The order was made against Orachorn “Praewa” Thephasadin na Ayudhya and her parents.
Orachorn’s sedan ran into the rear of a passenger van on the Din Daeng-Don Muang tollway on Dec 27, 2010. At the time she was 16 years old, too young to have a driving licence.
In 2011, she was charged with unlicensed driving, reckless driving causing deaths and injuries and property damage, and using a mobile phone while driving.
Today the Civil Court ordered not only Orachorn but also her parents to pay the compensation, because the parents had failed to prove they properly supervised their daughter.
The case involved 28 plaintiffs who are relatives of the dead and the injured people. The compensation ordered by the court ranged from B4,000 to B1.8 million per case, and the combined sum came to about B30 million baht, plus 7.5 per cent interest.
The plaintiffs earlier demanded B120 million and said they would decide later whether to appeal.
Orachorn’s Honda Civic car crashed into the back of the passenger van, which was heading to Victory Monument from Thammasat University’s Rangsit campus. The van was driven into the safety barrier on the side of the elevated tollway near the Bang Khen exit. The force of the impact catapulted passengers from the vehicle and they plunged down onto Vibhavadi Rangsit Road below.
On Aug 31, 2012, the Central Juvenile and Family Court found her guilty, sentenced her to three years in prison and banned her from driving until she is 25. The prison term was commuted to two years, and suspended for three years because she cooperated with investigators.
The court dismissed the charge of using a mobile phone while driving due to lack of evidence. A photograph of her calmly using her mobile phone on the tollway immediately after the accident was widely used by the media and angered many people.
Orachorn took the case to the Appeals Court, which on April 22, 2014, upheld the two-year jail term, but extended the suspension period from three to four years. The court also ordered her to do 48 hours of community service a year for four years.
In May this year the Supreme Court rejected Orachorn’s final appeal. She pleaded a lack of intent. The court ruled the appeal covered no new ground.
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