Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive

The Canadian Press , 03 Nov, 2014 10:57 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The night began with a promise not to drink and drive and ended with an impaired driver crashing his pickup and killing two passengers.
     
    Now the man behind the wheel on March 20, 2010, has been sentenced to three years in prison for the deaths of 20-year-old Brittany Plotnikoff and 38-year-old Kenneth Craigdaillie.  
     
    Wayne Fedan was driving them home from a party when he crashed his vehicle.
     
    His sentence includes a ban on driving for three years after he is released from prison.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Deborah Kloegman noted in her judgment that Fedan promised Plotnikoff’s stepfather earlier that evening that he would not drink and drive.
     
    The 53-year-old construction worker was also charged with impaired driving causing death but Kloegman earlier ruled that his blood-alcohol readings could not be entered as evidence due to improper police conduct.
     
    Despite that ruling, the judge found that Fedan consumed alcohol, an aggravating factor.
     
    In sentencing Fedan to a three-year prison sentence, Kloegman sided with the Crown. The defence had argued for a two-year term.
     
    Kloegman found that 30 minutes before the fatal crash, Fedan was seen tailgating, speeding and turning without signalling or braking beside a crosswalk, causing a pedestrian to jump to avoid being hit.
     
    She said Fedan’s “moral blameworthiness” is increased by his pattern of reckless driving that evening, the fact that his passengers were not wearing seatbelts, his consumption of alcohol and the broken promise that he would not drink and drive.
     
    Fedan was also under a police undertaking that banned consumption of alcohol due to a spousal incident in Alberta.
     
    The construction worker who is also an instrument technician has three children and three grandchildren. (Kamloops This Week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Hosts International Convention Which Brings World Of Space To Canada

    Toronto Hosts International Convention Which Brings World Of Space To Canada
    UNDATED, Canada - Toronto will be the centre of the universe next week. The city will host the 65th International Astronautical Congress, a conference aimed at helping companies in the space business.

    Toronto Hosts International Convention Which Brings World Of Space To Canada

    Christy Clark Says Path Of Peace On Schools, Aboriginals, Resources, Shapes BC Future

    Christy Clark Says Path Of Peace On Schools, Aboriginals, Resources, Shapes BC Future
    She told municipal leaders attending the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Whistler, B.C., that peace talks can settle difficult issues, including school strikes, aboriginal claims, resource conflicts and the high-cost of running governments.

    Christy Clark Says Path Of Peace On Schools, Aboriginals, Resources, Shapes BC Future

    Burnaby, Trans Mountain continue pipeline feud

    Burnaby, Trans Mountain continue pipeline feud
    VANCOUVER - Kinder Morgan took its fight with the City of Burnaby, B.C., directly to residents on Friday, the latest salvo in an ongoing feud over the proposed expansion of its Trans Mountain pipeline.

    Burnaby, Trans Mountain continue pipeline feud

    B.C. lawyers to vote in referendum on accreditation of Christian law school

    B.C. lawyers to vote in referendum on accreditation of Christian law school
    The governing members of the Law Society of British Columbia have voted in favour of holding a binding referendum to determine whether a Christian university's law school should be accredited.

    B.C. lawyers to vote in referendum on accreditation of Christian law school

    New Brunswick's chief electoral officer to seek audit of some vote tallies

    New Brunswick's chief electoral officer to seek audit of some vote tallies
    FREDERICTON - A spokesman for Elections New Brunswick says the province's chief electoral officer wants to address the snafus that delayed the release of Monday's voting results by asking a judge for a special audit.

    New Brunswick's chief electoral officer to seek audit of some vote tallies

    Crown appeals decision to grant bail to Quebec man charged with killing his kids

    Crown appeals decision to grant bail to Quebec man charged with killing his kids
    MONTREAL - The Crown will ask Quebec's highest court to review a decision to grant bail to a former doctor facing murder charges in the killing of his two children.

    Crown appeals decision to grant bail to Quebec man charged with killing his kids