Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Five Years In Prison For Drunk Driving Crash Which Killed London, Ont. University Student

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2016 01:45 PM
    A man who pleaded guilty in an impaired driving crash that killed a university student in London, Ont., was sentenced to five years in prison Thursday, as the victim's family called for harsher penalties for the crime.
     
    Jared Dejong had more than twice the legal limit of alcohol in his blood when he was arrested in the October 2015 collision that claimed the life of 18-year-old Andrea Christidis.
     
    The first-year student had been walking back to her residence on Western University's campus when Dejong's vehicle jumped a curb and hit her. She died of her injuries in hospital two days after the crash. 
     
    At his sentencing hearing in April, Dejong, who had been out on bail, said he was "haunted" by the memory of what he had done.
     
    The Crown had sought a five-year prison sentence for Dejong, while defence lawyers had called for two years behind bars and three years of probation.
     
    Dejong's lawyer said Thursday that the five-year sentence came as no surprise and said his client was determined to "make something positive" from the tragedy.
     
    "It is a sad case for both the Christidis family as well as the Dejong family. And I can speak for my client and his family when I say that they are truly sorry for the loss of Andrea," Jim Dean told The Canadian Press.
     
    "We can only hope that this will make someone else think before getting behind the wheel after drinking and possibly prevent the destruction of more families."
     
    Members of Christidis's family, however, said Dejong's sentence didn't go far enough, adding that drunk driving was treated too leniently by the courts.
     
    "No sentence handed down today could be fair or just so long as the penalty does not match the crime," said Soula Koutlemanis, Christidis's aunt, who read a statement outside court on the family's behalf.
     
    "(Dejong) will return to his family and continue his life. We, on the other hand, have been sentenced to a life sentence of pain and suffering."
     
    Dejong chose to drink and drive without any considerations for the consequences, Koutlemanis said, wondering aloud if harsher penalties would have resulted in him making a different decision.
     
    "We are living a nightmare, as are other families in similar situations. Something must change," she said. "The first step in our opinion is harsher sentences for those who drink and drive."
     
    An agreed statement of facts heard in the case revealed that Dejong was on Western University's campus drinking with friends at the campus pub for three or four hours. He was not a student at the school.
     
    Witnesses said road conditions at the time were "perfect" and that Dejong's vehicle was seen travelling very fast and at one point cut in front of a bus. Video from the bus also showed him driving on the wrong side of the road.
     
    The car went through two intersections without stopping, causing other drivers to take evasive action, before it jumped the curb and struck Christidis, throwing her 10 metres.  
     
    Dejong pleaded guilty to over 80 mg blood alcohol causing death in the case.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Has Longest Emergency Room Wait Times In Western World

    Quebec Has Longest Emergency Room Wait Times In Western World
    QUEBEC — A report by Quebec's health and welfare commissioner says the province has the worst emergency room wait times in the western world.

    Quebec Has Longest Emergency Room Wait Times In Western World

    Milk Producers Protest On Parliament Hill In Favour Of Supply Management

    Milk Producers Protest On Parliament Hill In Favour Of Supply Management
    They estimate imports of the protein — known as diafiltered milk —  cost them $220 million a year.

    Milk Producers Protest On Parliament Hill In Favour Of Supply Management

    Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions

    Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions
    OTTAWA — Health Minister Jane Philpott is visting two beleaguered reserves in northern Ontario today —  Attawapiskat and Kashechewan — to see conditions in the communities first-hand.

    Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions

    MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt

    MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt
    OTTAWA — Hunter Tootoo likely "hit a brick wall" before deciding to step down from his Liberal cabinet post in order to get help for a drinking problem — a struggle that's all too familiar to members of his family, his aunt said Wednesday.

    MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt

    Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce

    Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce
    Forensic pathologist Dr. Jeffery Gofton detailed his examination of Alexandru Radita at the trial of his parents in Calgary.

    Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce

    Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients

    Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients
    MONTREAL — Healthy Quebecers may now have a harder time booking routine annual physical exams after the province became the latest jurisdiction Wednesday to implement rules to eliminate the once-standard practice.

    Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients