Freddie's 8-yr-old brother 'wants to be dead so he can be in heaven with him'
The heartbroken family of a three-year-old boy crushed to death by a runaway trailer have hit out at a judge after a delivery driver escaped prison for the tragedy. They also spoke movingly about the impact on their own lives.
Freddie Hussey suffered fatal injuries when he was crushed against a wall as he and his mother Donna walked home from buying a birthday card for his grandfather.

Delivery driver Tony Davies, 38, who had failed to ensure the 1.7 tonne trailer was safely attached to his Land Rover Defender, today received 200 hoursâ community service at Bristol Crown Court and was banned from driving for six months.
In the courtroom Freddieâs father Scott branded Judge Geoffrey Mercer QCâs sentence a âf****** jokeâ and called Davies a âf****** twatâ.
Mrs Hussey agreed calling the sentence âdisgusting, no justice at allâ before shouting at Davies: âI hope you rot in hell. You are scum. He was a beautiful little boy.â
The court heard how the tragedy happened on the morning of January 27 last year when the trailer came loose from Daviesâ Land Rover on Parson Street in Bedminster, England.
Prosecutor Anna Vigars said Freddie had been walking behind his mother, playing in the puddles and laughing and joking when the accident happened.
They had not long dropped off his eight-year-old brother Archie at his Primary School when the trailer â a portable cabin â detached, travelling around 10 or 12 car lengths before mounting the pavement and crushing the toddler against a wall and telegraph pole.
A passing lorry driver tried to resuscitate Freddie and paramedics arrived within minutes but the boy died shortly afterwards at Bristol Childrenâs Hospital.

Freddie's devastated mother has heartbreakingly revealed how his elder brother wishes he was dead too, so that he can be in heaven with him.
Donna Hussey said eight-year-old Archie goes to bed most nights crying and her whole family have suffered from nightmares, depression, anxiety and are undergoing counselling.
In a victim personal statement Mrs Hussey described movingly to Bristol Crown Court how much the loss of Freddie had affected them all.
Fighting back tears, she said: âWe have all suffered with nightmares and flashbacks and we have had to put Archie to bed most nights crying as he is missing his little brother, his best friend and playmate and cannot comprehend how or why this has happened.
âArchie doesnât want to watch cartoons on Saturday morning anymore, as this is something he used to do with Freddie.
âIt is devastating as a parent when you have already lost one child and your other one talks about killing himself so he can be with his brother. He is only eight years old. What can you do or say?
âArchie and I have started therapy. I get flashbacks of the incident and events before and after every day. I have woken up at night screaming as I relive what happened in my dreams and it is terrifying.
âI canât breathe and have trouble sleeping as a result. Itâs always in my head and it is killing me. I know in my heart we did nothing wrong that day but I still go over the âwhat ifsâ, especially when I canât sleep at night.
âPeople tell me that I appear so strong, that I seem to be coping so well, they have no idea.
âI am trying to keep my family together, to try to keep everyday life as near to normal as possible to help my husband Scott and Archie, but Iâm screaming inside. Our lives have been changed forever and will never be the same again.â
Mrs Hussey said her husband suffers from panic attacks and is now scared to return to work as a lorry driver because he was in his cab when he was told of the accident.
âWe have both been diagnosed with severe depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder,â she said.
âWe will never be able to forgive the driver for the death of our son. When Freddie died a big part of us died too.
âNo matter what I write I donât think I can get the words to explain what a special, beautiful little boy Freddie was.
âHe should still be here and nothing can bring him back. Thatâs all we want. Part of us died that day and we have to learn to live with the constant pain and hurt caused by something that should never have happened.
âWe are all devastated. We all feel numb, empty, broken and these are just a few of our emotions. If it wasnât for our other son I donât think I would be here now to write this. It has just been hell and has tested my faith in just about everything.â
She said her family were unable to move away because her husband was unable to work as a lorry driver after Freddieâs death.
âIt is hard for us living across the road from the trailer company and doors away from the scene of the accident and itâs a constant reminder every time we look out the window or step outside,â she said. âWe have to walk past the scene every day.â
Mrs Hussey, who was comforted by her husband as she read the statement to the court, said it was the hardest thing she had ever written.
âFreddie was amazing; he was the happiest, cheekiest, loving little boy ever,â she said. âHe was always smiling; he always gave us the biggest kisses and cuddles. His smile melted any heart and you could never be cross at him as he just smiled at you, even if he was naughty. We called him âFreddie Booâ.
âHe had many friends and was very sociable. He was loved by so many and touched so many people. He was very bright for his age. Freddie loved going to nursery, he also loved playing outdoors. He loved sticks and jumping in muddy puddles.
âHe was obsessed with playing with cars and Fireman Sam. He said when he grew up he wanted to be a fireman and play rugby like his big brother. He had a big, bright future ahead of him and now itâs just gone and this should never ever have happened.â

