Judge rejects defence argument man was suffering effects of road rage attack, not drunk - Action News
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Manitoba

Judge rejects defence argument man was suffering effects of road rage attack, not drunk

A defence lawyer tried to convince a Manitoba judge that his client was injured in a road rage attack, not drunk, when police found his car partly on a sidewalk by the University of Winnipeg, and the man slurring and smelling of alcohol.

Car window was shattered but man was slurring, smelling of alcohol and glassy-eyed, court decision says

A law court building with a reflective exterior.
Provincial court JudgeHerbertLawrence Allen convictedDamanpreet Singh of driving while impaired in a May 9 decision. (CBC)

A defence lawyer tried to convince a Manitoba judge that his client was injured in a road rage attack, not drunk, when police found his car partly on a sidewalk by the University of Winnipeg, and the man slurring and smelling of alcohol.

Provincial court JudgeHerbertLawrence Allen didn't buy it, convictingDamanpreet Singh of driving while impaired and sentenced him to a one-year driving prohibition and a $1,500 fine.

According to the written decision of Allen'sMay 9 sentencing, Winnipeg police Sgt. Grant Lindgrentestified during trial that he wason patrol on Sept.5, 2022, when he saw a car on asidewalk, slowly rolling up to a concrete barrier around 3:40 a.m. at the corner of Portage Avenue and BalmoralStreet.

After the car stopped,LindgrensawSingh, who was the only person in the car, pull the keys from the ignition and dropthem on the passenger side floor. There wereempty cans of beer in the back seat andone of the back windows was smashed, with glass inside the car,Lindgrentestified.

The officer said Singh had mucus running from his nose and dried spittle at the corner of his mouth. There was"an overwhelming smell of alcohol" and Singh, who couldn't findhis driver's licence,had a stunned, blank expression on his face,Lindgrentestified.

Lindgren said when Singh tried to get out of the car, he"basically fell out" and needed help to stand, according to Allen's decision.He then toldLindgren,"I am only a little bit drunk."

Asecond police unit arrived, and officers had to help Singh walk to that car so he could be taken for processing at police headquarters.

Lindgren and the two officers from the second cruiserConst. Kyle Kroekerand Const.Jason Black all testified that Singh wasstumbling andslurring his speech, and had glossy,bloodshot eyesand breath that smelled of liquor.

Kroekeralso testified that when Singh was in his cruiser car, he complained of a sore hand, saying he had beenattacked earlier that evening and hit with a baseball bat.At the police station, Singh was givenan ice pack for his hand.

Lindgrennoted in his testimony there were reports over thepolice radioofa road rage incidentin the general area earlier that evening.

Defence lawyerEric Wachargued the cognitive and mobility disabilities exhibited by Singh were more consistent with recovery from a traumatic event as opposed to gross impairment.

'Jelly legs' result of shock: defence

Wach said Singh'smobility issues may have been "jelly legs" resulting from shock from that earlier road rage incident,according toAllen's decision.

The broken rear window in the car also pointed to some recent violent incident, Wach argued.

He suggested Singh could not be convicted of drunkdriving as long as there was some other reasonable alternative explanation. He also highlighted what he considered to be discrepancies in testimony by the officers.

But Allen disagreed. He found the officers' statements to beconsistent and credible

The judge didn't disputethere was evidence to suggest "something untoward" had happened to Singh'svehicle, but the smell of alcohol, the openbeer cans, Singh's difficulty standing and interacting with the officers, and his own confession of being "alittle bit drunk" all point to impaired driving.

"In my opinion, the alternative suggestion made by the defence in this case is speculative and insufficiently supported by the evidence to raise a reasonable doubt as to the fact of the accused being impaired by alcohol," Allen wrote.

"I am satisfied that the above noted indicators of impairment as provided in the testimony of the three Crown witnesses establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused's ability to operate a motor vehicle was impaired by alcohol."