Sharlotte’s Law is a proposed reform that has moved rapidly from a single family’s experience into the national policy arena. What began as concern about delay following a fatal road traffic collision is now part of a wider examination of how serious road crime is investigated and how justice is delivered to bereaved families.
The proposal focuses on a critical but often overlooked issue: the failure to secure time-sensitive forensic evidence promptly after a fatal crash. The delay shapes grief, prolongs uncertainty and can cause lasting psychological harm.
Sharlotte’s story
Aged 6, Sharlotte was killed by a driver who was two times over the drink-drive limit with class A drugs in his system, speeding and while on his phone. He mounted the pavement and hit Sharlotte where she died of her injuries.
Our specialist Serious Injury team represented Sharlotte’s parents during this extremely traumatic time in relation to the PTSD they suffered in the aftermath of the collision.
Following the collision, the driver responsible spent 11 weeks unconscious in a coma, preventing police from testing his blood samples during this time without his explicit consent.
Following her death, Sharlotte’s family were not only dealing with the devastation of losing a child, but the extensive delay to obtain answers during a critical investigation. There was a lack of clarity about what had happened and how the investigation would progress with the current legal loophole in obtaining consent.
For Sharlotte’s mother, Claire, the delay that followed her daughter’s death became inseparable from the trauma itself. Key questions remained unanswered for months and this delay prolonged her pain as they were desperately seeking answers
We have supported Sharlotte’s family’s call for this change in the law throughout the process and this experience resonated far beyond one family. It exposed a structural problem that many encounter after fatal collisions: a system that is slow to provide answers at precisely the moment when certainty matters most.