- A family was struck by a car from behind
- Woman died and two others rushed to hospital
- Elderly driver, 91, yet to be interviewed
By KYLIE STEVENS, SENIOR BREAKING NEWS REPORTER, AUSTRALIA and AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: | Updated:
An elderly driver who lost control of her car and mowed down a family walking along a footpath won’t be interviewed until the weekend over the collision that claimed the life of a grandmother and seriously injured her grandson.
A silver Toyota Yaris, driven by the 91-year-old woman, mounted the footpath near a playground on Coleman Road in Wantirna South, in Melbourne’s east, shortly before 12.30pm on Thursday.
The grandmother died at the scene.
Her partner is fighting for life in The Alfred Hospital.
Their young grandson was rushed to The Royal Children’s Hospital with life-threatening injuries, but is now in a stable condition.
The reserve and damaged park bench where the car ended up remained cordoned off on Friday, while several bouquets of flowers were laid on the nearby footpath where the pedestrians were hit.
The ‘terribly shaken’ elderly driver escaped with minor scratches and was taken to hospital for assessment and blood testing.
A woman is dead and two other people have been seriously injured after being hit by a car while walking along a footpath
The car, driven by a 91-year-old woman, hit the trio and then crashed through a fence
Tributes have been laid where a woman, 59, tragically lost her life while taking her young grandson for a walk on Thursday afternoon
She remains in hospital and is not expected to be interviewed by detectives until the the weekend, Victoria Police revealed on Friday.
It’s understood the driver collided with a street sign and struck the pedestrians before her car ploughed through a fence and came to a stop near the playground.
‘It came from behind,’ Superintendent Justin Goldsmith said.
‘It looks like it has lost control about 40m or 50m before the collision with the people who were walking on the other side of that road.
‘No one was hit at the park thankfully.’
A local resident told Sunrise that lollies and pieces of orange were scattered across her front yard following the collision, along with debris from the crash.
Supt Goldsmith said it was too early to say whether the driver had suffered a medical episode when she lost control.
Crash investigators will examine whether speed was a contributing factor.
Parts of the reserve and the damaged park bench remained cordoned off on Friday
The car finally came to a stop metres away from a children’s playground after smashing into a park bench
‘That will be subject to the investigation, but it is a downhill section of road, so if there has been a lack of control to some degree there is a possibility the car would have picked up speed as it’s driven further down Coleman Road,’ Supt Goldsmith said.
It comes after CCTV emerged of the out-of-control car travelling along Coleman Road moments before the collision.
The footage also showed a couple pushing a pram along a footpath. It is unclear if the group was the same trio who were hit.
The crash happened during the first week of Victorian school holidays and brought the state’s road toll to 14 lives lost in the last seven days.
‘We’re facing a horrific month for road trauma,’ Supt Goldsmith said.
‘We’ve lost so many lives and had so many life-threatening injuries over the course of last week (and it) is completely horrific and unacceptable.’
Victoria has recorded a number of deadly crashes involving out-of-control vehicles in recent years.
In November, a kindergarten worker and a three-year-old boy was injured when a runaway truck smashed through the gate of Macedon Ranges Montessori Preschool’s playground.
Victorian Police Superintendent Justin Goldsmith (pictured) described the fatal collision as an ‘absolute tragedy’
Police (pictured at the crash scene) are yet to formally interview the elderly woman, 91, who was behind the wheel
Two weeks earlier, an 11-year-old boy was killed and four other students injured when an SUV crashed through a fence at Auburn South Primary School in Melbourne’s east.
Five people were killed and six injured in November 2023 when a diabetic driver passed out behind the wheel and crashed into patrons seated outside the Royal Daylesford Hotel.
The driver was charged, but the allegations were ultimately struck out after a magistrate found there was not enough evidence to support a conviction.







