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Case of B.C. driver accused of fatal impaired collision adjourned

The case of a B.C. resident who faces numerous charges including impaired driving causing death was adjourned last week. Sean Terrance Letwin, a 30-year-old from Beaverdell, B.C.

The case of a B.C. resident who faces numerous charges including impaired driving causing death was adjourned last week.

Sean Terrance Letwin, a 30-year-old from Beaverdell, B.C., was charged with the offence — as well as impaired driving over the legal limit and driving while unauthorized — following a collision that claimed the life of a local man.

Emergency responders had received a report of the crash at about 11:40 p.m. on Friday, April 29. The Sundre and Olds RCMP detachments, as well as EMS and the Sundre Fire Department, attended the scene on Highway 27 about 15 kilometres east of Sundre. Despite being airlifted by STARS to a Calgary hospital, local resident Henryk Yonza, 47, succumbed to his injuries.

Police said the preliminary investigation had revealed that an eastbound vehicle, driven by Letwin, crossed over the centre line and collided with a westbound motorcycle, which Yonza was riding on his way home from Olds.

Letwin was arrested without incident at the scene and charged with the offences, said police.

Following a judicial interim release hearing, Letwin was released on cash bail with several conditions, including abstaining from alcohol and not being found in the driver's seat of any vehicle, said police.

Following what was scheduled to be a plea hearing on July 4, the case was adjourned to Aug. 8.

The ordeal is a stark reminder of why it's so important for people to understand that they might not be fit to drive even if they don't feel intoxicated after a few drinks, and that they should have alternate plans to arrive safely at their destinations, the Sundre RCMP detachment's Sgt. Jim Lank previously told the Round Up.


Simon Ducatel

About the Author: Simon Ducatel

Simon Ducatel joined Mountain View Publishing in 2015 after working for the Vulcan Advocate since 2007, and graduated among the top of his class from the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology's journalism program in 2006.
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