By Darrell
Noakes, for the Bicycle News Agency SASKATOON,
Saskatchewan (Canada), June 10, 1999 -- Donna Singer, 52, a Regina
motorist acquitted in April of impaired driving charges resulting from
the June, 1997 death of cyclist Donald Jaques, has been fired from her
job as an elementary school teacher. Singer's
employer, Regina School Division No. 4, announced today that they have
dismissed Singer. Singer had been suspended without pay after being charged
in Jaques death. School board
chairman John Conway, in describing the board's unanimous decision to
dismiss the teacher, said that Singer's admission that she had "some"
wine before driving on the day she struck Jaques was enough for the board
to decide that she had acted inappropriately. Following
Singer's acquittal in April, Regina School Division director of education
Loretta Elford said the school division received a flood of calls and
letters from the public and concerned parents expressing outrage at the
outcome of the trial. Singer was
found not guilty of impaired driving April 22 after breathalyser evidence
showing that she had high levels of blood alcohol was ruled inadmissible
because of errors in police procedure. Singer's defense argued that Jaques
likely swerved into the path of Singer's car. Donald Jaques,
61, was killed June 4, 1997 while riding with his wife and other members
of the Wascana Freewheelers Bicycle Touring Club of Regina. Singer's
union, the Saskatchewan Teachers Federation, intends to appeal the decision. Found
not guilty in death of Regina cyclist Singer, charged
with impaired driving causing death, was found not guilty on April 22.
Court of Queen's Bench Justice Catherine Dawson reached the verdict after
ruling the previous week that police breathalyser evidence was inadmissible.
Originally expected to last four days, the verdict ended four weeks of
testimony and legal argument which began on March 29. Singer's
automobile collided with Donald Jaques at about 8 p.m. on June 4, 1997
while he was riding with the Wascana Freewheelers bicycle club. Jaques
died at the scene. Police conducted
a breathalyser test on Singer two hours after the collision and determined
that the driver had a blood-alcohol level two-and-a-half times the legal
limit of 0.08 ml/l. On her first test, police recorded a level of 0.19
and, on her second, 0.18. Following
the verdict, Kevin Jaques, a Regina lawyer and son of the slain cyclist,
told reporters and bystanders that the ruling made the family feel victimized
again. He said he understood that the judge couldn't convict Singer once
the breathalyser evidence was ruled inadmissible. Jaques said
he would like to see the law changed so that police don't need to see
physical signs of impairment before asking for a breathalyser test. Crown prosecutor
Sharon Pratchler said studies and evidence show that mental impairment
occurs much more quickly than physical impairment. Aaron Fox,
Singer's lawyer said that the verdict cleared his client of any wrong
doing and told those present that the cyclist was to blame for the collision. The judge
ruled that police erred in conducting the breathalyser test because they
had pressured Singer into taking the test after her lawyer advised her
to refuse and because they had insufficient probable cause to ask her
to take the test. In court,
Regina Police Service Constable Al Hunt said that on the night of Jacques'
death, Singer admitted she drank two glasses of wine before the collision.
He said he didn't think Singer was drunk because she showed no typical
signs of impairment. He said he thought she might be an "experienced drinker"
who doesn't readily appear drunk, consulted with his supervisor, then
asked Singer if she would take a voluntary breathalyser test at a police
station. Tate said that on the way to the station he realised that Singer
was drunk. He said he smelled alcohol and noticed Singer's eyes seemed
glassy, red and slightly bloodshot. He said he told Hunt at the station
that he thought Singer was "loaded". Singer at
first agreed to take the voluntary test, but after phoning Legal Aid,
Singer told police she was advised not to. Constable Paul Tate, a breathalyser
technician with the Regina Police Service, then called Legal Aid to confirm
that a lawyer had provided that advice. "I wanted
to make sure she was getting the proper information," Tate told the court.
"And I wanted to make sure she was talking to a lawyer and not someone
fictitious." A short time
later Singer agreed to take the test. Both officers
also commented that Singer didn't cry at all throughout the evening. "She showed
no emotion whatsoever," said Tate. Singer's
lawyer, Aaron Fox, argued that police should not have tested his client.
Police interfered with Singers charter right to obtain counsel, he said,
because they continued to persuade her to take the test after a lawyer
advised her not to. Fox argued
that police did not think she was drunk and therefore had no reasonable
grounds to demand the test in the first place, he said. Fox also
argued that the breathalyser test was taken just outside the two hour
limit. The law says police must take the test within two hours. Otherwise,
an alcohol expert must testify and calculate the accused's level of blood-alcohol. Crown prosecutor
Sharon Pratchler argued that police tended to the victim first. Their
attention was divided between other priorities besides whether or not
Singer was drunk, she said. She said that because Singer had a cast on
her ankle, it was difficult for police to say for sure if alcohol affected
her ability to walk. Earlier in
the trial, Mavis Jaques, who was riding beside her husband at the time
of the collision, testified that she did not see what happened because
she was watching traffic on an overpass to determine when it would be
safe to cross a merge lane they were approaching. "I heard
a terrible explosion sound, a shattering noise," she to the court, struggling
to keep her composure. "I jumped. When I turned, I knew Don had been hit
because I saw him flying through the air. I called out to Don and he didn't
answer. That was scary." In cross
examining Mavis Jaques' testimony, Fox asked if she told police that her
husband swerved into traffic. She insisted
she didn't recall telling anyone that her husband swerved. She said her
husband was "an experienced and good rider" who travelled almost a metre
inside the shoulder that day. A man who
arrived on the scene to help, testified that he saw a car, identified
as the one driven by Singer, pull onto the shoulder nearby and stop. Stan
Velmer told the court that the Pontiac had a smashed windshield and damaged
roof. He said he saw Singer get out of the car in an ankle cast and talking
on a cell phone. "She had
a limp when she walked and didn't walk that steady," he testified. Two accident
reconstruction experts testified that Donald Jaques' fatal injuries and
damage to his bicycle show that he was hit from behind and didn't swerve
into traffic. Regina police
Constable Robert Simard said Jaques' injures to the back of the head and
shoulders indicated that he was hit from behind. He said if Jaques had
swerved left into traffic, his left side would have been more seriously
injured and the same side of the bicycle would have had more damage. Simard
said there was no debris from the collision in the driving lane. "There is
no indication of this bike being struck on the left hand side," said Simard.
"If he was, there's a good chance he might have been run over." Sergeant
Gary Pare told the court that it appeared Singer had straddled the shoulder
and wandered inside that lane. Under cross-examination,
Fox asked Pare if Jaques' left-side injuries were serious enough to indicate
the victim had swerved into the driving lane. Pare said
the injuries were serious, but said the evidence indicated Jaques was
hit from behind. -
30 -
Motorist
fired from job after killing cyclist
Police erred
in breathalyser test, judge ruled
Cyclist
hit from behind, experts testify
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