangerous driving and driving above the alcohol limit.Following a coroner's ruling of unlawful killing, Debbie Clack is urging lifetime driving bans for motorists involved in fatal crashes while under the influence.
Sebastian Naughton, assistant coroner for London South, said the evidence showed Hilton's actions could be considered as gross negligence as he fled police reaching speeds of more than 100mph (161km/h), carried out an illegal U-turn and ran a red a light as passengers inside the car begged him to stop.Speaking after the inquest at South London Coroner's Court, Lillie's mother said: "Lillie went through a horrific ordeal and we are continuing to live through this every day."She added: "Hilton killed my daughter."He pleaded guilty to causing her death by dangerous driving while more than twice the legal alcohol limit, running from the police, refusing to stop, losing control of his car, and crashing into a tree."She is calling for lifetime driving bans for anyone convicted of causing death by dangerous driving while under the influence and for tougher penalties for dangerous drivers.
Ms Clack said the crash caused a bleed on Lillie's brain and she died on 28 December. "She was just 22. My baby girl," she said."If going through today's pain means something changes, if it shines a light on what went wrong and stops even one other family from feeling this kind of grief, then it was worth it."It cannot be right that any driver involved in a fatal crash gets to go home still carrying their licence in their pocket. It is also the case that too often those convicted of injuring people by their dangerous driving can one day return to the road."What happened to Lillie, her family, friends and the whole community, has to mean something. We all need to believe that lessons will be learned."
'In trouble'
The friends had been enjoying a Winter Wonderland attraction and visited a pub in Morden before accepting a lift home from Hilton.The car crashed in Beeches Avenue, Carshalton.In February 2023, Hilton was jailed at the Old Bailey for 10 years and six months after pleading guilty to causing Lillie's death by dangerous driving, three counts of causing serious injury, failing to stop when directed and driving above the alcohol limit.The coroner suggested Hilton "possibly knew he was in trouble due to the number of people in his vehicle", that the U-turn was "practically inviting the police to pursue" and he would have known he was over the alcohol limit to drive.He "made no effort to ascertain" if his passengers were wearing their seatbelts.
In his findings the coroner said: "Despite repeated requests from passengers throughout the pursuit to slow down or stop, the driver of the Mercedes would not stop or slow down after the police were no longer in pursuit of the Mercedes."The Mercedes was travelling at about 70mph - in a 30mph speed zone - just seconds before the car went over a raised pedestrian crossing."The driver of the Mercedes lost control of the vehicle, was weaving before striking kerbs on both sides of the road and leaving the carriageway, striking a tree and the Mercedes," Mr Naughton said."Lillie sustained serious chest and head injuries in the collision."Due to the severity of her injuries there was no possible surgical intervention. Lillie deteriorated and died on 28 December 2021."It is not possible to say if her injuries could have been mitigated if her seatbelt had been fastened."Complications of a head injury was given as the cause of death in a post-mortem examination.
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The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Netflix star Sara Burack's tragic last hours before hit & run death as friend slams cops and begs suspect to speak up
THE best friend of a reality TV star killed in a hit and run on Thursday alleges police have left her family "in the dark" about the motorist who fled the scene. Netflix's Million Dollar Beach House star Sara Burack, 40, was found unconscious by a roadside in The Hamptons in New York shortly before 3 am on Thursday, authorities have confirmed. 4 She was taken to hospital with severe injuries and died hours later surrounded by those closest to her. Sara's close friend Paulette Orlando-Corsair told The U.S. Sun she was with her pal during her final moments and is appealing for help to find the driver. She said, "I don't know what she was doing at the time, she would just galavant, she lives near there and could have been visiting someone. "I don't know if she just stepped out into the street and someone just mowed her down. "At that time of night you're not really thinking a car is gonna come by, maybe she wasn't paying attention. I don't know what happened. "I know people that saw her that night, she was in good spirits. There's no doubt in my mind, she didn't jump in front of a car." Asked about the police investigation, she said, "We've been left in the dark here. "I'm p****ed off at them because she died and it was already written about an hour later, her father didn't even know what was going on, I'm really upset at that. "The father is not well at home alone. I was with her mother at the hospital." Orlando-Corsair also insisted Burack was not pronounced dead shortly after the accident, saying she kept fighting and "lingered on for quite a while." ESPN legend John Brenkus' tragic cause of death aged 54 announced as family make desperate plea "She was on life support and after she was taken off she still lived for another half an hour," her friend continued. 