Royal Highland Show Fined After Boy Death

Published 5th Dec 2014

The Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland has been fined £100,000 after being found guilty of a charge under the Health and Safety at Work Act, concerning the death of a three-year old boy at their annual Highland Show at Ingliston in 2008. At the end of a 13-day trial at Edinburgh Sheriff Court today (Dec 4) the jury of nine women and six men, after deliberating for two hours, found the Society guilty by a majority of failing to ensure that moveable concrete bollards in the North Car Park were provided and maintained in a condition and connected in a manner which did not present a risk of overturning.

The jury returned a majority verdict of not guilty on a second charge under the Act. The boy, Ben Craggs, was only six days away from his fourth birthday and was at the Show with his father, Jonathan and mother, Dawn, who farmed at Sedgefield in County Durham and were exhibiting cattle.

On June 19, the first day of the Show, Mr Craggs went to his lorry which was parked in the Silver Flow area of the North Car Park to collect his white show jacket. Unable to reach the jacket, which was hanging at the back of the cabin, he lifted Ben up to collect it.

As Mr Craggs was locking the cabin door, he heard a man shouting that a wee boy had fallen. Mr Craggs ran to find his son on the ground with a 148 kilo bollard on his head. He and the man, a car parking steward, lifted the bollard off the boy. Ben was bleeding from the nose and ears.

He was taken to the Royal Hospital for Sick Children, but died from severe head injuries. Ben had fallen and seized hold of a rope connecting two bollards, one of which overturned striking him on the head. Fining the Society £100,000, Sheriff Paul Arthurson allowed 28 days for payment and expressed public sympathy to Mr and Mrs Craggs for the tragic death of their son, Ben.