Tina Butcher was scanning Facebook when she saw the news. The campaign she had dedicated her life to, after the death of her son Jamie, had been won.
It was six years since the 22-year-old had been killed; knocked down on a pedestrian crossing in Wisbech by a driver who was doing almost twice the speed limit.
It was five years since she had spoken out about how justice was failing families who had lost their loved ones to recklessness on the roads.
But when the Government finally announced plans to toughen up sentences for killer drivers last month, there was no celebration in the Butcher household. Tina sat down and cried.
'It was just really emotional to hear it,' she said. 'After all this time, something positive had actually happened. It was a huge thing for our family.
'That was why we did it. It was for Jamie.'
Tina was forced to confront her worst nightmare in February 2011.
Jamie hadn't returned from a trip into the town to withdraw money. A police car pulled up and officers sat them down in the kitchen to deliver the news.
Tina had to phone her daughter Hollie to tell her that her big brother was dead.
Steve Green, Jamie's stepfather, had to identify the body.
He had to ring Manchester University to tell them that the promising psychology student who had just been accepted onto their post-graduate course wouldn't be coming.
Overwhelmed by grief, none of them ate for days. But it wasn't until months afterwards that the full horror of what had happened became clear.
The man behind the wheel was Michael Moore.
Prosecutors said he was travelling at a minimum speed of 58mph and had run a red light in a bid to get to one of the shops before it closed.
His Chrysler Cruiser hit Jamie with such force that his body was found 44 metres from the crossing.
Moore, then aged 40 and from Parson Drove, appeared at Cambridge Crown Court in April, 2012. He was jailed for 43 months.
Judge Gareth Hawkesworth said: 'Nothing I can do, in terms of the sentence, can bring him back.'
The family were devastated and furious.
'We have got to live with this for the rest of our lives because we knew him,' said Jamie's tearful sister Hollie. 'We knew his laugh, we knew his voice and that man has destroyed that.'
That afternoon, they vowed to do everything they could to change a system which had let them down; to toughen up the punishments imposed on dangerous drivers.
'When we started they asked us whether we just wanted to appeal Jamie's case,' said Steve. 'But we said we wanted the whole system to change.'
At first, the campaign grew quickly. But as the years ticked by, the MP discussions and press stories dried up.
Jamie's family didn't stop. They put up posters across the country, took their petition to businesses, supermarkets and even car-boot sales and raised thousands of pounds for charity.
Then, six years after they launched 'Justice for Jamie' in their local newspaper The Wisbech Standard, an announcement was made.
'Ministers confirm plans to introduce tougher sentences for those who drive irresponsibly and devastate lives,' read the headline.
The Government's proposals include raising the maximum sentence for causing death by dangerous driving from 14 years to life and creating a new offence of causing serious injury by careless driving.
It was a landmark moment but not one which will put an end to their road safety campaigning.
'I think this campaign actually helped us get on with life,' said Tina. 'Without it, I don't know how we would have gone on. I don't know how we would have coped with the anger and the grief. It was a focus for us.'
Steve said they were now thinking about going into schools to talk about road safety.
'It is still hard to talk about what happened, I'm emotional whenever I try to. But if you can do something good, if you can stop just one family going through what we did, then it's got to be worth it.
'It will always have an impact on us – but at least now we've helped make a difference.'
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here