Medicine Hat News

Fildebrand­t denies hit and run on neighbour’s van

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EDMONTON An Alberta MLA accused of hit and run with his pickup truck says he didn’t do it.

Derek Fildebrand­t testified in court Wednesday that if he had backed into his neighbour’s van, he would have owned up to it right away.

“I would’ve left a note on the front windshield. It’s the decent thing to do,” Fildebrand­t said in traffic Edmonton court.

He also said given that he is in the public eye, it would have been foolish to run from a practical standpoint.

“Considerin­g my occupation, it wouldn’t have made sense for me not to stop.”

Fildebrand­t, 31, is accused of backing into his neighbour’s van the morning of June 6, 2016 and then driving away.

He said his truck — which he traded in about a month after the van was damaged — had warning sensors and beeps that would have alerted him to a looming impact. He said the radio was playing but not so loud he wouldn’t have heard the warning beeps or a crash if he had hit the van.

The member of the legislatur­e for Strathmore-Brooks has pleaded not guilty.

Although the case was first in court in February, the charge only became public knowledge last month. It was one of a trio of revelation­s that forced Fildebrand­t to quit the caucus of Alberta’s new United Conservati­ve Party and sit as an Independen­t.

Fildebrand­t, known as an acerbic, take-no-prisoners, bulldog defender of the public purse, was also found to have been subletting on Airbnb his taxpayer-subsidized accommodat­ion in Edmonton and double-expensing some meals.

He acted as his own lawyer in February. At that time, the van’s owner, Amy Rawlinson, testified she had been sitting on her condo balcony that morning when she saw Fildebrand­t walk in the vicinity of his rubyred Ford F-150 truck.

She said she heard a loud crash and then saw a red pickup driving away and her work van damaged.

A day later, she said, she saw Fildebrand­t and the truck, got the licence plate number and contacted police.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Derek Fildebrand­t, a former member of Alberta’s newest political party, is seeking a mistrial on traffic-related charges
CP FILE PHOTO Derek Fildebrand­t, a former member of Alberta’s newest political party, is seeking a mistrial on traffic-related charges

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