Crown, defence say drunk driver should serve 3 years for crash that killed 2 UBC students - Action News
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British Columbia

Crown, defence say drunk driver should serve 3 years for crash that killed 2 UBC students

A Crown attorney says a man who was driving drunk when his car hittwo University of British Columbia students, killing them both, shouldserve three years in jail and be prohibited from driving for fiveyears.

Tim Goerner, guilty of dangerous driving causing death, sobbed while listening to impact statements in court

A large SUV is seen upturned on a road, with two officers looking at it pensively.
Police at the scene of the fatal collision on Northwest Marine Drive on the UBC campus early Sept. 26, 2021. (Doug Kerr/CBC)

The man who was driving drunk at high speed when his car hit two University of British Columbia students, killing them both, sobbed in court Monday as themother of one of his victims described her grief as "woven into myDNA."

Tim Goerner, who was 21 at the time of crash,was originally charged with two counts of impaireddriving causing the deaths of Evan Smith and Emily Selwood, both 18.

He pleaded guilty last month to two counts of dangerous drivingcausing death.

Smith's mother, Debbie O'Day-Smith, told the sentencing hearingin provincial court in Richmond, B.C., on Monday that her son was adventurousand made "an indelible mark on everyone he met.''

"I don't doubt he would've made a difference in this world,"she said. "I miss everything about him."

The families of both victims described in court the devastating experience of having a police officer knock on their doors to tell them their children were dead.

Emily Selwood was 18 years old and just starting her studies in social sciences at UBC when she was killed by an alleged drunk driver on Sept. 26, 2021. An undated family photo shows a smiling young woman from the shoulders up in bright sunlight. She has long brown wavy hair and dark eyes, and is wearing a spaghetti strap top, dangly earrings and a thing gold necklace.
Emily Selwood was 18 and just starting her studies in social sciences at the time of her death. (B.C. RCMP)
Evan Smith, 18, was a first year engineering student at UBC when he was killed by a suspected drunk driver on Sept. 26, 2021. A family photo shows a young man with a slight smile standing in front of a brick building. He has curly brown hair and is wearing a striped t-shirt with a backpack on top.
Evan Smith, 18, was a first-year engineering student at UBC. (B.C. RCMP)

Their deaths came a month after both Smith, from Ontario, and Selwood from Victoria, were helped by their parentsto set up their lives at UBC as undergraduate students.

Smith had been accepted into every school he'd applied for, butchose UBCbecause it was a place he felt he couldgrow the most, his mother said.

"You robbed me of my baby, my little boy,'' she said, addressing Goerneracross the courtroom. "If you are remorseful, prove it.''

She urged him to watch her son's funeral service onlineand saidshe expects "truth and accountability'' from the young man.

Crown prosecutor Daniel Pruim said Goerner had alcohol in hissystem when he killed Smith and Selwood, and a joint submission fromthe Crown and the defence said Goerner should serve three years injail, with a driving prohibition of five years.

The court heard Goerner, an international student at theuniversity, was drinking alcohol at a party the night of Sept. 25,2021.

Early the next morning he was driving on campus at speeds between100 and 120 km/h in a 40 km/hzone.

Goerner hit a street lamp, then a boulder and his vehicle becameairborne before running down the victims from behind.

Both Smith and Selwood were pronounced dead at the scene.

'Weighs on his soul'

Goerner, dressed in a grey suit, sat in court with his head down,crying as he listened to victim impact statements from those wholoved the teens.

Selwood's father, Duncan Selwood, told the court that their world "fell apart"the day of her death.

He said the emotional toll was like being "electrocuted"byjolts of fear, disbelief, sadness, anger and guilt that "knocked meto the ground."

He said he can barely sleep since his daughter's death, and wordsof encouragement from others about things getting better or easierare unhelpful.

"They're all wrong,"he said. "Hearing these words makes me soangry."

He said he can no longer interact with people, telling the courtthat his daughter's death will "forever torment me.''

"I'm in this bad place because of Tim Goerner,'' he said, addingthat any words of apology would be "insulting,""empty,"or "meaningless."

"I hope this weighs on his soul,"he said. "I hope TimGoerner's time in prison is hard."

Goerner's sentencing hearing is expected to continue Tuesday afternoon.

With files from Chad Pawson