Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Dublin Live
Dublin Live
National
Sean McCarthaigh

Dublin cyclist's death 'unexplained' as inquest found no reason for accident

Gardai could find no reason why an experienced cyclist suddenly veered across the road into the path of an oncoming jeep near Dublin Airport while out with a triathlon club, an inquest has heard.

David Steele, 45, from Swords, was killed in the collision in September 2020. The inquest discounted weather or road conditions as being factors in his death with the coroner saying the incident was “absolutely out of the blue”.

A sitting of Dublin District Coroner’s Court heard several members of the Portmarnock Triathlon Club describe the moments which led up to the tragic death of their friend. Paul Williams said the group of around eight cyclists were on a 90-kilometre training run which had left Portmarnock at around 7.40am.

Read more: Dublin man arrested for child grooming offences after alleged vigilante sting

Mr Williams said they were returning towards Swords and had moved into single file on the R108 when Mr Steele, who was directly in front of him in about fifth place in the group, made a sudden move to the right towards the other side of the road. While there was a strong wind at the time, Mr Williams said the wind would have been blowing in the opposite direction to the one turned by Mr Steele.

Mr Williams said he assumed that his friend had swerved to avoid something on the road, although he had not seen anything. He believed Mr Steele’s bicycle wobbled as he tried to correct its path but could not prevent the collision. He described having to look away as he witnessed the deceased being thrown in the air by the impact with a black jeep. Mr Williams said he did not believe the driver of the Volkswagen Touareg which struck Mr Steele was travelling at great speed.

Questioned by the coroner, Clare Keane, Mr William said the deceased was “a safe, steady cyclist and not a risk-taker.”

Another eyewitness, David Pedro, who was at the back of the group of cyclists, said he saw Mr Steele take a 90º turn to the right but could see no reason why he had done so. The driver of the jeep, David Leonard, said he had seen the group of cyclists coming towards him and mentally praised them for keeping so close to the verge on their own side of the road.

Mr Leonard said he saw one cyclist move to the left but then “like a bullet left the pack” in the other direction and crossed to his side of the road, striking his windscreen. The motorist said he had already begun to slow down as he anticipated that the cyclist would bring down other members of the group and there would be a pile-up on the road.

The inquest heard evidence of efforts to resuscitate Mr Steele but he was pronounced dead at the scene of the collision. A forensic scene investigator, Garda Lynn Connaughton, said there was nothing found on the road that could have caused or contributed to the collision.

Garda Connaughton also ruled out the weather, speeding and the road surface as playing any part in what happened. She said forensic evidence also showed that the motorist had already started slowing down and taken evasive action before the impact with the cyclist.

Garda Connaughton said the victim “for some unknown reason” had deviated from his path into oncoming traffic. In a statement read out in court, the deceased’s wife, Karen Steele, said she still found the details of her husband’s death “very traumatic to speak about.”

She described her late husband, who came originally from the Outer Hebridean island of South Uist in Scotland, as “the love of my life.”

At the time of his death, she remarked how her “Ironman” who had competed in several triathlons and long-distance cycle races, had loved cycling and died “doing what he loved.” Detective Garda Neil Cotter told the inquest that the DPP had directed that no criminal prosecution should arise out of the case.

He also confirmed that Mr Steele had had his bicycle serviced just five days before the fatal collision. A post-mortem revealed he died as a result of multiple traumatic injuries including several fractures of the spine.

Dr Keane returned a verdict of accidental death. Offering her condolences to Mr Steele’s family, the coroner acknowledged that the inquest had been unable to find the exact cause of an incident which had taken the life of a fit, young healthy man in the prime of his life.

“It was absolutely out of the blue,” the coroner remarked.

READ NEXT:

Sign up to the Dublin Live Newsletter to get all the latest Dublin news straight to your inbox

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.