Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing

The Canadian Press, 22 Jan, 2015 10:18 PM
  • B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing
PENTICTON, B.C. — A 26-year-old man will spend another six months in prison before beginning the long journey back into the community of Oliver, B.C., for drunkenly stabbing his younger brother to death.
 
Kyle Louie was sentenced Thursday after earlier pleading guilty to manslaughter in the death of his 21-year-old brother, Reece Louie, on Feb. 19, 2011.
 
The Crown said Reece Louie suffered multiple stab wounds in an altercation at their father’s house, where the brothers lived at the time.
 
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Austin Cullen agreed with a joint submission from Crown and defence lawyers that Louie be sentenced to 75 months and be declared a long-term offender.
 
Given 69 months’ credit for time already served, Louie has six months remaining on his sentence. His time behind bars will be followed by five and a half years of supervision as a long-term offender.
 
Louie declined to address the court, but turned and waved to family members and supportersbefore being escorted out of the courtroom as some people in the gallery hugged each other.
 
Family members, including the brothers’ mother, declined to comment.
 
Defence lawyer Tom Arbogast later said the family is relieved by the judge’s decision.
 
“I don’t know if anyone’s happy in a situation like this," he said. "It was a tragedy on all sides. Hopefully they can heal and move ahead in the community about this and use this as something to maybe draw a positive out of something that was really tragic.”
 
Court heard Louie believes that turning his turn his life around would the best possible tribute to his brother. He hopes to become a mechanic.
 
As part of the long-term offender designation, Cullen recommended to the National Parole Board that Louie enter various residential treatment programs and then a halfway house following his release from prison.
 
Arbogast said he remains hopeful that Louie will succeed in changing his life, with the support of fellow members of the Osoyoos Indian Band.
 
 
“I’m very comfortable that his community has turned out for him and I think that’s a really good sign because he needs community support,” he said. “He needs to understand the gravity of what has happened and I think that he really does.”
 
“I can just say that Kyle is relieved and I think he really wants to move forward in a positive way,” he said after meeting with his client.
 
Kyle and Reece Louie were close friends, but had severe anger management and drug and alcohol problems. They often violently fought each other when intoxicated.
 
Court has heard a breathalyzer reading taken several hours after his arrest indicated Louie had a blood-alcohol level of .30, almost four times the legal limit. (Penticton Herald)

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec government passes controversial pension legislation

Quebec government passes controversial pension legislation
QUEBEC — The Quebec legislature has passed a controversial pension bill that has triggered massive protests from municipal workers.

Quebec government passes controversial pension legislation

Brothers jailed for 'relentless attack' in online cyberbullying of 14-year-old

Brothers jailed for 'relentless attack' in online cyberbullying of 14-year-old
DAUPHIN, Man. — Two Manitoba brothers have been sentenced to 16 months in jail for tormenting and sexually exploiting a 14-year-old girl online.

Brothers jailed for 'relentless attack' in online cyberbullying of 14-year-old

More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley
VANCOUVER — Officials with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency are expected to release more details on an avian flu virus that has forced the quarantine of four poulty farms in British Columbia's Fraser Valley.

More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges

RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges
The RCMP alleges the teenager had committed a robbery at the direction of and for the benefit of an unspecified terrorist organization.

RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges

Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed

Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed
TORONTO — An Ontario court has dismissed an appeal by the federal government that sought to quash a class action lawsuit which claims a devastating loss of cultural identity was suffered by Ontario children caught in the so-called "60s scoop."

Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed

Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?

Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?
The Conservative government has been under fire in recent weeks for a growing backlog of 11,000 social security cases, most involving ailing or injured Canadians denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits and waiting for their appeals to be heard.

Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?