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Diplomatic Immunity

United States diplomat and alleged NSA spy based in Northampton, Anne Sacoolas, was sentenced to eight months imprisonment, suspended for twelve months, at the Old Bailey in London for causing the death of British teenager Harry Dunn in a fatal traffic collision in August 2019, meaning she will avoid incarceration.


Sacoolas pleaded guilty in October to causing death by careless driving, punishable by up to five years in prison but has since pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and subsequently received a suspended sentence.


“The American who fled the UK after killing a Northamptonshire teenager with her car has pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and received a suspended sentence on Thursday. Anne Sacoolas claimed diplomatic immunity to avoid arrest and was later revealed to be a spy for U.S. intelligence. In a statement read at the Old Bailey on her behalf, she apologized to the family of Harry Dunn for the ‘tragic accident’ that claimed his life.


Dunn was riding his motorcycle near the Croughton Royal Air Force base in August 2019 when Sacoolas came down the road driving on the wrong, ‘American’ side – as she told police after the crash. The 19-year-old died in the hospital.


Sacoolas then claimed diplomatic immunity and fled back to the U.S., which refused to extradite her, saying the details of her work could not be disclosed on ‘national security’ grounds.


Dame Parmjit Kaur Cheema-Grubb, the presiding judge in the case, said what Sacoolas did was ‘not far short of deliberately dangerous driving’ but accepted her plea to a lesser charge of careless driving instead, saying the American showed ‘genuine remorse’. Sacoolas was sentenced to eight months in prison, suspended for a year, and will lose her driving privileges for the duration.


Sacoolas, spotted pumping gas in Virginia


Sacoolas, 45, tuned into the hearing via video link, as the U.S. government would not risk her returning to the UK. Dunn’s mother, Charlotte Charles, described this as ‘despicable’, adding she was ‘absolutely disgusted’ with U.S. actions, according to the BBC.


Charles said her son’s death haunts her ‘every minute of every day’, but that her quest for justice was now ‘well and truly complete’ with the sentencing.


According to Crown Prosecution Services, Sacoolas drove out of RAF Croughton on August 27, 2019, and drove about 350 meters on the wrong side of the road before striking Dunn’s motorcycle head-on. Dunn was driving on the left, as is proper in the UK.


Sacoolas told the police she was on ‘the American side’ of the road, and told a witness who arrived on the scene, ‘It’s all my fault. I was on the wrong side of the road. I have only been here a couple of weeks’.


When the witness went over to Dunn, he told her, ‘Don’t let me die’.


RAF Croughton hosts a major U.S. communication facility serving troops in Europe and the Middle East. American administrative and technical staff working there don’t have diplomatic immunity, but Sacoolas claimed she did – and fled the country before she could be arrested. Interpol issued a ‘Red Notice’ for her arrest in May 2020, confirming she did not in fact qualify as a diplomat.


The U.S. refused to extradite Sacoolas, eventually explaining that not only did her husband work for the CIA, so did she. In a February 2021 court hearing in the civil case brought by Dunn’s parents, her attorney said Sacoolas had worked for U.S. intelligence and left the UK due to ‘security issues’. In July 2021, the U.S. government sought to seal the records in the case. Dunn’s parents settled their lawsuit two months later, for an undisclosed amount”. -RT


The judge asserted that imposing a custodial sentence would be an empty gesture since the accused would not hand herself over to authorities in person.


So, as it stands, this affluent woman with ties to intelligence who claimed diplomatic immunity after killing a nineteen-year-old man, fleeing the scene and the country to escape prosecution, will remain in the United States.


Diplomatic immunity is supposed to be used to protect diplomats from actual danger, not to shield them and their families from prosecution for crimes committed abroad.


And to make matters worse, whatever the civil judgment against Anne Sacoolas amounted to will likely be footed by the American taxpayer as she gets to continue her employment with the CIA or whichever three letter agency.