'The doctors said, 'We don't know if she can hear you but you can talk to her.' "We kept on saying, 'Sara, we're here for you, you're not alone.' I wanted her to know she wasn't alone. "It's just sickening. How can you hit someone and just take off like that? "It was a very commercial area, there's several eating establishments, a gas station, all the things. "I don't know if they've found the person yet or they're still looking. They haven't told me anything." Paulette went on, "I'm wondering if it was a drunk driver. The Hamptons is notorious for DWI. That's our crime here. "I would pray that anyone who saw this or knows anything about it to please contact the town of Southhampton police, which is ironically two minutes from where this happened. "They can just walk in there, even if they want to tip anonymously. Leave a paper at the police station." She begged, "Please do it. Someone died in a horrendous way. "Her brain was so damaged, she had multiple fractures, so much swelling, brain bleeding, her liver was damaged, her leg was broken in two places." Both a New York State Police Accident Reconstruction Unit and detectives from the Southampton Town Police Department investigated the scene. The U.S. Sun has made several attempts to contact the Town of Southhampton Police Department. Burack had previously said her family ran a commercial construction and material sales business that she spent years working for before moving into the luxury real estate market. "I have always been intrigued by real estate projects and decided to become a broker after my experience as a summer property manager in the summer house I would rent," she told Burack was a household name for fans of Netflix reality show Million Dollar House, which saw real estate agents pitted against one another. "The competition is fierce - and the drama undeniable - as a group of young and hungry agents try to seal the deal on luxury listings in the Hamptons," according to the description of the show on Netflix's website. Burack had described the show as a glimpse into the lavish lifestyle of the rich and aspiring. "Viewers will be taken into the world of the Hamptons where they will see not only beautiful multimillion-dollar beach homes and estates, but will be shown summer in the Hamptons," she told "With scenes from broker open houses, polo games, yacht life and more, there is sure to be an awww from viewers!" Anyone with information about the crash is asked to call police at 631-702-2230 or 631-728-3400. 4 4


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Real life 'Wolf Of Wall Street' corrupt City boss who remains on the run is ordered to pay back £64million after Ponzi-style scam
A City boss compared to the Wolf Of Wall Street has been ordered to pay back £64million over his role in a gigantic Ponzi-style investment scam, prosecutors said. Anthony Constantinou remains on the run after he fled the UK during his trial at London 's Southwark Crown Court in June 2023. He was found guilty of seven counts of fraud by false representation, fraudulent training and money laundering and convicted in his absence to 14 years imprisonment. Constantinou enjoyed a playboy lifestyle, driving a fleet of flash motors and riding around on a superbike branded the logo of his company, Capital World Markets (CWM). The 41-year-old crook spent millions on sponsorship deals designed to make CWM appear successful and draw in potential clients. He duped hundreds of investors out of a total of £70million between 2013 and 2015 while he ran Capital World Markets (CWM). A spokesman for City of London Police said a confiscation order was made against him on Thursday for the sum of £64 million, which is payable within three months. Police released photographs of some of the luxury vehicles Constantinou spent his fraudulent money on, including a Porsche, Range Rover and luxury motorbike. They previously said he was thought to be in Turkey or Dubai after being stopped in Bulgaria with a fake Spanish passport. CWM had high-profile sponsorship deals with sports events or teams including the Honda Moto GP, Chelsea Football Club, Wigan Warriors rugby league club, Cyclone Boxing Promotions and the London Boat Show. The seven-week trial heard how Constantinou spent £2.5million of investors' money on his 'no expense spared' wedding on the Greek island of Santorini in September 2014, while his son's first birthday party a few days earlier cost more than £70,000. More than £470,000 was paid for private jet hire to fly him and his associates to Moto GP races across Europe as well as a return flight to Nice for a 150,000-euro five-day yacht cruise around the Mediterranean to Monaco. The firm paid £200,000 a quarter to rent 'plush' offices in the City's Heron Tower, while nearly £600,000 was spent on just six months' rent of his large home in Hampstead, north-west London, where his luxury cars were parked in the drive. Promised returns of 60 per cent each year on risk-free foreign exchange (FX) markets, a total of 312 investors trusted their money to CWM. Some were professionals but most were individuals who handed over their life savings or pension pots, with a large number of Gurkhas paying into the scheme, said prosecutor David Durose KC. Constantinou denied wrongdoing but was found guilty of one count of fraud, two counts of fraudulent trading and four counts of money laundering and sentenced to 14 years in prison in his absence. Adrian Foster, of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), said: 'This was a callous scam targeting members of the public. Many people lost their hard-earned money because of Constantinou's greed and false promises in this fake investment scheme. 