Major Collision On Motorway Ends Fatally | Motorway Cops FULL EPISODE | Blue Light

Publicado 2023-09-10

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @Actingskint
    Although the car broke down in a lane ,so wasn't able to limo to a hard shoulder . It demonstrates clearly , why a hard shoulder is needed . And just how fuc@@ng ridiculous the plans are , to remove hard shoulders of many motorways , is complete insanity . Smart motorways have been condemned by many rescue services . Perhaps the public might be listened to in regards to this . But I suspect not .
  • @AnthonyMcGowan
    that recording of the moment of the collision as recorded by the 999 service is chilling.
  • @MageZathara
    So glad dad and daughter were okay.. Her cry broke my heart 😭
  • @pearlkt
    The chap that took over the call is amazing
  • @jo.s7993
    This brought me to tears. My brother used to work for a breakdown company that had the contract to clear motorway accidents in Kent. He is a seriously tough, hard man, & completely unshakable, until he did this job. He did it for eighteen months, but couldn't face it any longer. He said he saw things that nobody should see. Blood, bone, brain matter, shit, etc.... The bits & pieces of shattered bodies that were left in vehicles after the remains of what were once people, that could be removed. It's the only time since we were kids that I've seen him breakdown sobbing when he told me. He hasn't talked about it since, & if anything like this comes on TV, he turns it off or walks out of the room. The emergency services, have support & training to deal with this sort of thing (thankfully!), but the non emergency services such as him don't. Please think about this when you're driving, because it's not just the victims that have their lives affected. He's doing ok now, but it changed him....
  • @annagrinnell6790
    The woman with the red Audi , driving with three children in the car no insurance and no safety seats for them . Unbelievable 😮
  • I drove in England for over 20 years and then moved to Italy. The British police are exceptional. Looking at this video makes me want to complement every one of you, thank you for your service, and tell the British people they are 44:03 incredibly lucky to have them on their roads, towns and countryside.
  • @meganfarrell7427
    The daughter riding in the front seat that day only because dad had stuff filling up the back seat and it saving her life is proof to me that everything happens for a reason. So glad they’re okay. That little girls scream made my heart drop.
  • @StarFyre
    That good Samaritan who went to the Fiesta to get the phone to keep police updated and also pried the Seat's door open to rescue the trapped driver deserves some form of public recognition. He is a legend, heroically risking his life to help others without regards to his own safety, with cars and HGV's flying up behind him. He could have died, just think if a 44 ton lorry ploughed into him, they take a while to stop. There would have been nothing left of him to scrape off the tarmac. When I used to drive buses and coaches I had 14 non-fault accidents in a year. I even had a woman bounce off the side of one of our latest buses and try to bolt ,so I didn't stop for passengers, and slammed the bus diagonally across the carriageway so she couldn't move. She admitted she had no insurance and was bawling her eyes out, and traffic was piling up. I'm a sucker when pretty girls cry and I couldn't see any damage so I let her go. One incident was when I was driving down the promenade and I heard a noise, checked my left mirror to see a guy bouncing down the road. I turned to the passengers and said Why do they walk on the effin road!!! He's sitting when I got to him, his mrs was crying and his kid had blood pouring off him. There was a dick on the bus who was constantly yelling on his phone so I told him to call 999 when he sheepishly said it was a fake phone. I honestly thought I'd killed him. Cops come, ask the guy if he was walking on the road and he said no, then the cop said ah, so the bus was driving down the pavement then. What happened was there was a rubbish bin next to the kerb and he stepped around it and glanced off the bus, breaking a window and it spun him around and he punched his kid right on the nose! What scared him the most was he saw the back wheel pass by right next to his face. I was a nervous wreck but that's not the worst incident. The worst one was when I was coming down a hill with a slight bend. There was a woman wanting to turn right so she was waiting for me to pass when, for some inexplicable reason another car came up and OVERTOOK the waiting car. My bus weighs 10 tons, so if I am doing 30mph, thats 300 tons of force., plus whatever mass she had. At least she died instantly and not in agony. Her vehicle was totally and utterly destroyed to the point of being unrecognisable as a vehicle. I had the shakes from hell and couldn't stop crying. Bus company sent out a van to take me back to the depot, and all the other drivers went heyyyyy killer! I kept thinking for years if there was something I could have done something to avoid it but I had no reaction time. I now suffer from serious mental health issues and still see it in my dreams, 35 years later. Cops see this all the time, takes a special sort of person who can do that. I used to hate them, now I have respect. It can be a thankless job. Sorry this comment is so long.
  • @odgie5228
    As a resident who lives close to a major section of the m62, it's always stood still, the removal of hard shoulder to accommodate smart motorways and other reasons is ridiculous. It's very open and high elevation, leading to quite treacherous conditions come winter, with fog, ice and snow.
  • @neilburns8869
    I was relieved to hear that Caston and his young daughter both survived the horrific crash. Of course there was an element of luck involved but there often is with a lot of situations in life. Just as well he had his daughter's child safety seat strapped in properly and in the front.
  • @megataurus7779
    I watch these vids regularly just to keep myself in check,your life can change in a heartbeat when driving on these roads,hats off to the cops who deal in dangerous situations
  • @martyn334
    man that fire brigade response was unreal!
  • @amandaomezi7492
    It the little girl was at the back, she may not have made it. Hearing her scream brought tears to my eyes
  • @kristydubar6531
    as an american that has driven both I95 down from Maine to Florida, and on the west coast i5 from washington to central California.. the UK roads are insane! you guys are amazing i couldn't do it! so glad to see the gentlman and his daughter both survived and ar doing well! <3
  • @Nickgowans
    Front and back dashcam, absolutely essential these days What boggles my mind is that with hundreds of miles of motorways, there are only 56 on the whole M62. Surely there should be dozens in every mile.
  • @nickyshaw7677
    Love how she tries to blame it on the truck and the evidence proves she was in the wrong
  • @patrick103b
    People’s refusal to slow down amazes me they often see the hazard and speed up rather than slow down
  • @TheDog8873
    The child’s cries bring me to tears every single time