Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fatal B.C. Boating Trial Told 'Collective Shock' Hampered Police Probe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2015 01:44 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The shock of seeing a speedboat lodged inside a houseboat blinded police who were investigating a fatal 2010 crash on a British Columbia lake, a defence lawyer has argued.
     
    Leon Reinbrecht's trial is in its final stages, with defence lawyer Joe Doyle providing an opening statement in B.C. Supreme Court Thursday morning in Kamloops.
     
    Reinbrecht has been charged with one count each of criminal negligence causing death and criminal negligence causing bodily over the July 3, 2010, incident on Shuswap Lake that claimed the life of houseboat-operator Ken Brown. 
     
    "This case, on its face, with a motorboat inside a houseboat, is a shocking case," said Doyle. "It shocked many people."
     
    Doyle said collective shock put blinders on investigators pursuing criminal charges against Reinbrecht, who was at the helm of the speedboat that collided nearly head-on with the houseboat.
     
    The collision took place just after 11 p.m. and followed a post-Canada Day fireworks display on a section of the lake called Magna Bay.
     
    Doyle called the police work "reverse engineering," of fitting evidence into the parameters of criminal charges, not recommending charges based on the evidence.
     
    "The defence is going to say it's quite a different matter than that," Doyle said. "There are certain rules of the road that weren't followed (by the houseboat)."
     
    Doyle said his case hinges largely on the houseboat's lights.
     
    "You have a houseboat that was travelling at full throttle and it is not displaying navigational lights that are required and expected to be displayed by a vessel," he said.
     
    "Mr. Reinbrecht collided with a houseboat that wasn't displaying navigational lights as required by Transport Canada."
     
    The first defence witness, Justin Beaumont, is an expert in marine-vessel investigations, and he examined the boats' wreckage.
     
    Beaumont said the houseboat's masthead light, a navigational light required to be operating, was not working and the wiring was disconnected.
     
    Previous witnesses have given conflicting testimony about the houseboat's lighting.
     
    Last week, Reinbrecht's trial ground to a halt after a Crown expert witness, an RCMP corporal who investigated the crash, made a phone call to Beaumont's employer, the Canadian Coast Guard, to see if he would be in conflict by giving defence evidence.
     
    Cpl. Richard Harry said he called out of a sense of "loyalty to the Crown," a development B.C. Supreme Court Justice Sheri Donegan said was "concerning."
     
    Another defence expert witness is expected to be called next week.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Modi's Canada Visit: Uranium Deal Clinched, 13 Agreements Inked

    Modi's Canada Visit: Uranium Deal Clinched, 13 Agreements Inked
    The highlight of the agreements was the $350-million uranium deal that was signed by Cameco and the Atomic Energy Commission of India in the presence of Modi and Harper. 

    Modi's Canada Visit: Uranium Deal Clinched, 13 Agreements Inked

    Marijuana Use Among Teens, Young Adults May Be Down, StatsCan Survey Suggests

    Marijuana Use Among Teens, Young Adults May Be Down, StatsCan Survey Suggests
    The survey shows younger Canadians are still the biggest consumers of marijuana, with a third of 18- to 24-year-old respondents reporting they had used marijuana or hashish in the past year.

    Marijuana Use Among Teens, Young Adults May Be Down, StatsCan Survey Suggests

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers
    WESTASKIWIN, Alta. — The trial for a man charged with attempted murder in the shooting of two Mounties in rural Alberta has begun with him pleading not guilty.

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage
    TORONTO — House prices have jumped dramatically over the past year in Canada's two most expensive real estate markets, Vancouver and Toronto, but other major cities showed a mixed bag of results.

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It
    HALIFAX — Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says he doesn't see any possibility of a coalition with the NDP, a day after he said he would "maybe" be more open to the idea if Tom Mulcair wasn't running the party.

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting
    OTTAWA — In a decision that could reverberate in cities and towns across the country, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that prayers cannot be recited before municipal council meetings in the Quebec town of Saguenay.

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting