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Rosie-Ann Stone: Not guilty for causing sister death crash
A young woman accused of causing a crash that killed her sister has been found not guilty. Rosie-Ann Stone was charged with causing the death of her sister Jennie by careless driving.
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Full interview with Rosie-Ann Stone
Rosie-Ann Stone gives emotional TV interview
Rosie-Ann Stone - cleared last week of killing her sister in an horrific car crash on a country road in East Yorkshire - has given her first emotional television interview.
Speaking on ITV's This Morning Rosie-Ann - accompanied by her mother and father - said it was hard to imagine a future without her sister Jennie, who was killed in the crash last February.
Only eight months before the crash the family had to cope with the death of Rosie-Ann's brother Gregg, a soldier killed in Afghanistan by insurgents. Emma Wilkinson reports.
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Woman cleared of causing sister's death
A young woman who lost her brother to the war in Afghanistan has been cleared by a jury of killing her sister in a car crash.
The judge in the case has questioned if Rosie-Ann Stone should ever have been brought to court over Jennie Stone's death in the first place.
James Webster reports.
CPS: "Difficult decision" to prosecute Rosie-Ann Stone
Hull woman cleared of causing smash which killed sister
A young woman accused of causing a crash that killed her sister has been found not guilty.
Rosie-Ann Stone, 21, was charged with causing the death of her sister Jennie by careless driving.
Jennie Stone, 28, died when her blue Peugeot 206 car hit a tree next to the A165, near the village of Fraisthorpe, on February 18 last year.
Stone found not guilty for sister death crash
Rosie-Ann Stone has been found not guilty for the death of her sister Jennie Stone.
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Judge: Sympathy should not affect judgement
The jury in the trial of a young woman accused of causing a crash that killed her sister has been told that sympathy should play no part in their decision making.
21 year old Rosie Ann Stone was overtaking a lorry on the A165 at Fraisthorpe, in East Yorkshire, when her car was in collision with her sister Jennie's vehicle.
She denies the charge and the jury will begin considering its verdict tomorrow morning.
Stone: Sister "took a risk and misjudged the situation"
Stone explained how she had driven her sister's son Charlie, now 10, to school in Skipsea earlier that morning with Jennie also in the car.
She told the jury that they planned to go shopping in Scarborough and she had set off first to get some things from her flat in Bridlington on the way.
Stone said she had no idea Jennie was behind her in the queue of traffic building up behind the slow lorry on the A165.
She explained how she looked in her mirror before attempting to overtake the truck and could see nothing to cause concern.
She told the court that she was about half-way past the lorry when she came into contact with another car she had not seen before.
She said it "skimmed" the side of her vehicle so, for a moment, there were three vehicles abreast in the road.
"I saw blue and I saw her (Jennie)," Stone told the court.
"I saw her blond hair and I twigged almost instantly."
She told how her sister's car was travelling faster than hers and it pulled ahead.
But she said: "It suddenly shot across the road. I instantly thought the truck was going to hit her."
Stone said she saw her sister's car hit the tree and stopped her vehicle.
"I was running back down towards the tree to get to her," she said.
"I saw her in the car.
"I was screaming. I tried to get near her and some people took me away.
"I remember screaming something about my sister."
he said she was put in a car and kept away from the crashed Peugeot.
"I wanted to be with Jennie," she said.
"Nobody was with her. She was on her own."
Earlier the jury heard how the defendant described Jennie as a "speed demon" in police interviews.
In a transcript of an interview she had with officers, she said her sister took risks as a driver and had been involved in a number of minor accidents.
She told the police: "I knew she was a speed demon.
"I knew she was comfortable taking risks in her vehicle.
"I think she took a risk and misjudged the situation."
Jury hear about brother's Afghanistan death
A young woman accused of causing the death of her sister in a car crash in East Yorkshire was in tears as she told a jury how their brother died serving in Afghanistan months before the incident.
Rosie-Ann Stone, 21, took to the witness box to describe how Jennie Stone, 28, died when her blue Peugeot 206 car hit a tree next to the A165, near the village of Fraisthorpe, on February 18 last year.
Wiping away tears from time to time, Stone explained how she was in her own car and had pulled out to overtake a slow-moving lorry when she felt the car collide with another vehicle, which "skimmed" her Vauxhall Astra.
She said she suddenly "twigged" it was her sister driving the other car.
Moments later, Stone told the jury at Hull Crown Court, Jennie's car veered in front of the lorry and crashed into a tree.
The defendant, who denies causing her sister's death by careless driving, began her evidence on the third day of her trial by answering questions from her barrister Patrick Palmer about her family.
She had to stop briefly to compose herself as she explained through her tears how her brother Greg was killed while serving in the British Army in Afghanistan in June 2012.
Private Gregg Stone, of the 3rd Battalion, The Yorkshire Regiment, was shot while on active service.
His sister told the court how all her family, including her parents and her surviving three brothers, were in court to support her.
And she explained to the jury how they were all wearing red jackets given to the family by her brother's colleagues in Burma Company to remember him.
"My brother Greg was in the Yorkshire Regiment, an infantry soldier in Burma company," Stone told the jury.
"It's the company jacket. He was never without his. He wore it all the time.
When he died his comrades donated their jackets in memory of him to the family. We've all got one."
Asked by Mr Palmer about her sister, Jennie, Stone said: "She was like a mum to me when we were younger. As we got older we were inseparable."
She said they were "incredibly close".
Stone: Sister drove like "speed demon" before fatal crash
A woman on trial for causing a car crash that killed her sister has begun giving evidence in her defence.
A jury has heard how Rosie-Ann Stone, 21, told police she thought her sister Jennie was a "speed demon" who took a risk. She denies causing death by careless driving.
From Hull Crown Court, Chris Kiddey reports: