Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Verdict Delayed For Speedboat Operator Accused In Shuswap Lake Death

The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2015 01:18 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A speedboat operator accused of driving erratically and killing the driver of a houseboat will have to wait a month to learn his fate.
     
    Leon Reinbrecht is charged with criminal negligence causing death and criminal negligence causing bodily harm in the July 2010 crash on Shuswap Lake that claimed the life of Ken Brown.
     
    Reinbrecht's trial began in B.C. Supreme Court earlier this year.
     
    Justice Sheri Donegan was slated to deliver her verdict Wednesday but will now wait until Oct. 27.
     
    Multiple witnesses testified about seeing a speedboat being driven erratically on the busy lake in the moments leading up to the crash, which followed a post-Canada Day fireworks display.
     
    Defence lawyers repeatedly focused their questioning on whether the houseboat was properly lit.
     
    An expert witness for the defence testified the lighting system was not working at the time of the crash, and police admitted they failed to check it. 
     
    Justin Beaumont, an expert in marine-vessel investigations, also raised questions about the police investigation.
     
    At one point during the trial, an RCMP corporal who investigated the crash contacted Beaumont's employer, the Canadian Coast Guard, to see if the man would be in conflict by testifying.
     
    Toxicology reports showed Brown was impaired at the time of his death. The Crown put forward no evidence about whether Reinbrecht was intoxicated, but a witness who was on the speedboat said Reinbrecht had been drinking.
     
    In his closing argument in June, defence lawyer Joe Doyle compared Brown to a driver on a highway without headlights.
     
    "This is running into an unlit vessel that's moving, that should have had its lights on," Doyle said.
     
    "He (Brown) shouldn't have been out there."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dalhousie University Student Charged With Murder Back In Court Next Month

    Dalhousie University Student Charged With Murder Back In Court Next Month
    The case of a 22-year-old man charged in the death of a fellow student at Dalhousie University in Halifax will return to court next month.

    Dalhousie University Student Charged With Murder Back In Court Next Month

    Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab

    Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper doesn't have a reputation as a gambler, but his 2015 federal election call is shaping up as an all-or-nothing bet on another Conservative majority.

    Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab

    Merritt, B.C., Demonstrators Fight Biosolids, Arguing Sewage Sludge Unsafe

    First Nations and members of the group Friends of the Nicola Valley are demonstrating outside the convention, hoping to convince delegates that dumping the biosolid material is unsafe.

    Merritt, B.C., Demonstrators Fight Biosolids, Arguing Sewage Sludge Unsafe

    La Presse Laying Off 158 Workers As It Ends Weekday Printed Edition

    La Presse Laying Off 158 Workers As It Ends Weekday Printed Edition
    Montreal La Presse is laying off 158 employees as it prepares to eliminate its weekday printed newspaper in January.

    La Presse Laying Off 158 Workers As It Ends Weekday Printed Edition

    U.S. court to rule on settlement fund for victims of Lac-Megantic rail disaster

    U.S. court to rule on settlement fund for victims of Lac-Megantic rail disaster
     A bankruptcy judge in Maine is set to rule on a $338 million US settlement fund for victims of the 2013 train derailment in Lac-Megantic, Que., that claimed 47 lives.

    U.S. court to rule on settlement fund for victims of Lac-Megantic rail disaster

    Akal Takht Pardons Dera Sacha Sauda Chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh

    Akal Takht Pardons Dera Sacha Sauda Chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh
    The Akal Takht -- the highest temporal seat of the Sikh religion -- on Thursday said it has pardoned Dera Sacha Sauda sect chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh following a written apology from him.

    Akal Takht Pardons Dera Sacha Sauda Chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh