Met Police officer ‘drove at 80mph on wrong side of road’ before crash which killed pregnant woman, court hears

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  • May 29, 2026
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Flowers at the scene of the fatal crash in Eltham

PA

A Metropolitan Police officer was driving at around 80mph on the wrong side of the road just before a crash which killed a pregnant woman, a court has heard.

Mariam Ahmed, 38, died after her Volkswagen Polo was involved in a high-speed collision on Eltham Road, south-east London, on October 17 2024.

Her unborn child could not be saved.

Pc Chris Johnson, 56, and former Pc Danny Tomkins, 35, appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Thursday and spoke to confirm their names, addresses and dates of birth.

Prosecuting, Catherine Farrelly KC said both men were on duty and were driving separate vehicles over 70mph on a 30mph.

She added that they both overtook cars by driving on the wrong side of the road for roughly “130 metres” at high speed, moments before the crash.

Johnson, of Tonbridge, was driving the vehicle involved in the collision, and reached “somewhere in the region of 80mph”, the court heard.

“He appeared to have accelerated to the maximum capability of the vehicle he was driving,” said Ms Farrelly.

At the point of impact, Johnson, who has been charged with causing death by dangerous driving, was at around 50mph, “breaking to the maximum”, the prosecution said.

Tomkins, driving a second police vehicle which was not involved in the collision, overtook Ms Ahmed at 78mph before the crash, the court heard.

He denied dangerous driving on Thursday.

Ms Farrelly said: “The two of them were on duty as part of a pre-planned deployment targeting vehicles that were suspected to be involved in criminal activity.”

Ms Ahmed was travelling in the same direction on the same road as the officers, and had indicated to turn off before the collision, the court heard.

The force has said Johnson is attached to the Met’s Taskforce. Tomkins was attached to the same unit at the time of the incident, but has since left.

The charges follow an investigation by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which began a probe following a mandatory referral from the Met.

The two men have been granted unconditional bail, and will next appear at the Old Bailey on June 25.