By court reporter Candice Prosser
An Adelaide woman who caused the death of her four-year-old daughter in a freeway crash while driving under the influence of methylamphetamine has been refused permission to withdraw her guilty plea.
Kylie Anne Hie, 34, pleaded guilty to an aggravated count of causing death by dangerous driving on the first day of her District Court trial in August.
Hie’s four-year-old daughter, Charlotte Hie, was killed in November 2013 when Hie crashed her van while attempting a “tight and ambitious” overtaking manoeuvre of a slow-moving truck on the down track of the South Eastern Freeway at Leawood Gardens.
Her daughter was in a child seat in the front passenger side of the van, which bore the brunt of the collision with the truck.
After hearing the prosecution’s opening address and voluntarily going on a court view to visit the crash site, which had a memorial shrine for her daughter, she changed her plea to guilty.
The next day she then applied to withdraw that guilty plea, arguing her psychological state was not stable after visiting her daughter’s shrine and she was not fit to make an informed decision.
Judge Paul Slattery dismissed her application.
In his written ruling, he said it was clear Hie had received proper advice from her solicitors who had dealt with her matter in a careful, consistent and sensitive way, and her decision was informed and deliberate.
“I am satisfied that when Ms Hie entered her plea, she was unaffected by any form of coercion, pressure or attempted persuasion of her to enter in a plea on one basis or another.