Νεκρός 7χρονος από ηλεκτροπληξία!!! (2018) Διαβάστε όλη την υπόθεση… Εγκληματική αμέλεια Ηλεκτρολόγου
Αμέσως από κάτω, σας παραθέτω μία ”είδηση” του Newsbomb, που φαίνεται κακή με τον τρόπο που αναρτήθηκε….
Την παρουσιάζουν και σαν φρέσκια… χωρίς να δίνουν καμία άλλη εξήγηση για το περιστατικό…
θα δείτε και την ανάλυση που μιλά για…. χιλιάδες βόλτ!!! (τρομερές ειδήσεις)
το περιστατικό συνέβη όντως στο Essex της Αγγλίας, αλλά πριν δύο χρόνια.
Στο τέλος διαβάστε όλη την υπόθεση αναλυτικά από Αγγλική ιστοσελίδα…. έχει τρομερό ενδιαφέρον.
Τελικά, η έλλειψη γείωσης δημιούργησε το κακό!!
Δεν είχε συνδεθεί τελικά η γείωση με τον ηλεκτρικό πίνακα.
Οπότε έφτασε η ώρα που ένα σφάλμα δεν είχε διαφυγή προς τη γη ώστε να δημιουργήσει βραχυκύκλωμα ή διαρροή…
Έτσι, όταν το 7χρονο παιδάκι ήρθε εκείνη την κακιά ώρα και ακούμπησε στα κάγκελα, έπεσε νεκρό!!!
Τα παρακάτω λοιπόν είναι από προχτεσινό άρθρο του newsbomb….
Δεν μπορεί να χωρέσει ανθρώπου νους τον τρόπο με τον οποίο έχασε τη ζωή του ένα παιδί μόλις 7 ετών,
καθώς σκοτώθηκε από ηλεκτροπληξία ενώ έπαιζε στον κήπο pub στο Essex της Μεγάλης Βρετανίας.
Ο Harvey Tyrrell έπαιζε μαζί με άλλα παιδιά στον κήπο του μαγαζιού,
όταν ακούμπησε μια λάμπα, η οποία σε ένα σημείο δεν είχε μόνωση, χιλιάδες βολτ διαπέρασαν το κορμί του 7χρονου,
ο οποίος έχασε ακαριαία τη ζωή του.
Για το θάνατο του παιδιού συνελήφθη ο 73χρονος ηλεκτρολόγος Colin Naylor,
ο οποίος κατηγορείται για ανθρωποκτονία από αμέλεια.
Ήταν φυσικά ο ηλεκτρολόγος ο οποίος είχε κάνει την εγκατάσταση.
Ήταν τόσο κακοφτιαγμένη η εγκατάσταση, που δεν υπήρχε καν καλώδιο γείωσης,
κάτι το οποίο αποδείχτηκε μοιραίο.
Και τα παρακάτω είναι από την Αγγλική ιστοσελίδα… στις 22/01/2021
The parents of a seven-year-old boy who was electrocuted by ‘significantly faulty’ pub garden lights wept in court
as CCTV was shown of his final moments.
Harvey Tyrrell died on September 11 2018 after he suffered an electric shock in the garden of the King Harold pub in Romford, east London,
when he sat on a light on a low wall.
Electrician Colin Naylor, 73, is accused of ‘raising his eyebrows’
at the state of the electrics at the pub three months before Harvey died.
The little boy collapsed in front of his parents after sitting on the lights
and touching a metal railing that electrocuted him, jurors were told.
Police rushed to the King Harold pub in Harold Wood, near Romford, Essex,
following the incident at around 5.20pm on September 11, 2018.
Harvey was found unresponsive and he was rushed to hospital,
but he died just over an hour later.
Harvey’s mother Danielle and father Lewis wept and hugged at Snaresbrook Crown Court
as footage of their son playing happily with a friend just moments before the tragedy was shown.
The light fixtures are said to have had powerful stolen electricity
running through the rig without proper safety mechanisms, the court was told.
Jurors heard there were several points where water had fallen into the defects
that only made the entire venue more dangerous.
