Fiona Lamdin,West of England home and social affairs correspondent, in Tauntonand
Dan Ayers,Somerset
Family handoutA 17-year-old who died on the M5 after fleeing a stationary police car while handcuffed had tried to escape from vehicles before, a court has heard.
Tamzin Hall, from Wellington, was arrested after a disturbance at the children’s home where she lived in Taunton in November 2024.
She fled police while on the M5 and sustained fatal injuries when she was hit by another car. The police watchdog previously said the car she was inside had stopped for safety reasons.
A pre-inquest hearing at Taunton Coroners’ Court heard earlier that Tamzin, who had autism, had tried to escape from moving vehicles four times in the year before she died. A jury inquest into her death is scheduled for January 2027.
The inquest heard Somerset Council had identified the children’s home she was living in was not suitable for Tamzin.
The council had applied for a space in a secure home for her but there was not one available, the court heard.

Coroner Samatha Marsh told the hearing Tamzin regularly tried to escape from the children’s home.
She said if Tamzin had been in secure accommodation, the police would not have been called to support staff on the night of her death.
Marsh said that, as an autistic child, Tamzin needed three adults to be with her. At the time of her death, there were two police officers in the vehicle.
Avon and Somerset Police said it had referred the incident to the Independent Office for Police Conduct and could not speculate on the watchdog’s investigation.
In a statement released previously, Tamzin’s mother Amy Hall described her eldest daughter as her “best friend” and said her death had left their family “devastated”.
A representative for the Hall family said earlier that they were “keen to emphasise” that the driver involved was “not at fault at all” for Tamzin’s death.







