Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Vehicle Owner Denies Liability In Whistler Crash That Killed Two Cyclists, Passenger

The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2016 12:01 PM
    PEMBERTON, B.C. — The owner of a vehicle that allegedly struck and killed two cyclists out for a weekend ride north of Whistler, B.C., denies having given the driver permission to use her car.
     
    Carmen Ned has filed a response to a civil suit in B.C. Supreme Court saying she gave neither express nor implied consent for Samuel Alec to take her vehicle on May 31, 2015.
     
    Alec is accused of fatally hitting cyclists Ross Chafe and Kelly Blunden on Highway 99 in a collision that also killed the vehicle's sole passenger, Paul Pierre Jr.
     
     
    Chafe's wife, Lizanne Bussieres, alleges Alec was impaired at the time of the crash, and is seeking damages from him, Ned and the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia.
     
    In his response filed in court last year, Alec blames the incident on Chafe's negligence, though none of the allegations have been proven in court.
     
    In August, RCMP charged Alec with impaired driving causing death, criminal negligence causing death and failure to remain at the scene of an accident.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    International Students Eye Top-Notch Education 'At A Reduced Price' In Canada

    International Students Eye Top-Notch Education 'At A Reduced Price' In Canada
    Hundreds of thousands of international students flock to Canadian univesities each year. But prospective students from the U.S. may find Canadian schools even more enticing this year thanks to the low loonie.

    International Students Eye Top-Notch Education 'At A Reduced Price' In Canada

    Falling Crude Prices Not Reflected At The Pump As Low Dollar, Refiners Take Cut

    Falling Crude Prices Not Reflected At The Pump As Low Dollar, Refiners Take Cut
    CALGARY — Low oil prices are hammering Canada's resource economy but drivers aren't seeing the silver lining of equally low prices at the pump.

    Falling Crude Prices Not Reflected At The Pump As Low Dollar, Refiners Take Cut

    Deadline For Midnight Strike Or Lockout Looms At Halifax Newspaper

    Deadline For Midnight Strike Or Lockout Looms At Halifax Newspaper
    HALIFAX — A lockout or strike appears inevitable at Canada's largest independent daily newspaper.

    Deadline For Midnight Strike Or Lockout Looms At Halifax Newspaper

    Twitter Harassment Trial Will Help Set Tone For Online Interaction: Observers

    Twitter Harassment Trial Will Help Set Tone For Online Interaction: Observers
    TORONTO — The outcome of what's believed to be the first criminal harassment case in Canada involving Twitter will help set the tone for how the courts and society navigate the nuances of online interaction, observers said Thursday.

    Twitter Harassment Trial Will Help Set Tone For Online Interaction: Observers

    B.C. Ministry Wants To Stop Metis Foster Parents' Petition To Keep Toddler

    B.C. Ministry Wants To Stop Metis Foster Parents' Petition To Keep Toddler
    The British Columbia government is fighting an attempt by Metis foster parents to stop the province from moving a two-year-old girl to Ontario to live with her older siblings.

    B.C. Ministry Wants To Stop Metis Foster Parents' Petition To Keep Toddler

    Langley's Injured Man Not Victim Of Gunshot, But Police Mystified By Events

    Langley's Injured Man Not Victim Of Gunshot, But Police Mystified By Events
    A man inside claimed he had been shot in the shoulder, he was taken to hospital and doctors quickly reported his injury did not appear to be from a gun

    Langley's Injured Man Not Victim Of Gunshot, But Police Mystified By Events