Discussions move on. This point was about PD saying he was right and the presiding judge was wrong about the law. So where's the problem with my post as regards that?
Stop lying NS.
I pointed out that the quote you claimed was from the presiding judge was not from him at all. It was from IDS - hardly an unbiased source, given that he is the leading parliamentary mouthpiece for a change in the law. I (and I suspect you) have no idea what the judge said, because we have no direct opinion from him.
However what we do know is that in this case the cyclist in question was
successfully charged with an offence,
successfully prosecuted of that offence and jailed.
And if you read the reports manslaughter was also an option (although the evidence in this case didn't meet the threshold) and the maximum sentence for manslaughter is life.
And I am aware of at least one other case in the last couple of years where the current law has been used successfully to prosecute and jail a cyclist who caused the death of a pedestrian. And given that there are only a handful of deaths involving collision between a cyclist and a pedestrian (and some will involve the death of the cyclist and some will be the fault of the pedestrian) then that seems to be a very high incident to successful prosecution rate.