A Danish hunter who drove on the wrong side of the road and caused a crash which killed a minibus driver and injured his 10 passengers was admonished yesterday.
The case against Stefan Hansen, 25, called at the High Court in Glasgow.
His sentence had been deferred for a year to allow him to carry out 300 hours of unpaid work with the Red Cross in his homeland.
Judge Lady Stacey previously warned him that if he failed to do the work, the alternative of prison was still open to her.
Upon hearing yesterday that it had been completed, she made no further order and admonished him.
She previously told him: “While this offence is punishable by imprisonment I am not persuaded it is the only suitable disposal in your case.”
She said his action had caused “devastation” in a number of people’s lives and added: “You will know you did a great deal of harm by your action’s carelessness that day.”
The judge also banned him from driving for two years in the UK.
Hansen was on the wrong side of the road on the A83 near the Kennacraig ferry terminal, Tarbert, Argyll, when he collided head-on in a Mitsubishi 4X4 with the vehicle.
The driver of the minibus, Andrew Rennie, 62, of Millars Park, Campbeltown, died following the collision on October 17, 2013. A son of Mr Rennie was among those seriously injured.
Iain Rennie, Charles McCormick, Peter Chute, Steven Coffield, Alan MacMillan, Alister Jarvie, Ryan Sharp, Richard Todd, John Gillies and Gary Anderson were all injured.
Hansen, who has no previous convictions, had denied a charge of causing his death by dangerous driving by driving his vehicle southbound in the northbound carriageway.
A jury earlier convicted him of the lesser offence causing death by careless driving.
The court heard he had previously offered to plead guilty to causing death by careless driving.