Coedely crash: Car split in half during fatal crash, hears inquest
The car three teenagers were in when they were killed in a crash split in half during the collision, an inquest has heard.
The incident happened on 11 December 2023, when an Audi A1 collided with a bus in Coedely, Rhondda Cynon Taf.
Morgan Smith, 18, Callum Griffiths, 19, and Jesse Owen, 18, were each thrown from the car and died as a result of “blunt injuries” they received.
The inquest heard that Jesse Owen, who was driving the car, was over the drink driving limit.
Several witnesses described the car as travelling at high speed before it crashed, the inquest heard.
Ellis Williams, who was sat in the front passenger, seat was the only “walking wounded” survivor of the crash.
Two others received life changing injuries.
In a statement, Ellis told the court that he had heard others in the car calling for Jesse to slow down.
He said that in the moments before the crash “I thought we were going fast. I heard someone say ‘woh, woh, woh'”.
He told the inquest he looked up and saw that “Jesse looked scared”.
After the crash he said he looked to his right and saw the driver’s seat was empty. He added “the car had split in half into two parts”.
He said looked around “screaming” and saw the others on the floor.
Toxicological tests showed Jesse Owen had 113mg of alcohol per 100ml in his blood. The legal limit is 80mg per 100ml.
Ellis Williams said it had been the day of his fathers funeral and that they had come from the wake following the funeral.
Initially, the group had been to a pub before moving on to Tonyrefail workingman’s club, where witnesses described them as each having bought drinks.
One member of bar staff said that she had asked them for ID and had served them three alcoholic drinks each.
Luca Watkins, who was a friend of the group, said in a statement that they were leaving to go to either Coedely or Cardiff.
He said: “We saw them leave as a group, within minutes I’d heard there’d been a crash in the Coedely area.”
The court heard that Jesse was not going to remain out with the group, but was just going to drive them to Cardiff because he had work in the morning.
‘Exceptionally fast’
One witness, Martin Russell, told the inquest he was waiting to pull out from a junction and saw the Audi A1 passing “at high speed”.
He said the road had a 20mph limit and the car was travelling “exceptionally fast” and estimated the the speed to be about 50-60mph (80-97 km/h).
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone drive so fast on that road,” he said.
Hugh John said in a statement that he was walking his dog on the Ely Valley Road and the speed of the car led him to say to a friend that the car was driving fast.
He said he recognised the car as belonging to the son of his friend and saw “lots of heads” in the car.
He said it had to “drive in the middle of the road over the chevrons to hold the line” as a result of the speed it was travelling.
Jesse ‘not a risk taker’
The court has heard that it was dark and that it had been raining, but it wasn’t raining at the time the Audi was driving.
In a statement from his parents, Jesse was described as “a safe careful and considerate driver” who drove almost daily.
They said that they had impressed upon him the importance of not drinking and driving and that he “was not a risk taker or reckless in his life”.
Callum was described as a “talented kickboxer” who had “found his vocation as a barber”.
Morgan was described by his mother in a statement as “a talented boxer”.
The court has been shown CCTV images of the teenagers leaving the workingmen’s club together, and images of the car at various locations along its journey.
The inquest continues.