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Mother who lost arm and leg ‘contributed’ to injuries, claims TfL

A mother-of-two City worker who lost her arm and leg after being hit by two Tube trains ‘contributed’ to her own life-changing injuries, according to Transport for London.  

Sarah de Lagarde, 46, slipped on a wet platform at High Barnet station in north London in September 2022 and fell down the gap between the train and the platform.

But nobody heard her desperate cries for help and after being hit by two trains, she was rushed to hospital where her limbs were amputated. 

The PR executive, who now uses two prosthetic limbs including a bionic arm, has since launched a legal battle against London Underground Ltd (LUL), part of Transport for London (TfL), and is seeking £25million in compensation.

However, in defence documents submitted to the High Court by TfL’s legal team and seen by the London Standard, it is claimed that ‘the incident was caused or contributed to by the claimant’s negligence’.

The public transport network says Ms de Lagarde ‘placed herself in a position of danger’ because she was ‘negligent’ in how she got off the train.

Ms De Lagarde, global head of corporate affairs at City investment firm Janus Henderson, was returning home from work when the accident happened at 10pm on September 30, 2022.

She fell asleep and was woken up by another passenger at the end of the Northern Line at High Barnet station, eight miles past her stop to get home to Camden.

Mrs de Lagarde is pictured at the Royal London Hospital trauma ward after the accident

The wife and mother fell onto the tracks at High Barnet station, pictured, on her commute home after she fell asleep and missed her intended stop

After getting off the train, she noticed it was returning back the same way and stepped backwards to get back on. But she fell through the gap onto the tracks.

TfL defence lists six grounds of Ms de Lagarde’s alleged contributory negligence

  • Failed to manage her exit from the train so that she was on stable footing when she was on the platform. 
  • Failed to walk safely along the platform so that she stepped sideways and backwards on the platform after alighting the train and fell backwards into the gap.
  • Failed reasonably to maintain her balance.
  • Failed to have sufficient regard for her own safety and placed herself in a position of danger.
  • Failed to heed warnings of the existence of the gap, including announcements given on the network of the existence of a gap between trains and platforms.
  • Failed to guard against the obvious risk of danger of falling off the platform if positioned close to its edge.
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According to the TfL defence: ‘The claimant took a few steps forward on to the platform and then took a few steps backwards, before the rear of her body struck the rear side of the door of the train she had exited from.

‘The claimant continued to move backwards and, approximately seven seconds after exiting the train, she fell into the gap between carriages five and six of the train.’  

Around five minutes later, the train driver walked back through the train to get to the driver’s cab to start his return journey southbound.

He noticed Ms de Lagarde’s brown leather bag wedged between the train and the platform, which he later handed to lost property. But he didn’t investigate further.

TfL’s defence said the driver ‘did not see or hear the claimant at that point and did not look into the gap, having no reason to do so’.

She called out for help, but no one came and the train left the platform, bringing her right arm with it.

She managed to reach her phone but her face was so badly injured the face ID didn’t work and it was too wet from the rain for the touchscreen to function, so she again tried to shout for help.

But again, no one came. And then a second train arrived, running over her right leg.

Standing outside the Royal Courts of Justice in central London last February, she said: ‘There were no staff on that platform, and no one was watching CCTV. No one had responded to my screams for help.

‘Twenty-two tonnes of steel crushed my limbs, and, if that wasn’t bad enough, I remained on the tracks undetected until the second train came into the station, crushing me for a second time.

‘A few weeks before I was hit by the two Tube trains, I climbed Mount Kilimanjaro with my husband, which was a lifelong dream of mine.

‘I felt on top of the world, and overnight all that changed. I am now severely disabled for life.’ 

Mrs de Lagarde at a rehabilitation centre, getting fitted for her bionic arm

She was travelling home to Camden from work when she fell down the gap

The mother suffered from PTSD and said she will never use the Underground again

Sarah de Lagarde's prosthetics

Sarah de Lagarde's prosthetics

Ms de Lagarde lost her right arm and leg after being crushed by the tube

TfL say that the driver of the second train did not see Ms de Lagarde lying on the track, despite the train’s headlights being on.

However, TfL said their purpose was ‘not to illuminate the tracks or the platform’ but to make the train visible to workers on the track.

Ms de Lagarde was on the tracks for 15 minutes before the alarm was raised and London Fire Brigade and London’s Air Ambulance medics rushed to the scene,

Three air ambulance medics helped save her life, with Dr Benjamin Marriage and paramedics Chris Doyle and Kevin Cuddon receiving a national bravery award.

Mr Cuddon said: ‘Sarah was trapped in a very awkward position so I crawled under the train to help the London Fire Brigade get her out. 

‘Together we had to carry her about 30m under the train and put her on a device to lift her up to the platform. 

‘She was really quiet, pale and had lost some blood.’

Ms de Lagarde had stepped onto an ‘accessibility hump’, a slope of a ramp that is designed to make it easier for wheelchair users to board trains. 

Mrs de Lagarde was hit by two trains during the horror fall in September 2022

An investigation by TfL found that the ramp was ‘in principle compliant’ with TfL’s standards and that ‘passengers stepping onto the base of the platform ramp is considered a sub-optimal arrangement’ but was nevertheless

Ms de Lagarde says ‘remained conscious and continued to cry out for help’.

Her claim states: ‘She was left lying partially across the first rail of the track, closest to the station platform.

‘The claimant attempted to manoeuvre her right foot and leg across the first rail in order to retrieve her mobile telephone. She cried out for help, but nobody came to her assistance.’

She was unable to move into a recess space in the platform wall as it was blocked by a steel frame and ‘excess ballast’, it is claimed.

It is disputed by TfL that there are different safety procedures for trains departing from a terminus station, as opposed to a station elsewhere on the line.

‘The same checks are required on dispatching a train from a terminus station and a non-terminus station,’ TfL said. 

Ms de Lagarde was airlifted to the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel where where she underwent surgery before being transferred to the Amputee Rehabilitation Unit in Lambeth on October 20. 

She was discharged home on December 1, 2022. Ms de Lagarde receives ongoing care at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore.

A TfL spokesperson said: ‘We are responding to a legal claim brought by Sarah de Lagarde. 

‘It is not appropriate to discuss details of our defence while this case is ongoing. 

‘Our thoughts continue to be with Sarah and her family following this terrible incident, and we will continue to make every possible effort to learn from any incident on the Tube network. 

‘Safety is our top priority and we will always place it at the forefront of our thinking.’ 

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