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British backpacker on e-scooter given four years’ jail for Western Australia crash death
British backpacker Alicia Kemp's face in a close-up from social media.
British backpacker Alicia Kemp, who crashed an e-scooter into a bystander, causing him fatal brain bleeding. Photograph: Tik Tok
Court heard Alicia Kemp, 25, from Redditch, Worcestershire was over the blood alcohol limit when she drove into Thanh Phan, 51, in Perth
A British backpacker has been sentenced to four years in prison after a fatal collision with a father-of-two while riding an electric scooter in Australia.
Alicia Kemp, 25, from Redditch, Worcestershire, appeared at Perth district court in Western Australia on Friday where she was sentenced after pleading guilty to dangerous driving causing death while under the influence of alcohol.
The Guardian
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In the whole of australia how many pedestrians have been killed by cars in recent years and compare the figure with the number of pedestrians killed by escooters.
Across Australia, pedestrian fatalities on roads (almost entirely from collisions with motor vehicles such as cars, trucks, and buses) have been rising in recent years.
- In 2024 (calendar year), there were 167 pedestrian deaths, according to official data from the Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics (BITRE).
- For the 12 months ending July 2025, this rose to 205 pedestrian deaths, reflecting a continuing upward trend.
- From 2020 to mid-2025, comprehensive reviews (including a University of Melbourne study tracking ~37 e-scooter-related fatalities nationwide) show these deaths almost exclusively involved the riders themselves (e.g., falls or collisions with vehicles), not pedestrians struck by them.
- The only confirmed case in recent years is one pedestrian death in Perth, Western Australia, in May 2025 (Thanh Phan, struck by a rented e-scooter rider).
- Advocacy groups and media corrections have noted that earlier reports mistakenly attributed rider deaths to pedestrian impacts; no widespread pattern exists.