Naylor, who worked at the pub with his brother-in-law David Bearman,
is accused of ‘raising his eyebrows’ at the state of the electrics three months before the tragedy.
The electrician denies gross negligence manslaughter
after a post-mortem found the cause of death was electrocution.
He also faces a separate charge of failing in his duty as an electrician
by not installing or maintaining the electrics in a way that prevented and protected others.
The court heard Bearman, the landlord of the King Harold, has already pleaded guilty
to gross negligence manslaughter and stealing tens of thousands of pounds of electricity last year.
Harvey’s father Lewis said he was told his son had ‘fallen from a wall’ –
but when he ran outside, he realised Harvey was seriously injured.
‘He was making gasping sounds. I thought he was unconscious but then the gaps between the gasps got longer,
and his breathing became shallower,’ he said.
‘I couldn’t get my head around it,
especially when someone said he had stopped breathing.
‘It seemed like forever waiting for the ambulance to come.
I could see the helicopter above but they couldn’t seem to find anywhere to land.’
Duncan Penny QC, prosecuting, said: ‘In the garden of a public house in Romford where he was playing with a friend of his,
Harvey Tyrrell, who at the time was a seven-year-old boy, was killed when he was electrocuted
as a result of the unsafe installation of an electrical lighting circuit in that garden.
‘Harvey had been taken to the King Harold that afternoon by his mum and dad.
‘The prosecution’s case is that, together with another man – who was the owner of the premises – this defendant,
Colin Naylor, who was the electrician who installed that lighting circuit in the garden of the public house
is responsible for the manslaughter of Harvey.
‘The Crown’s case is that the defendant was grossly negligent in the installation of that lighting circuit
and in the discharge of his duty as an electrician working at those premises to ensure safety – familiar as he was with the state of the premises in question,
having worked there as he had for an extended period during the spring and the summer of 2018.’
The prosecutor said the electrical lighting circuit contained numerous significant faults
and showed pictures and diagrams to jury that showed how easy it was for Harvey
to ‘stretch his arms and touch the metal railing, and therefore completing the circuit.’
He said: ‘There was in this circuit, which was installed outside, inadequate insulation in the installation of the fixings
and the wiring to prevent ingress of water, or water getting into the fixings and the wirings, and other faults –
which gave rise in the opinion of the experts who looked at it,
to the existence of live charge on the garden light which little Harvey touched that day.
‘When young Harvey both touched one of the garden lights, by sitting on it, and took hold of some nearby metal railings
which were behind him it seems clear that electricity then flowed through Harvey’s body, causing him fatal damage.
‘He collapsed to the ground in front of another boy with whom he was playing
and these events were watched by a number of adults in the area who went immediately to assist him.
‘Contact was made with the emergency services who attended shortly afterwards
but sadly it was to no avail and the conclusion of the forensic pathologist
who conducted a post mortem examination on Harvey’s body was that he had been electrocuted.’
The court heard that Naylor had done several electrical jobs on the pub in the Spring and Summer of 2018,
and even he had cause for concern about Bearman’s previous work,
who had bought the property for £900,000 in 2010.
Mr Penny said: ‘There can be no doubt that when the Health and Safety Executive came to inspect Mr Bearman’s premises in September 2018
in the aftermath of these events, overall the premises were very dangerous.
‘The defendant told the police officers that as an electrician of 50 years experience when he had cause to look at one of the distribution boards,
known as fuse boards, in the basement of the public house the state of it had caused him,
as he put it, to ‘raise his eyebrows’.
‘He accepted that, when shown it by Mr Bearman, he had indeed thought that the fuse board area needed some attention
but in due course he had decided having spoken to Mr Bearman that he did not ‘want to get involved in that side of it’.
‘The Crown suggests that it is against that background that the defendant’s conduct
in the installation of the garden lights should be judged.
‘After proper inspection, the whole distribution board was not properly connected to earth
and the earthing of electrical circuits is a key safety feature in all electrical circuits which are installed domestically.’
Naylor, who wore a striped shirt, navy jumper,
dark padded coat and a medical face mask in the dock, denies the charges.
The trial continues.
Πηγή γνήσιου άρθρου: https://www.dailymail.co.uk