


A heavily pregnant UK-based Nigerian nurse, Evelyn Brown, has been crushed to death by a truck driver.
58-year-old Trevor Norgate, was behind the wheel of his HGV when it drifted onto the hard shoulder where Brown, 41, had stopped in her Kia Sorento.
Footage of the smash on the M8 westbound near Hermiston Gait in Edinburgh on December 18, 2023 was captured on Norgate’s dash cam.
The court heard Norgate, of Bellshill, Lanarkshire, already had six points on his licence at the time for using a mobile phone while on the road.
He appeared in the dock at the High Court in Glasgow today where he pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving.
Evelyn – known as Eve – died from her injuries. She was 34 weeks pregnant at the time and her unborn baby also passed away.
Prosecutors stated Norgate had ‘allowed himself to become distracted’ prior to the collision and that he should have seen Ms Brown’s vehicle.
He was remanded in custody and is due to be sentenced next month, when he faces a prison sentence.
Ms Brown was born in Nigeria and moved to the UK in 2015.
Ms Brown worked as an agency nurse for a company called Medline and had not long finished a 12-hour shift at East Lothian Community Hospital in Haddington when tragedy struck that morning.
The court heard Ms Brown, who had two young girls aged three and four, had texted her sister to say she was on her way home.
Norgate meantime was driving his haulage firm HGV, having started work at 4am that day.
He had ‘complied with rest requirements’ while behind the wheel of his lorry.
The court was shown harrowing footage of the collision, which began with Ms Brown’s stationary car on the hard shoulder with its lights on.
Norgate immediately got out and dialled 999. A passing doctor stopped to give an unresponsive Ms Brown first aid.
Fire crews cut her out of the wrecked car before paramedics attempted to revive her, but she had suffered fatal neck and chest injuries and she and her baby died at the scene.
Norgate went on to make a number of comments to police including he had ‘moved in his lane’ for ‘something in the road’.
But prosecutors said there was ‘no evidence to substantiate’ this claim.
She added, instead, the dash cam footage showed ‘a slow, continuous motion’ on the hard shoulder that morning with ‘no signs of driver interaction’.
Ms Brown, also of Bellshill, lived with her wheelchair-bound mother at the time.