'I should not be alive': Veteran wants answers after cow crash

Russell Jenkin’s car after crashing into runaway stock on State Highway 94, north of Gore. PHOTO:...
Russell Jenkin’s car after crashing into runaway stock on State Highway 94, north of Gore. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
A car crash into cows near Gore wrote off the car of a 25 year army veteran, leaving him sitting at home alone on Anzac Day.

Ten weeks after crashing into escaped stock on State Highway 94, Russell Jenkins said he has heard nothing from the police or the farmer responsible, with no offer of financial compensation or even an apology.

On the night of the crash, he hit four cows at open road speed, killing one on impact, he said.

One animal rolled up on to his windscreen, puncturing the glass right in front of his face.

"I should not have been alive any more," he said.

He said he sat at his Riversdale home for twelve days from April 17 through Easter weekend and Anzac Day waiting for some contact from police, an insurance company or a farmer and got nothing.

Living alone and with no car, he then caught a bus to Dunedin for his work.

"Nobody came and knocked on my door," he said.

"And the fact that I am a veteran, on that day, and no-one came and talked to me. It’s not like I wasn’t available, because I was there. My car was parked on my front lawn."

Mr Jenkins was the second person to plough into the cows that night, after 18-year-old Grace Steele, driving the opposite way, first hit the beasts.

Grace was told last week by her insurance company that the owner of the stock could not be proven to be liable for the accident, as no evidence of negligence was shown.

She had suffered mental stress and concussion from the incident.

Despite this, the farmer’s insurance company paid the $1050 excess of damage on her car despite the farmer being found not liable.

Mr Jenkins has received no compensation.

Grace Steele was told last week by her insurance company that the owner of the stock could not be...
Grace Steele was told last week by her insurance company that the owner of the stock could not be proven to be liable for the accident. Photo: ODT Files
His Hyundai Grandeur V6 was written off and he has since bought a bigger, higher, safer $20,000 four-wheel drive vehicle.

He said he would love some money and a meaningful apology from those responsible for the crash.

"Cars are worth nothing. Lives are worth something and an apology is probably up there as well," he said.

The ex-veteran joined the army at 16, serving in the East Timor, Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan conflicts.

He walked to the smaller Riversdale service on Anzac Day.

He did not see how the farmer could be found not liable for the accident.

"It has to be a gate left open or something, otherwise the stock would not be on a provincial highway," he said.

ella.scott-fleming@odt.co.nz