A 12-year-old girl who sued her mother won $256,000.00, according to court proceedings.
Faith Varden-Carberry, the 12-year-old, who sued her parents and the Motor Insurance
Bureau of Ireland, has been awarded $256,000 following the car accident
that killed her younger sister Ava and friend Michaela Logan, in 2007.
The local newspaper reported on the agreement reached in the Supreme
Court on Wednesday. Varden-Carberry, originally from Longford, sued her
parents and MIBI through her grandfather Anthony Carberry.
In 2007, Mary Carberry, an alcoholic, blacked out drunk while
driving with three children in her car. The younger sister Ava, who was
6-years-old at the time, and her friend Michaela Logan died after the
car went off the road and crashed into a muddy embankment outside
Edgeworthstown, Co Longford.
Faith, wearing a seatbelt in the back seat, suffered severe physical
and emotional trauma. She was confined to a spinal cast for two months,
and went through months of therapy to help cope with the tragedy.
Mary Carberry had been excluded from driving at the time of the
accident, resulting from a previous conviction. However, with two young
daughters, she needed a way to get to and from school. Carberry had her
daughters ask their father Thomas Varden, whom Mary had little or no
relation to,
for help. Varden agreed to buy a car for the family on the condition that Mary did not drive it.
However, Mary Carberry did not adhere to the condition, and ultimately caused the death of two young children.
While young Faith had brought charges against her father as well,
they were later dropped, leaving only her mother and MIBI responsible.
Mary Carberry was sentenced to six years in prison with two years
suspended, and MIBI was found by the court on Wednesday that they were
responsible for a payment of $256,000 to Faith.
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