Close X
Friday, November 29, 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

    B.C. Man Operated 'Chop Shop' For Guns To Be Used In Crime: Crown Lawyer

    B.C. Man Operated 'Chop Shop' For Guns To Be Used In Crime: Crown Lawyer
    Frank Caputo told B.C. Supreme Court that police pulled Charles Patrick over in December 2013 behind the wheel of a suspicious vehicle.

    B.C. Man Operated 'Chop Shop' For Guns To Be Used In Crime: Crown Lawyer

    Iraqi Couple Allege Alan Kurdi's Father Was Captain Of The Boat That Capsized

    Iraqi Couple Allege Alan Kurdi's Father Was Captain Of The Boat That Capsized
    Reports say Zainab Abbas and Ahmad Hadi, who lost two children in the tragedy, told journalists in Baghdad that after the accident, Abdullah Kurdi begged them not to tell Turkish police that he was in charge of the boat

    Iraqi Couple Allege Alan Kurdi's Father Was Captain Of The Boat That Capsized

    Sex Case Of Ex-Alpine Canada Coach Bertrand Charest Put Off Until October

     The case of a former national ski coach who faces a host of sex-related charges involving girls and young women between the ages of 12 and 19 has been put off until October.

    Sex Case Of Ex-Alpine Canada Coach Bertrand Charest Put Off Until October

    13 Pot Shops In B.C. Threatened With Police Raids In Health Canada Crackdown

    13 Pot Shops In B.C. Threatened With Police Raids In Health Canada Crackdown
     North America's oldest medical marijuana dispensary has fired off a terse letter to Health Canada demanding to know why it's being targeted.

    13 Pot Shops In B.C. Threatened With Police Raids In Health Canada Crackdown

    Canada Only Country To Charge Refugees Interest On Travel Loans: Advocates

    Canada Only Country To Charge Refugees Interest On Travel Loans: Advocates
    The federal government requires refugees to pay for their own travel costs and overseas medical exams and will loan families up to $10,000.

    Canada Only Country To Charge Refugees Interest On Travel Loans: Advocates

    Rob Ford Says No New Tumours Found Months After Surgery For Rare Cancer

    Rob Ford Says No New Tumours Found Months After Surgery For Rare Cancer
    Former Toronto mayor Rob Ford says doctors haven't found any new tumours months after his surgery for a rare and aggressive form of cancer.

    Rob Ford Says No New Tumours Found Months After Surgery For Rare Cancer