A British backpack attacked him as a drunken electric scooter, Australia’s murder of a man.
Alicia Camp, 25, from Redditch at Worrestershire, admitted that dangerous driving is killed while alcohol is influenced by alcohol in appearance, through a video transplant, in Monday.
The prosecutors reduced the second charge of dangerous driving and caused physical damage to the passenger.
Dangerous driving that causes death while poisoning has a maximum prison sentence in Australia.
Ms. Camp had a drink with a friend on May 31 before pulling the couple out of a bar. Later on that night, he hired an electronic scooter and moved from the back, at a speed of 20-25 kilometers per hour when he encountered Tanh Phaan.
Mr. Fan, 51, described by relatives as “beloved husband, father of two, brother and dear friend”, suffered serious injury and died of brain bleeding a few days later in the hospital.
The 26 -year -old female traveler endured a broken skull and a broken nose, but survived. He suffered minor injuries.

The court had previously heard that Ms. Camp’s blood alcohol was 0.158 – more than three times the legal limit of 0.05.
Prosecutors said that CCTV videos show him “unexpected” moments before the accident.
Michael Tudori, a defense lawyer, said that his customer was “nervous and worried” as “a young foreign national girl in our prison system” but relieved that secondary charges had declined.
“He has done a stupid thing at that time,” There are consequences, and he just wants to continue with his life, “he said. “
The accident led Mr Fan, the first pedestrian in Western Australia, died in an electronic scooter incident and forced the city council and other local governments to suspend rent plans.
Western Australia’s law requires electronic scooters for more than 16 years, wearing helmets, vigilant and carrying no passengers.
Ms. Camp, who was on a working holiday visa in Australia, is in custody and is scheduled to appear in court on October 31. His lawyer said he would like to end the penalties before Christmas, adding that his family was worried in England.