Alton Towers crash survivors Leah Washington and Joe Pugh have celebrated their fifth anniversary together in lockdown - almost five years after they went on their first date to the amusement park.
The 23-year-old amputee from south Yorkshire shared a picture of the pair together on her Instagram page with the caption: "5 years."
Joe posted the same picture but wrote: "We made it to 5 years should currently be in a log cabin but garden celebrations (with the household only to all the corona police) will have to do! Thanks for all the good times & memories over the last 5 year's Leah! Happy anniversary."
Joe's Instagram story gave some more detail to their day of celebrations - they were playing beer pong, shot roulette and got a takeaway from their local pub. Nice.
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Leah and Joe were on their first proper date at Alton Towers back in June 2015 when the ride they were on - the Smiler - smashed into a stationary carriage.
Leah was one of two passengers who lost a leg, while Joe shattered two kneecaps in the horrific crash which was put down to human error after an investigation found that an engineer had wrongly restarted the ride while a stationary carriage was on the track.
When the Smiler crash happened, at least 16 were injured and five people were seriously hurt, but the trapped ride-goers had to wait a gruelling four hours to be freed as they sat 25ft (7.6m) up in the air at an angle of 45 degrees.
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Since then, Alton Towers has been fined £5 million ($6m) over the incident. However, a solicitor representing eight of the 16 injured said: "Money will never replace limbs, nor heal psychological scars."
A judge sentencing the theme park's operator Merlin Attractions Operations Ltd said the Smiler crash was 'avoidable.'
Sentencing Judge Michael Chambers QC described the crash as a 'catastrophic failure', adding: "This was a needless and avoidable accident in which those who were injured were lucky not to be killed."
Featured Image Credit: Instagram/leahwashyTopics: UK News, Alton Towers, UK