‘Endless grief’ for parents of boy run over at school

A 11 -year -old boy was laughing at the picnic table laughing with his friends within the safe boundaries of the primary school.
In a few minutes, Jack Davey was killed by a driver who accelerated the fence of Melbourne school, passing over the table and crushed him and the other three children.
Jack’s parents told a court to a court on Monday that his life was taken;
“A 11 -year -old boy died at a time … Jack never saw the car, impossible,” he said.
“How does your car collapse through that fence, this median sherry, these poor children?
“This is impossible, incredible, and something I think in every second of the day. Lack of answering these questions makes me angry.”
The driver Shaymaa Oun Ghazi Zuhaira cut Mr. Davey when the court began to cry loudly during the front of the court.
“Sorry,” 41 -year -old woman shouted at the mourning father, “I’m really sorry.”
Jack’s mother Jayde said, “I tried to admit my son was going in the depths and pits of endless grief,” Jacke said.
“He was here for a minute, laughing with his friends and was killed next.” He said.
“The accusations do not go anywhere near the result. This is an insult for us and Jack, if there is no fee to kill him, where is the justice?”
The other three children sitting or standing at the picnic table with Jack were taken to hospital with serious injuries. As the car was flying over it, another child suffered a little bruising.
On Monday, the prosecutor Anthony Albore made a second charges against Zuhaira because he claimed to be guilty of careless driving crime.
Zuhaira, a P2 -controlled license, finished a meeting with the Director of Auburn Southern Elementary School on 29 October 2024 when the accident occurred.
Five school students had Zuhaira’s Toyota SUV from a parallel park at 2.35 o’clock and had a break at a picnic table near the Burgess Street border fence.
Albore, “Toyota was mounted and went to the picnic table where children lived, rested in the steps to the sports building.” He said.
One of the surviving children’s victims said, “Everything was dark, then under one car” and the other “me and friends sitting at a picnic table, a car came to us.”
Albore, Zuhaira went to her husband a few minutes before the accident and passing through the school at a speed of more than 70 percent, he said.
He told the police that the wheel and the accelerator were “stuck” and continued to say, “I can’t control the car”.
The court said Zuhaira might have been accelerated for a brake when he went to school.
Lawyer Matthew Sena began hearing on Monday, trying to print his name from media reports because of trauma and mental health problems.
Zuhaira said his son was stressful and triggered the trauma before his life in Iraq.
“Symptoms of trauma were triggered at the meeting with the school principal, prevented the ability to drive the vehicle and led to the misunderstanding of the accelerator.” He said.
Mr. Albore rejected this and said that the witnesses saw Zuhaira happy and smiling as he left school after the meeting.
He wanted to be convicted of the seriousness of the crimes and to be ordered to be corrected.
Zuhaira will not encounter prison, but may disqualify his license.
He will be sentenced to Wednesday.
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