TORONTO — A drunk man found sleeping behind the wheel of his idling parked truck has lost his bid to take his impaired driving conviction to Ontario's top court.
In a decision Wednesday, the Ontario Court of Appeal rejected plans by Hugh O'Neill to argue he had only started the engine to keep warm and had no intention of driving.
O'Neill was found behind the wheel in the early hours of a December morning parked in a lot outside an industrial building in London, Ont. Court documents show a police officer had difficulty waking him. His blood-alcohol level was well in excess of the legal limit. He was convicted at trial. An initial appeal was dismissed.
O'Neill argued at trial that friends had driven him back to his truck after a night of drinking and he climbed in with the aim of sleeping until he was sober. He testified he had woken during the night, got out to relieve himself, and then got back in. At that point, he said, he had started the truck to keep warm and fell asleep again.
However, he insisted he planned to go get breakfast in the morning before driving to work.
MORE National ARTICLES
Ontario Elementary Students To Get Five Hours A Week Of Math Instruction
Education Minister says the province will spend $60 million to help students improve their test results in math
Ontario Elementary Students To Get Five Hours A Week Of Math Instruction
TransCanada Shuts Down KeyStone Pipeline After Oil Spill In South Dakota
The pipeline, which carries about 500,000 barrels of oil a day, was shut down in minutes
TransCanada Shuts Down KeyStone Pipeline After Oil Spill In South Dakota
Rental Housing Is For Residents, Says Vancouver Councillor Eyeing Airbnb Rules
Coun. Geoff Meggs wants to expand and accelerate a study already underway by city staff on the effect Airbnb and similar websites are having on the supply of rental housing.
Rental Housing Is For Residents, Says Vancouver Councillor Eyeing Airbnb Rules
Online Tool Educates Teachers To Help Kids Returning To School After Concussion
Teachers across Canada can now get advice from a new program to help students returning to school after a concussion.
Online Tool Educates Teachers To Help Kids Returning To School After Concussion
B.C. Seniors-Care Facility Cuts Entire Staff Over Reports Of Chronic Underfunding
More than 150 employees at Wexford Creek Care Home in Nanaimo, B.C., ranging from nurses to care aides, received pink slips on Friday.
B.C. Seniors-Care Facility Cuts Entire Staff Over Reports Of Chronic Underfunding
Transport Canada Report Raises Alarm Over Aging Coast Guard Fleet
A report done for Transport Canada and quietly tabled in the House of Commons, paints a grim portrait of the country's coast guard fleet, saying it is understaffed, desperately in need of new ships