The court heard the tragedy has been attributed to a handbrake lever being in the wrong place, which caused the trailer to come adrift.
âDuring the course of the examination the police found the Land Rover and the trailer were in good condition, save for the handbrake handle,â Mrs Vigars said. âHad there been proper coupling there is no question of them coming apart.â
CCTV footage was shown of Davies, who worked for Arthur Booy Transport in Bristol, hitching up the trailer to his Land Rover before setting off that day.
At a previous hearing Davies, of Berwick Lane, Hallen, Bristol, pleaded guilty to causing death by careless driving. He had denied the more serious charge of causing death by dangerous driving.
Adam Vaitilingam QC, defending, described the effect the tragedy has had upon Davies saying he was a âdifferent person â a shell. He is very withdrawnâ.
âThe consequence of the accident is too awful to contemplate but his culpability is at the lowest level it could be,â he said.
âHe has accepted responsibility for the death of this young child. It is not something he will be forgiven for but he will not forgive himself either.â
Passing sentence Judge Mercer said the guidelines for causing death by careless driving focused upon the quality of the driving but this case centred upon the coupling of the trailer to the Land Rover.
âThis terrible, tragic, heart rendering accident occurred on January 27 last year,â he said.
âThe trailer which your Land Rover was towing became detached from it after you had driven it for a distance of at least 12 miles.
âIt travelled onto the pavement and struck and killed a greatly loved three-year-old boy Freddie Hussey, who was with his mother.
âThe grief of his parents and those that knew and loved him, the loss to them is beyond words. His mother very bravely read out to the court her statement expressing the difficult circumstances and the effect of what happened has had upon them.
âNo one who heard can be other than deeply moved by it.
âAll other features of this case pale into insignificance. The terrible consequences of your carelessness are a factor to be taken into account in determining the sentence.
âBut of course no sentence which this court can impose and adequately reflect the grief and loss of his family and it does not purport to do so.
âBy your plea of guilty you accept your carelessness, as it was, caused his death and you will live with that burden for your life, I have no doubt.
âAn innocent bystander at the scene of the tragedy heard you say âI think I have killed a little boyâ and describes your state of emotion at that time.â
Judge Mercer said there was âno suggestionâ that Davies was driving âanything but entirely properlyâ.
âThe carelessness lies between the coupling of the Land Rover and the trailer,â he said.
âThe offence is causing death by careless driving and not death by dangerous driving and in the context of this case it makes a very significant difference.
âIt means that the problem with the coupling between the Land Rover and the trailer is not a danger that ought to have been obvious to a competent and careful driver.
âHad the danger been obvious to a careful and competent driver the offence would have been causing death by dangerous driving. It was not an obvious risk but a risk you accept you should have been alerted to.
âYou failed to appreciate that there was or might be a problem that the coupling was not properly locked into place.
âHad you been alerted to that risk I am quite satisfied you would have not driven from that yard. In my considered judgement the level of carelessness on my assessment falls short of that which requires or justifies an immediate custodial sentence.â
Davies, who has qualified as a HGV driver since Freddie's death, did not comment as he left court.
His solicitor Tim Hayden said afterwards: âMr Davies would like me to say that this has been a tragic set of circumstances, which he has acknowledged all the way through and he has pleaded guilty as soon as the offence was put to him.
âHe doesnât regard this outcome in any way something to be celebrated and his feelings all the way through have been for the family and the loss they have suffered.
âEver since this accident, he has effectively been withdrawn and the shell of a man he once was previously and that will continue because the circumstances of this childâs death have not altered as a result of the hearing that has taken place today.
âI canât say whether they are right to think (the sentence) is a joke or not because the judge outlined his reasoning and the basis he was required to sentence but I can understand why the family would feel that is a sentence that perhaps they werenât expecting or wishing for.â
In a statement released afterwards, Mr and Mrs Hussey said: âItâs very difficult to put into words how we feel about losing our beloved youngest son Freddie.
âOur son has been taken away from us, and we will never have the opportunity to see Freddie grow and have his own life.
âWeâve been left to pick up the pieces. Our family life has been shattered and we now have to try and continue with our lives knowing this tragedy could have been prevented.
âNo sentence will ever reflect the enormous loss and devastation we as a family have suffered. We have to find a way to live with this, but weâre relieved the court process is now over.â