'We continue to pursue the proceeds of crime robustly with the City of London Police, where we identify available assets to disrupt and deter large-scale frauds like this case. 'In the last five years, over £478million has been recovered from CPS obtained confiscation orders, ensuring that thousands of convicted criminals cannot profit from their offending. £95 million of that amount has been returned to victims of crime, by way of compensation.' Constantinou has been photographed socialising with Princess Beatrice and showing Princess Anne around his company premises after agreeing to sponsor the London Boat Show in 2015. Constantinou was previously jailed for a year at the Old Bailey in 2016 after being found guilty of sexually assaulting two women during after-work drinks. One of the victims described how the parties were just like the raucous scenes depicted in Martin Scorsese's The Wolf Of Wall Street, starring Leonardo DiCaprio as rogue New York trader Jordan Belfort. The court heard that in October 2014, Constantinou pushed a woman up against the frosted glass of the reception area and went on to grope and kissed her against her will. Then in February 2015, he assaulted another woman during drinks after a business meeting. During the meeting, Constantinou threw her mobile against a wall and told her: 'Don't answer phones in my meeting.' Constantinou was three years old when his fashion tycoon father Aristos was gunned down in his Bishop's Avenue mansion in 1985. The unsolved case was dubbed the 'Silver Bullet Murder' due to the six nickel-jacketed bullets that ended Aristos's rags-to-riches life. One of Constantinou's investors spoke to Mail Online in 2023 about his boss' appetite for bad behaviour. The man, who first met Constantinou in 2014, said: 'He put out this image of himself as being hyper successful and I think essentially that's what I fell for. 'Initially I had dismissed the whole thing as too good to be true but I saw so much evidence of it being genuine that I convinced myself that it was. I should have listened to my gut. 'I thought essentially if this is a scam he wouldn't have gone to this much effort. It was very elaborate and there were a lot of people involved. 'The clever thing he did was he did actually have a properly regulated FX business in London but he ran the Ponzi alongside it - that was quite clever. 'So seeing the office, his house, the chauffeur driven Rolls Royce he got around in and all these sponsorship deals - it did all look very genuine. 'If Chelsea are being sponsored by them and he's meeting showing Princess Anne and showing her round the office it feels legit.' After a few meetings with Constantinou and his CWM colleagues in 2014, it was agreed that the businessman would invest £140,000 and work with the company to set up a Dubai base. It was while working alongside Constantinou in his 'Wolf of Wall Street' style trading floor, that he saw how difficult, volatile and untrustworthy the fraudster could be. He continued: 'Every single business meeting - and I mean every single one - he would force everyone in the meeting to drink. 'It was always the same, Grey Goose vodka mixed with orange and cranberry juice and he'd force everyone to stay and get drunk. 'The drinking would start from 2pm in the afternoon and go on until 10 or 11 at night and it was every single meeting, every day. 'He was like a spoiled child king. Nobody could leave these sessions or he'd have a tantrum and lose his s***. 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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Karen Read haters furious as they spot detail in juror's online bio that 'should have excluded her from the trial'
A juror in the controversial Karen Read trial has sparked outrage after online sleuths spotted alarming details in her X profile. Paula Prado was the 11th of 12 jurors who spectacularly acquitted Read earlier this week over the murder of her Boston cop boyfriend earlier this week. The verdict came Wednesday following two trials which gripped and divided the nation after the first collapsed into a mistrial. Prado said 'justice was served' after Read, 45, was cleared over the January 2022 murder of John O'Keefe. But now a detail in the juror's X bio has sparked concern and accusations of bias, which she was quick to slap down. The short profile states that Prado is a Brazilian attorney and 'true crime lover with a soft spot for justice'. The details have lead many to suggest that Prado should have been recused from jury duty. 'Juror number 11 in the Karen Read trial, already knows she's about to be held in contempt of court for juror fraud & deletes (one of) her X accounts,' one person wrote on X, in reference to Prado. A juror in the controversial Karen Read trial has sparked outrage after online sleuths spotted alarming details in her X profile. In her bio and her pinned post on X, she reveals she is a 'True Crime lover' and a 'licensed attorney in Brazil' sparking allegations of bias Many found these details disqualifying and made posts criticizing her for even agreeing to be on the jury that would let Read go Another wrote that they did not believe Prado, 'knew nothing about [Karen Read] prior to jury selection,' adding that, 'if you knew nothing, how is it one day later you are so informed?' 'So a self-described true crime lover was an unbiased juror in a high profile true crime trial in her backyard?' a third person questioned. Many of the people who posted about this controversy pointed out that Prado appears to be following pro-Karen Read accounts, as well as Aidan Kearney, alias Turtleboy, a journalist who extensively covered the trial. Others were frustrated that in her pinned post, Prado admits she is 'a licensed attorney in Brazil'. While attorneys are called to serve on juries just like any other citizen, they are often struck from the final roster because of how their occupation could influence their approach as a juror. Although Prado had many people attacking her, she had plenty of defenders, mirroring the polarizing nature of the trial itself. One woman replied to one of the posts slamming Prado and claimed that she only started following the various accounts on Thursday, the day after Read was acquitted. Prado then waded in and to try and quash the accusations. 'I am a licensed attorney in Brazil. I do not practice in Massachusetts. When I was asked what I do for work, I answered objectively,' Prado wrote. 'I have an MBA in Marketing and currently support a law office in Brazil with their digital marketing. I hope this clarifies things.' Read was acquitted after jurors rejected the prosecution's argument that she hit her boyfriend with an SUV and left him to die in the snow outside a house party. Her defense put forth a theory that Read was the victim of an elaborate plot to frame her by O'Keefe's law enforcement buddies, some of whom they suggested may have been the true culprits despite no charges being filed against them. In an interview with CBS News, Prado slammed investigators on the Read case for not doing their jobs and proving the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. 'I just want to tell them it's not our fault that Karen Read was not convicted,' she said. 'Even if there is any chance that she is guilty of something, or hurt him somehow, the Commonwealth or the investigators didn't do their jobs to prove that to us.' Prado said the prosecutors' case was full of inconsistencies and claimed there simply was not enough evidence to definitively conclude that a collision occurred on the day O'Keefe was found dead. Read sobbed in court after she was found not guilty in her second trial. Her first trial ended in July 2024, after a deadlocked jury could not come to a verdict. The jury in her retrial returned a not guilty verdict on the charges of murder and leaving the scene resulting in death on Wednesday. She was found guilty of Operating Under the Influence and sentenced to probation. Read, who wore a light blue suit, cried and hugged her lawyer Alan Jackson after the judge delivered the news. She has long maintained her innocence and insisted that she was framed by his police officer friends who were inside the house where he was found dead. In the years her case has wound through the courts, she managed to gain a cult following of supporters from the widespread social media coverage and hit HBO documentary of the case. Read was greeted by a massive crowd of pink-clad fans shouting 'Karen Read is free' after she left the court an innocent woman. Read thanked her lawyers and supporters in a brief press conference outside of the courthouse. 'I could not be standing here without these amazing supporters who have supported me and my team financially and more importantly emotionally for almost four years,' she said. 'No one has fought harder for justice for John O'Keefe than I have. Than I have, and my team.' The couple had been dating for two years at the time of O'Keefe's death. He had been serving on the Boston Police Department for 16 years. Several witnesses in the case, including some of those who were in the house that fateful night, released a statement calling the verdict a 'miscarriage of justice'. The witnesses who signed the statement included Jennifer McCabe, who made the infamous and misspelled 'Hos long to die in cold' Google search in the early morning hours of O'Keefe's death, and Brian Albert, who owned the home where the party took place. Read's defense claimed that the search was evidence of additional involvement in O'Keefe's death, which was ruled a result of blunt force trauma and hypothermia. 'While we may have more to say in the future, today we mourn with John's family and lament the cruel reality that this prosecution was infected by lies and conspiracy theories spread by Karen Read, her defense team, and some in the media. The result is a devastating miscarriage of justice,' the statement said. Read's supporters told Daily Mail they are ecstatic with the verdict and they are ready to help fight for justice for O'Keefe. 'God, this is just. The American jury system prevailed, and the Commonwealth failed. The Commonwealth failed its people. The jury came back with a just verdict,' said Rita Lombardi, who had been at court nearly every day. 'This is history, and this is what ordinary people did: ordinary people raised their voices in positive and productive ways to speak truth to power. 'My message to the people who did this to John is that you failed miserably. It's just the beginning.' The jury handed down its decision after deliberating for at least 22 hours.