Proceedings stall as lawyer says Jagmeet Grewal was arrested in error for driving without a licence.
The criminal negligence trial of trucker Jagmeet Grewal, charged in a collision that killed four people in 2019, was put on hold Friday afternoon — because he was arrested for driving without a licence, apparently in error.
Grewal’s lawyer announced the unexpected turn of events just as Quebec Court Judge Yanick Laramée was set to resume the trial at the Laval courthouse after the lunch break.
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“He was arrested for an offence he did not commit,” the lawyer said, noting Grewal has a licence to drive regular vehicles.
“He’s allowed to drive, but not a Class 1 (trucks). I talked to (the police) and they did the research and he was released.”
Grewal was released in enough time for the trial to resume Friday afternoon with a delay of only 15 minutes.
The 56-year-old Dorval resident faces four counts of criminal negligence causing death and another four of causing injury.
On Aug. 5, 2019, his truck was travelling at 100 km/h on Highway 440 in Laval when it crashed into a line of cars that had come to a stop at the exit to Highway 15.
Grewal has pleaded not guilty to all of the charges.
During a break in the trial Friday morning, Grewal told a TVA reporter that he feels he is “also a victim.”
“The trial is underway, so I will leave it to the lawyers. We are trying to prove it isn’t a criminal case, despite what everyone seems to think,” he said, describing what happened as “an accident.”
The Crown’s argument is that Grewal should not have been driving a truck that day.
In 2012, Grewal was badly injured in a chain-reaction collision in Illinois involving four trucks. In the years that followed, he suffered mental health problems including anxiety, depression, insomnia and flashbacks. In 2014, the SAAQ suspended his licence to drive a truck, and determined he would need to provide new medical information if he wanted to get it back. His licence to drive lighter vehicles was suspended as well.
On Friday, Kareen Dostie, a division chief for the SAAQ’s medical evaluation department, testified Grewal somehow got his licence back in 2018 after at least three doctors recommended he should never drive a truck again.
Grewal sent in a form requesting permission to obtain a new licence in March 2018, she said.
Dostie added that Grewal was allowed to take the written test for a Class 1 licence, for trucks or “heavy vehicle combinations.” She said he failed his first attempt at the written test but passed the second, as well as the practical test that followed.
Dostie said the agent who dealt with Grewal’s request for his Class 1 licence did not look into why his licence was suspended, because the agent did not have access to files held by the SAAQ’s compensation department.
“Was there a connection between the two departments?” the judge asked Dostie.
“In 2014, no,” Dostie replied.
“And in 2018?” the judge asked.
“In 2014 and 2018 there was no connection between the two departments,” Dostie said, adding that, in general, the type of agent who handled Grewal’s request in 2018 did not have computer access codes required to look into the records held by the SAAQ’s compensation department.
“So one department might decide that a person is permanently unable to drive and the other department will issue a new valid (licence)?” the judge asked.
Dostie replied in the affirmative, and quickly added procedures were changed in 2020. All agents are now required to check the other department’s files when someone applies to get their licence back, she said.
Dostie said Grewal was given back his Class 5 licence, for automobiles, on April 20, 2018. Four days later, he received his licence to drive trucks.
The trial will resume next week.
pcherry@postmedia.com
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