3-year sentence in 4 Alberta teens' deaths angers families - Action News
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3-year sentence in 4 Alberta teens' deaths angers families

The families of four high school football players killed in a car crash near Grande Prairie, Alta., leave the courthouse disappointed and angry at the three-year sentence handed to the man responsible for their deaths.

Crash near Grande Prairie killed high school football players in 2011

3-year sentence for fatal crash

12 years ago
Duration 2:31
Brendan Holubowich was sentenced to 3 years for dangerous driving after a crash that killed 4 Alberta teenagers, and the families of the boys who died call the sentence an outrage

The families of four high school football players killed ina car crash near Grande Prairie, Alta., left thecourthouse disappointed and angryWednesday at the three-year sentence handedto the man responsible for their deaths.

Brendon Holubowich was sentenced Wednesday in the deaths of four high school football players near Grande Prairie. (CBC)

"He goes for three years quite likely on parole in eight months to a year it's not right," said Leon Deller, father of Matthew Deller, 16,who died along with Vincent Stover, 16, Walter Borden-Wilkins, 15, and Tanner Hildebrand, 15.

Deller said he was hoping Justice William A. Tilleman would impose a stiffer sentence than the three years agreed to by the Crown prosecutor and Holubowich's defence lawyer, but he wasn't surprised when it didn't happen.

Brendon Holubowich, 23, was sentenced Wednesdayon four counts of dangerous driving causing death and one count of dangerous driving causing injury.

"The courts just failed us completely," said Desiree Judd, the mother of Zach Judd, the only survivor in the car. "They failed the boys, they failed Zach."

The judgetold the families the case was the most difficulthe has ever dealt with.

Tilleman wiped his eyes as he recounted reading the 20 victim impact statementsfrom family members Tuesday, describing them as "so deeply personal" that he "will never forget them."

After the sentencing Holubowich's mother, Teresa Bateman, read a statement to reporters in which she apologized to the victims' families.

"We cannot imagine the loss or grief you've experienced," she said. "This tragedy cannever be reversed and for this we are sorry."

Bateman also talked aboutthe impact of the crash on her family.

"Any thread of normal was also ripped from our lives," she said. "The familiarity of our home community became a place where we now felt afraid and at risk."

On Oct. 22, 2011, Holubowich was driving a pickup truck that hit a car carrying five members of the Grande Prairie Composite High School Warriors football team.

Court heard that at the point of impact, Holubowich was travelling at 120 km/h.