Mum of teenager killed by boyfriend in car crash pays emotional tribute to 'quirky, loyal and clever' daughter

The mum of a Liverpool student killed by her boyfriend after he lost control of his car says she lit up the room with her smile.

Published 2nd Dec 2016

The mum of a Liverpool student killed by her boyfriend after he lost control of his car says she lit up the room with her smile.

Elizabeth Buckley, 19 from Holmes Chapel suffered serious injuries after she was involved in a crash on Thornton Road in Bebington on the 2nd of December

Elizabeth who was a passenger in the car died a short time later.

Thomas McDonagh, 22, of Pensby Road, Thingwall was senteneced yesterday to 40 months imprisonment after admitting causing death by dangerous driving

In a statement issued by Elizabeth’s mum Karen Kujawa on her behalf of Elizabeth’s family, she said: “Elizabeth had her whole life in front of her. She was beautiful inside and out. She lit up the room with her smile."

"She was funny, quirky, loyal and clever. She had it all taken away from her on that night by Thomas McDonough. The chance to live her life with all the opportunities that go with that. She will never fall in love and get married."

"She will never get the chance to have the children she so desperately wanted in the future. Elizabeth was so loved and we miss her terribly, every single minute of every day. We are broken. Our life is a poorer place without her in it. It has been an absolute honour and a privilege to have called her our daughter.

“l have to live without my only child. Her dad has to live without his only daughter who he adored and a little boy has to grow up without the sister he idolised as she did him. Her grandparents have lost their first grandchild and only granddaughter.

"My siblings have lost their deeply loved only niece.”

Mrs Kujawa added: “Thomas McDonough had a duty of care towards Elizabeth when she got in his car which he disregarded.

“This highlights the issue of young driver awareness and the consequences that occur when safety isn't taken seriously."

The parents of all young drivers have a responsibility to ensure that their child/children have the skill and experience when driving and that the cars that they are driving are within their capabilities. If this is adhered to then perhaps there would be less deaths of young people in road incidents and Elizabeth might be alive today."

Sergeant Paul Hulme, from Merseyside Police’s Road Policing Unit, said: "This was a horrific incident which has had a devastating impact on Elizabeth’s family and their friends.

“Elizabeth was a young woman with her whole life ahead of her and no sentence can reflect the scale of their loss.

“It is clear from our investigation that McDonough’s actions behind the wheel were a reckless attempt to impress his passenger and had he not accelerated in the way he did, we believe this collision would have been avoided."