Truck driver involved in hockey team bus crash gets 8 years


MELFORT, Saskatchewan (AP) — The driver whose transport truck crashed into a hockey team bus in Canada, killing 16 people, has been sentenced to eight years in prison.

Thirteen others were injured when Jaskirat Singh Sidhu's semitrailer loaded with peat moss collided with the Humboldt Broncos' bus in rural Saskatchewan. Sidhu had pleaded guilty earlier this year to 29 counts of dangerous driving

The Broncos were on their way to a playoff game in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League.

Judge Inez Cardinal said today that Sidhu's remorse and guilty plea were mitigating factors, but added she had to consider the number of people who died or were severely injured and face lifelong challenges.

Sidhu's truck ran through a stop sign and into the path of the junior hockey team's bus at an intersection last April.

Judge Cardinal said the collision was avoidable.

"Mr. Sidhu had ample time to react ... had he been paying attention," she said. "Somehow we must stop this carnage on our highways."

The prosecution wanted the 30-year-old Sidhu to be sent to prison for 10 years, while his lawyers said other cases suggested a range of 1 1/2 to 4 1/2 years.

Judge Cardinal began her decision by reading aloud each victim's name. She said the nearly 100 victim impact statements from families were staggering.

The judge said the hockey players who died were gifted athletes, while others on the bus were dreaming about families or had already started them.

"Families have been torn apart because of the loss," Judge Cardinal said. "They are prone to depression, anxiety or outbursts."

She also spoke of the survivors, who she suggested "are putting on a brave face in an attempt to be strong."

Sidhu's lawyers had said he was remorseful and is likely to face deportation to his home country of India after he serves time.