Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Judge rules against blood-sample evidence after B.C. crash that killed 2 people

Cam Fortems, Kamloops This Week, Darpan, 04 Sep, 2014 02:33 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - The alleged driver in a crash that killed two people registered a blood-alcohol reading 50 per cent higher than the legal limit about an hour after the incident but a judge has ruled against the evidence.
     
    The results obtained through a blood sample taken at a hospital can't be used by the Crown because police failed to read the man on trial his legal rights beforehand, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Deborah Kloegman said.
     
    She said those rights included the right for Wayne Fedan, 53, to speak to a lawyer without cost or delay.
     
    However, she allowed as evidence a statement Fedan gave to a paramedic, in which he admitted to driving that night and drinking three rye and cokes beginning five hours earlier.
     
    Fedan is charged with two counts each of impaired driving causing death and dangerous driving causing death.
     
    The single-vehicle wreck killed 20-year-old Brittany Plotnikoff and 38-year-old Kenneth Craigdaillie in the early hours of March 20, 2010.
     
    While the Crown had said it would not use a blood-alcohol reading taken by police following the crash, a prosecutor intended to enter as evidence the reading taken in hospital.
     
    Last year, Kloegman found RCMP breached Fedan’s rights under a section of the charter because he was not read those rights when the first blood-alcohol reading was done.
     
    That meant Fedan’s admission to police that he was the driver and had been drinking are not admissible.
     
    Kloegman said Tuesday that the police demand for a blood sample at the hospital was also not accompanied by a charter warning.
     
    Court has heard that a junior RCMP constable with little experience was placed in charge of the investigation and the scene with two people dead.
     
    Const. Donna Gillingham has testified that she was a rookie officer who'd been on the job for a year and a half and may not have noted the smell of alcohol on Fedan's breath.
     
    Court heard Gillingham found an almost-empty bottle of whisky next to the pickup. The Crown alleges the bottle was inside the vehicle prior to the crash.
     
    Dr. Todd Ring testified Tuesday that Fedan was brought to Royal Inland Hospital in serious condition.
     
    Ring said he was concerned about possible brain injury and spinal fracture.
     
    Under those circumstances, Ring said, he would not allow police or a lawyer to speak with Fedan due to possible medical complications.
     
    The trauma team was focused on completing blood work and a CT scan to determine if Fedan had brain or other internal bleeding, he said.
     
    “If someone’s on the phone (talking to a lawyer), those steps can’t happen. It takes away from his medical care,” Ring said.
     
    Kloegman ruled medical staff at the hospital had Fedan’s medical needs, not his legal rights, in mind.
     
    A CT scan found Fedan had neck fractures and there was a danger he could break his spinal cord. Four days after the accident, he had neck surgery.
     
    Defence lawyer Anthony Varesi argued police had no right to take the second blood sample, based on the earlier breach of his rights.
     
    Varesi also noted that RCMP chatted with Fedan while at the hospital, but in the care of paramedics, before he was admitted.
     
    There was nothing preventing police from reading him his rights and allowing him to speak with a lawyer before the blood sample was taken, Varesi said. (Kamloops This Week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth
    VICTORIA - Google Earth may soon extend it global gaze to some of the most remote First Nations territories in Canada....

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - The head of the BC Teachers' Federation is urging government to enter mediation with teachers in order to end an ongoing strike before the school year starts next week.

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou
    HINTON, Alta. - Scientists studying the ravaged caribou habitat of Alberta's northwestern foothills say they have found so much disturbance from decades of industrial use that restoration will have to be selective.

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back
    A Vancouver man said he was looking forward to a bath and some black forest cake after completing a swim from New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island and back.

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back

    The universe in his hands: Vamcouver Artist hopes to launch galactic consciousness

    The universe in his hands: Vamcouver Artist hopes to launch galactic consciousness
    VANCOUVER - When a storm of magazines and major dailies published an astronaut's photograph of the Earth cresting above the moon in January 1969, the image spurred a new era of global consciousness.

    The universe in his hands: Vamcouver Artist hopes to launch galactic consciousness

    Scheduling conflicts with VIPs force Tories to keep two Challengers airborne

    Scheduling conflicts with VIPs force Tories to keep two Challengers airborne
    OTTAWA - The Harper government's plan to decommission four of its six C-144 Challengers was sidelined and revisited last year because the executive jets were getting more VIP and military use than thought.

    Scheduling conflicts with VIPs force Tories to keep two Challengers airborne