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|    Message 7,867 of 8,306    |
|    AvoidDeadmonton@Murder.Capital.Cana to All    |
|    DEADMONTON Canada Lets You Kill Someone     |
|    13 Apr 12 03:29:16    |
      XPost: can.general, calgary.general              DEADMONTON Canada Lets You Kill Someone - You Only Pay $115 For Motor Homicide              One more reason to AVOID DEADMONTON, and to publicize worldwide.       Will Richard Wong the Director for Alberta Tourism now use this news story       to encourage more people to visit DEADMONTON?              Something really STINKS about the handling of this KILLING !       Why did DEADMONTON Police fail to charge the driver who killed,       who made an unsafe left turn ? Was he a lawyer or buddy of chief cop              Killer did not even pay the $3,000 for wrongful death !              $115 the only penalty - less than for using a cellphone, or a red light or       speeding, but the driver KILLED A PERSON !              Less of a penalty than for killing a human in a thirdworld country.                     >Driver fined after popular NAIT instructor struck and killed              >By Ryan Cormier, edmontonjournal.com April 4, 2012 4:03 PM                     >Graham Miller, 47, was killed in a traffic accident as he rode his motorcycle       >on Nov. 9, 2011.              >EDMONTON - A friend of a motorcyclist and popular NAIT instructor killed by a       >car wonders about the fairness of a $115 fine given the driver.              >Graham Miller, 47, was riding his Victory Hammer motorcycle from his teaching       >job, on his way to meet friends for dinner, on the evening of Nov. 9, 2011. As       >he rode through the intersection of 106th Street and Princess Elizabeth       >Avenue, a car turning left struck him.              >He died at the Royal Alexandra Hospital.              >On Wednesday, the driver, 41-year-old Gerald Andrew Lee, paid a $115 fine for       >making an unsafe left turn, a charge under the Traffic Safety Act.              >“Life just doesn’t seem fair sometimes, does it?” asked Robert Lynch, Miller’s       >best friend of 10 years, after hearing the news.              >“A $115 fine hardly sounds just. I get the sense this was an accident and now       >this guy will have to live the rest of his life having taken a very good man       >away from a lot of people. It’s a real shame that Graham was taken from us       >this early because of someone else’s carelessness.”              >A fine hardly seems a fair price for Lee to be “absolved of his negligence,”       >Lynch added.              >The Traffic Safety Act is separate from the Canadian Criminal Code.              >Miller, an experienced motorcyclist of more than two decades, was wearing a       >helmet when he was struck.              >“He loved to ride, he had that Victory for six or seven years,” Lynch said.       >“He’d done multiple trips across the country on a motorcycle.”              >Miller was an instructor for the digital media and information technology       >program at NAIT. Shortly after he died, his students spoke favourably about       >him. At the time, Miller had volunteered to work with students to create a       >video game design club.              >Miller wanted to help as much as he could with the new club, but always made       >sure not to overshadow the efforts of his students, Ryan Troock said.              >“He was more worried about doing too much than too little,” Troock said.              >“I can honestly say he was the best instructor, both in terms of actually       >teaching the material and in terms of being great to talk to.”              >Miller followed a family tradition in teaching. Both his parents were       >instructors. He also coached rugby at St. Francis Xavier’s High School.              >“Teaching was definitely his passion,” Lynch said. “When they say that people       >look to their careers in hopes of finding what they love to do, Graham found       >that. He had an excellent rapport with his students.”              >rcormier@edmontonjournal.com       >© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journal              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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