Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

No Parole For More Than A Decade For Man Who Killed Winnipeg Bus Driver

Darpan News Desk, 07 Aug, 2019 06:46 PM

    WINNIPEG - A man convicted of killing a Winnipeg bus driver in what a judge described as a brutal and explosive stabbing will not be eligible for parole for 12 years.

     

    Irvine Jubal Fraser, 58, was at the end of his shift and route in February 2017, when he got into a fight with passenger Brian Kyle Thomas.

     

    Security cameras on the bus show that Thomas asked the driver where he was and if he could use a phone.

     

    Fraser told Thomas to leave the bus several times before the driver grabbed the man by the neck of his sweater and bent him over backwards. The driver then shoved Thomas off the bus.

     

    From outside the bus, Thomas swung his arms at Fraser and spat at him. The driver stepped off the bus and Thomas stabbed him a dozen times.

     

    A jury found the 25-year-old guilty earlier this year of second-degree murder. The conviction carries an automatic sentence of life in prison, and the Crown and defence both asked there be no parole eligibility for 12 years.

     

    Chief Justice Glenn Joyal agreed Wednesday, saying the bus driver used "undue aggression to an unruly passenger" but that the passenger's response was "explosive and enraged."

     

    "(There was) a significant degree of brutality," said Joyal.

     

    The judge added that Fraser was no longer acting as a Winnipeg Transit operator when he became physical and stepped off the bus to face the unruly passenger, but he is not responsible for his own death.

     

    Fraser's family expressed anger outside court at the judge's description.

     

    "His shift didn't end when the bus stopped. His shift ends when he brings the bus to the station," said Fraser's brother, Dean Byard.

     

    "My brother was still … working at the time he was killed."

     

    Fraser's death prompted calls for increased safety measures on Winnipeg buses, including safety shields for drivers.

     

    Crown prosecutor Paul Girdlestone has said the killing had a profound impact on other drivers and their families.

     

    The defence did not present evidence during the trial but argued that the bus driver provoked the attack.

     

    After the judge read his sentencing decision, Thomas began yelling at his lawyer, Theodore Mariash, calling him a "sellout."

     

    Court heard Thomas had a dysfunctional childhood on the Shamattawa First Nation and both of his parents have been convicted of manslaughter. He became a permanent ward of Child and Family services when he was six.

     

    Thomas also has fetal alcohol syndrome and addictions issues. Court heard he started sniffing solvents as a child and has a history of unpredictable and violent behaviour.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Seniors Will No Longer Have To Accept First Available Long-Term Care Bed

    B.C. Seniors Will No Longer Have To Accept First Available Long-Term Care Bed
    Seniors in British Columbia will have more long-term care options and choices starting this month.

    B.C. Seniors Will No Longer Have To Accept First Available Long-Term Care Bed

    B.C. River Unsafe For Crews After Slide But Blocked Fish Could Be Moved: DFO

    Salmon blocked from migrating upstream to spawning grounds could be trapped and trucked above an obstruction following a rock slide in British Columbia's Fraser River, a spokeswoman for Fisheries and Oceans Canada said Wednesday.  

    B.C. River Unsafe For Crews After Slide But Blocked Fish Could Be Moved: DFO

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued For Sex Offender Jonathan Cardinal Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Vancouver Police are asking for the public’s help in locating 29-year-old Jonathan Cardinal, a federal sex offender, after he failed to return to his halfway house in Vancouver on July 2.

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued For Sex Offender Jonathan Cardinal Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal
    Joshua Dylan Petrin was a high-ranking drug trafficker when he asked two of his associates to "take care" of his right-hand man, who was planning to walk away from their criminal enterprise without his permission.

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking
    A former Nova Scotia Mountie has been sentenced to 10 years in a minimum security prison for stealing 10 kilograms of cocaine from an exhibit locker and arranging sales that earned him $100,000 in cash.

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking

    Trudeau Announces $1.3 Billion In Federal Funding For Montreal Metro Extension

    Trudeau Announces $1.3 Billion In Federal Funding For Montreal Metro Extension
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government will invest $1.3 billion to help finance an extension of Montreal's metro system.  

    Trudeau Announces $1.3 Billion In Federal Funding For Montreal Metro Extension