Crash driver had previous history

Ravineel Avikash Sharma
Ravineel Avikash Sharma
Nine months before Scott David Millar killed his friend in a drunken crash in Alexandra, he nearly killed himself in an almost identical incident.

The 19-year-old yesterday appeared before the High Court at Dunedin where he pleaded guilty to manslaughter and reckless driving.

Ravineel Avikash Sharma, a 19-year-old apprentice plumber, died almost instantly in the passenger seat of Millar’s car when it  rolled down a steep bank after being driven  wildly for a sustained period on August 10 last year.

Yesterday, the defendant’s history of poor driving was revealed, including an eerily similar crash.

Crown prosecutor Robin Bates said Millar had accrued 85 demerit points and was granted police diversion after being charged with careless driving in November 2016.

On that occasion, he rolled his car 100m down a bank on Otago Peninsula.

Millar told police he could remember being out in Dunedin having "a few beers" but did not recall driving.

He was taken to hospital  with bruising on the brain and avoided conviction by completing a defensive driving course.

Less than a year after the near-miss, Millar was drinking with Mr Sharma and others at a commercial garage in Chicago St, Alexandra.

That evening, the defendant consumed at least one ‘‘road-cone beer bong’’, where the cone  was used as a funnel to consume the drink.

"This forces the drinker to consume a large amount of alcohol in a short period of time," a police summary said.

Hayden Crawley, who was at the gathering after recently moving to the area, was offered a ride home and at 11.45pm they left.

Millar was described by witnesses as "six out of 10" on a scale of intoxication and "too drunk to drive".

Mr Crawley queried the direction the defendant was travelling when he sped off.

They were taking "the long way home", Millar said.

The teen driver almost immediately lost control of his car, sliding through an intersection and mounting a footpath.

Without checking for damage, Millar again accelerated away, reaching speeds of up to 120kmh in a 50kmh zone.

Both passengers asked the driver to slow down as they reached  the open road but he would not, the court heard.

Mr Crawley noticed the speedometer showed Millar’s Nissan was travelling at or beyond 180kmh at one stage.

The defendant turned into an asphalt area near the Alexandra Airport terminal where he performed "donuts".

And the recklessness continued as he drove off down Coates Rd.

Millar used the handbrake to try to "drift" round a right-hand bend but lost control.

The car rolled down a steep bank and came to a violent halt when it collided with a pine tree.

The roof directly above Mr Sharma bore the brunt of the force and he sustained severe head and neck injuries which killed him "almost immediately", Mr Bates said.

Millar also suffered a serious head injury, while Mr Crawley managed to climb out of the wreckage to get help.

The defendant was transported to Dunstan Hospital before being airlifted to Dunedin where he was put in an induced coma.

A blood test taken by medical staff put Millar at nearly twice the legal limit but police requests for an evidential sample were declined by doctors because of the teen’s precarious condition.

By the time staff acquiesced, at noon the following day, the defendant had a zero alcohol reading.

Millar was discharged after three weeks in hospital and had no recollection of the events.

He was remanded in custody and will be sentenced in April.

 

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