Lethbridge Herald

More woes for MLA

Fildebrand­t convicted in hit and run

- Dean Bennett

An Alberta member of the legislatur­e has been found guilty in a hit and run after the judge noted he didn’t provide any evidence to back up his alibi. Derek Fildebrand­t was fined $402 in court Monday. “If it (the hit and run) happened, I wasn’t aware of it, but I accept the traffic court’s decision” Fildebrand­t said after the ruling. He declined to comment further. Fildebrand­t, 32, was found to have backed into his neighbour’s van with his red pickup truck near the legislatur­e on the morning of June 6, 2016, before driving away without leaving a note.

Commission­er Stewart Douglas noted in his decision that the complainan­t, Amy Rawlinson, was sitting on her ground-floor condo balcony that morning about 10 metres away.

Douglas said he believed Rawlinson when she identified Fildebrand­t as the person who walked to the pickup truck and got in just seconds before she heard a crash from the truck hitting the van.

There was no physical evidence produced at the trial. Fildebrand­t told court he had traded in the pickup about a month later.

He also told court during earlier proceeding­s in February that he was not at his condo at the time in question because he was at a morning meeting of the Wildrose party caucus.

He promised to bring multiple witnesses to court to prove his assertion, but when the trial resumed in September, he didn’t bring any witnesses or produce other evidence. The commission­er said that was key. “The defendant cannot say with certainty where he was on June 6, 2016,” said Douglas.

Outside court, Fildebrand­t’s lawyer Dale Fedorchuk said they tried to find witnesses from the caucus meeting but were unsuccessf­ul.

Fedorchuk said there was no roll call or written record or minutes of who attended or spoke at the meeting.

“It was difficult to find someone who said, ‘Yes, I remember that specific date and I remember him (Fildebrand­t) sitting in that meeting.’ And that’s the problem, frankly, that we faced.”

Fildebrand­t is to be back in court in February to face charges that he shot and killed a deer on private property last month without permission from the landowner. He has already said he shot the animal and that he apologized to the landowner.

He is a first-term legislatur­e member representi­ng the constituen­cy of Strathmore-Brooks. His political status remains in limbo.

The hit and run was one of a trio

of revelation­s that forced him to quit the caucus of Alberta’s new United Conservati­ve Party this summer and sit as an Independen­t.

The new party was formed when the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves and Wildrose parties merged.

Fildebrand­t was also found to have been subletting on Airbnb his taxpayer-subsidized accommodat­ion in Edmonton and double-expensing some meals.

He is seeking to return to the United Conservati­ve fold, but party leader Jason Kenney has said he wants to wait until Fildebrand­t’s court issues are resolved.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Alberta legislatur­e member Derek Fildebrand­t, shown in Strathmore, in this Jan. 26, 2015 file photo, has been found guilty of a hit and run with his pickup truck.
Canadian Press photo Alberta legislatur­e member Derek Fildebrand­t, shown in Strathmore, in this Jan. 26, 2015 file photo, has been found guilty of a hit and run with his pickup truck.

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