• 4 minutes ago
A driver who killed five people in country Victoria could be released from prison after serving just three years behind bars. The 30-year-old had been speeding before he failed to give way at an intersection in northern Victoria.

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00The aftermath of one of Victoria's deadliest crashes. A lifetime of pain for the victim's
00:07loved ones and the man responsible could walk free in three years. This carnage came after
00:14a driver ignored warning signs and rumble strips, causing a three vehicle smash at Strathmerton
00:20in 2023. Christopher Joannidis' white Mercedes went through a give way sign and crashed into
00:26a ute, sending it flying into the path of a milk truck. The ute driver, 62-year-old
00:32mother Debbie Markey, was killed, along with four passengers, seasonal workers from Taiwan
00:38and Hong Kong. Minutes before the crash, Joannidis had been pulled over by police and warned
00:44to slow down. Your driving was in a manner dangerous to the public, Judge Gavin Meredith
00:49said. It has had a catastrophic impact on your victims. In court, the children of Debbie
00:54Markey watched on, along with truck driver Andrew McCluskey, who says he's been traumatised
01:00for life. The maximum penalty for dangerous driving causing death is ten years, and Joannidis
01:06was facing five separate charges. But instead of a lengthy stint in prison, many in the
01:11courtroom were left stunned when the judge announced a maximum sentence of five and a
01:16half years. Joannidis could be released on parole after serving just three years in custody.
01:22The court heard the 31-year-old has struggled in prison over the last two months with obsessive
01:27compulsive disorder and depression. This wasn't the first tragedy at the intersection of the
01:33Murray Valley Highway and Lauban Road. In 2022, a man died in a crash with an unmarked
01:39police car. There have been recent upgrades and a coronial inquest is looking at what
01:44can be done to make it safer.

Recommended