A 15-year-old boy has been charged with manslaughter after a heavily pregnant woman was killed in a crash involving an allegedly stolen car in central Hobart.
The woman, who was 32 weeks pregnant, died at the scene and her baby was delivered at the Royal Hobart Hospital.
The 24-year-old woman had dropped her partner off at work and was driving with her two-year-old son inside the car when the crash happened about 1:00am on the corner of Davey and Argyle Street.
Her son received minor injuries and police said specialists were treating the newborn.
The teenager, who is alleged to have been the other driver, was questioned while under police guard in hospital.
He has been charged with one count of manslaughter and one count of motor vehicle stealing and is due to appear at the Hobart Youth Justice Court.
Police have alleged the car was seen speeding across the Tasman Bridge shortly before the crash.
The two cars ended up on either side of the one-way arterial street and the allegedly stolen car was badly burnt.
Three teenagers, including a 12-year-old girl, were taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
They are all from the Hobart area and police said they were likely to be charged with stealing a motor vehicle.
Top Comments
Police have to chase criminals, problem is everybody knows excessive speed is your ticket (potentially) out of trouble so we need a better deterrent, for starters EVERYBODY in the car should get charged as an adult and as though they are the driver, with illegal use AND in this case manslaughter along with any trafic infringements, there needs to be a mandatory no doubt about it and no exceptions jail term for everybody in the car if the driver runs, something like 30 days for first offence BUT there needs to be a grace period of around 1-2 minutes where the 30 days penalty is dropped if the driver stops, this gives the driver time to think better of it and it gives any passengers the opportunity to make it clear they want the driver to stop!. Perhaps a higher personal responsibility may take enough joy out of the ride that its no longer worth the risk of getting in