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Andy Mundy death probe: Appeal from family


THE family of hit-and-run victim Andy Mundy have had their hopes for justice dashed.

Officers are back to square one after a 19-year-old Portland man they arrested last year was released from police bail without charge.

A Crown Prosecution Service spokesman said they decided there was not enough evidence to prosecute.

The father-of-three’s family have been left clinging to the hope that somebody will come forward to say who left him to die on the road.

Mr Mundy’s daughter Jasmine Mundy, 19, from Dorchester Road, Weymouth, said: “I’m angry as there’s obviously people that know.”

Mr Mundy, 44, was on his way to meet his son Luke at a party when he was hit on Verne Hill Road on Portland.

A mother driving her son to the same party stopped 20 minutes later but despite their efforts they could not save him.

Miss Mundy added: “We are taking one last chance to say it’s not too late to come forward and say what you know. They might think as it’s been so long there’s no point.

“But there is a point. We need to know exactly what happened to our dad.”

A Portland man was arrested within a week of Mr Mundy’s death on August 8 last year and a black BMW was seized.

Miss Mundy said she and her brothers Luke Mundy, 20, and Ashley Sawtell, 23, had been trying to move on. She said: “We are just stuck in a rut not knowing what’s going on and how it all happened.

“It brings back upset all the time and it’s not fair.”

The family waited almost two months for Mr Mundy’s body to be released for a packed funeral at Weymouth Crematorium.

Mr Mundy’s ex-partner Claire Chapman said: “The church was packed out.

“His children and friends are struggling to come to terms with this, and it’s made me ill.

“If somebody is hiding whoever did it can they live with it for the rest of their life?

“If no-one comes forward, whose son or daughter is it going to be next time or whose nan or granddad?

“This is someone’s dad.”

Mrs Chapman, 40, of Dorchester Road, has hoped for an anonymous apology.

She said: “It would show although they don’t want to face the law, they are sorry.

“It makes me think they have no conscience.”

She added: “Anybody who is close to them should just have the courage to stand up and be honest knowing they would be doing the right thing.”

Mrs Chapman said her children have been left paying off the £2,000 funeral bill monthly as it has not been covered by insurance.

She said: “They are paying for the pleasure of someone running their father over. It just gets worse.”

Comments(3)

ddchelsea says...
12:22pm Wed 10 Mar 10

Hope whoever has done this will get what they deserve!!! RIP Andy, we all miss you!

likeitornot says...
2:51pm Wed 10 Mar 10

I feel very sorry for all concerned for him to die is bad enough but to die as a result of such a despicable act as not stopping after running him down must be very hard, I just hope that whoever did it is haunted for the rest of their life. I don’t know much about these things but I wondered if they could claim from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board for the funeral costs if nothing else.

james the thirst says...
9:46pm Thu 11 Mar 10

Unfortunately indicative of the cowardly and gutless elements of modern society, long gone are the days of decent conscience when you put your hand up and took your punishment. Didn't know him and probably wouldn't have wanted to but he deserved better


Jasmine Mundy with mother Claire Chapman and, inset, Andy Mundy Jasmine Mundy with mother Claire Chapman and, inset, Andy Mundy

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