‘Miscarriage of justice’: FSIN calls for appeal, new law in Kennedy case
The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) is calling for an appeal and law changes after charges were stayed for a woman who struck and killed a nine year old girl on a marked crosswalk in Saskatoon.
Taylor Ashley Kennedy was charged with impaired driving causing death in the Sept. 9, 2021 crash that killed Baeleigh Maurice, who was on her way to school riding a scooter.
On Dec. 13, Judge Jane Wooten stayed the charges due to the case exceeding the 18 month window set out by the Supreme Court of Canada’s 2016 decision R v. Jordan.
Kennedy, the first person in Saskatchewan to face a THC-related impaired driving charge, had admitted to police that she had used both cannabis and magic mushrooms in the 24-hour period before the fatal crash. Her trial began in October 2023, and was marked by numerous delays.