Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Woman Pleads Guilty To Impaired Driving In Crash That Killed Saskatoon Family

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2016 12:19 PM
    SASKATOON — A Saskatoon woman has admitted to impaired driving in a highway crash that killed a couple and their two young children.
     
    Catherine McKay, who remains in custody, appeared in court on video and pleaded guilty to four counts of impaired driving causing death.
     
    A sentencing hearing is to be held July 27.
     
    Police said that McKay was driving an SUV that struck the family's car as it crossed Highway 11 just north of Saskatoon on Jan. 3.
     
     
     
    Jordan Van de Vorst, who was 34, and his 33-year-old wife, Chanda Van de Vorst, died at the scene.
     
    Five-year-old Kamryn and her two-year-old brother, Miguire, died in hospital.
     
    Jordan Van de Vorst worked as a microbiologist at research company Phenomenome Discoveries, which said after the crash that more than 50 people had received transplants through organ donations from the family.
     
    McKay, listed at the time as executive director of the Saskatoon Sports Council, was also an active member of the city's wrestling community.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Photo-Matching Scheme Quietly Singles Out Passport Fraudsters

    Federal Photo-Matching Scheme Quietly Singles Out Passport Fraudsters
    OTTAWA — Federal officials used photo-matching technology to identify 15 high-risk people — all wanted on immigration warrants — who used false identities to apply for travel documents.

    Federal Photo-Matching Scheme Quietly Singles Out Passport Fraudsters

    Privacy Laws, Bureaucracy Make Canada A Challenging Place For Solving Cold Cases

    Privacy Laws, Bureaucracy Make Canada A Challenging Place For Solving Cold Cases
    He mapped her movements through her downtown neighbourhood, plotted his attack, then savagely struck one August night in 1983. When he was done, Susan Tice lay sexually assaulted, stabbed and breathing her last in her own bedroom.

    Privacy Laws, Bureaucracy Make Canada A Challenging Place For Solving Cold Cases

    University Of Calgary Pays Ransom Of $20,000 After Attack On Computer Systems

    University Of Calgary Pays Ransom Of $20,000 After Attack On Computer Systems
    The University of Calgary says it paid a ransom of $20,000 demanded after a recent cyberattack to preserve an option to restore critical research data.

    University Of Calgary Pays Ransom Of $20,000 After Attack On Computer Systems

    Giant Sinkhole Opens Up In Ottawa Street

    Giant Sinkhole Opens Up In Ottawa Street
      Water could be seen gushing through the sinkhole before crews managed to shut the water off.

    Giant Sinkhole Opens Up In Ottawa Street

    Group Wants Liberals To Take Action On Plan To Help Yazidi Refugees

    Group Wants Liberals To Take Action On Plan To Help Yazidi Refugees
    OTTAWA — At least 400 Yazidi women raped and tortured by Islamic militants could have safe passage to Canada if the government would heed a proposal to rescue them, a religious freedoms organization says.

    Group Wants Liberals To Take Action On Plan To Help Yazidi Refugees

    Pan Am Games $342 MillionOver Budget: Ontario Auditor General

    TORONTO — Ontario's auditor general says last summer's Pan Am and Parapan Am Games in Toronto came in $342 million over budget, but the province still paid more than $5 million in performance bonuses.

    Pan Am Games $342 MillionOver Budget: Ontario Auditor General