Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conviction, Sentence Upheld For Ontario Cop Who Crashed Doing 178 Km/h In A 50 Zone

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2018 12:16 PM
    TORONTO — A police officer who crashed after driving at 178 kilometres an hour in a 50 zone while responding to an emergency had his dangerous driving conviction and licence suspension upheld on Friday.
     
     
    In its ruling, the Ontario Court of Appeal rejected a challenge from provincial police Const. Jamie Porto, who argued his trial judge had made several errors in finding him guilty.
     
     
    "The appellant's excessive speed in and of itself amounted to a marked departure from the standard of care of a reasonable police officer," the Appeal Court said in its decision. "It was open to the trial judge to reach this conclusion."
     
     
    According to court records, Porto was responding to an emergency call on an afternoon in October 2014 after a crash. Court records show he sped through the village of St. Joachim, east of Windsor, with its posted speed limit of 50 km/h at a speed of 178 km/h.
     
     
    Porto passed a construction zone and a school before crashing into a vehicle going in the same direction that was making a left turn. The crash occurred as Porto tried to pass the vehicle driven by Ryan Coombes on the left, court records show.
     
     
    Coombes was left with cracked ribs and a concussion, while a pedestrian and her daughters not far from Coombes' spinning vehicle were able to walk away unhurt. A gas station nearby was extensively damaged.
     
     
     
     
    At trial, the officer admitted his speeding amounted to driving in a manner dangerous to the public and that his driving had resulted in bodily harm. The issue for the judge to decide was whether Porto's driving had shown a "marked departure" from what was reasonable in the circumstances.
     
     
    In December 2016, Superior Court Justice Bruce Thomas convicted the 34-year-old officer of dangerous driving causing bodily harm to Coombes. He ordered Porto to pay a fine of $2,500 and barred him from driving for a year.
     
     
    "I am reminded that this officer was responding to a potential life-threatening call," Thomas said in nevertheless finding Porto's driving was unreasonable. "(But) Const. Porto should have foreseen the danger posed by Mr. Coombes's vehicle."
     
     
    Thomas concluded that the constable, a 10-year officer with two children, should have reduced his speed dramatically and stayed in his lane until he was sure of what move Coombes was planning. The failure to do so and the attempt to pass Coombes at the intersection in the middle of the village at high speed was not reasonable, the judge found.
     
     
    In upholding the conviction, the Appeal Court rejected Porto's argument that Thomas had put too much emphasis on speed.
     
     
    "Given that the trial judge concluded that speed alone amounted to a marked departure, it is difficult to see how he could over-emphasize this factor," the Appeal Court said. "At 178 km/h, the appellant had virtually no time to react to emergencies or foreseeable conduct by other drivers."
     
     
     
     
    The higher court also rejected arguments to substitute a discharge for the fine and driving ban based on fresh evidence — essentially that Porto is considered a "conscientious and able" officer respected by his superiors and peers.
     
     
    "That same evidence was before the trial judge and it provides no basis upon which this court could interfere with the sentence he imposed," the Appeal Court said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate

    Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate
    VANCOUVER — Police appear to be cracking down on pop-up stalls selling marijuana while frustrations mount over the open-air market operating in a prominent square in downtown Vancouver.

    Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard
    Firefighters were still on the scene of a large fire in Port Coquitlam, B.C., late Monday after a collision in a CP Rail yard.

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free
    The university is poised to become only the third post-secondary institution in B.C. to ban smoking on its premises, starting Jan. 21, 2018.

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake
    VANCOUVER — A tsunami warning issued for coastal British Columbia was cancelled Tuesday morning after people living along parts of the province's coast evacuated to higher ground when a powerful earthquake struck off Alaska.

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis
    The fire department has partnered with Vancouver-based software developer GINQO to create a program that mines data from dispatch calls in real-time to identify clusters of overdoses.

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress
    TIGNISH, P.E.I. — The president of a P.E.I. branch of the Royal Canadian Legion is expected to apologize after a Sikh man was reportedly asked to remove his religious head covering and heckled with racist remarks.

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress