Montreal Gazette

Impaired driver who hit cyclist sentenced

- JESSE FEITH jfeith@postmedia.com

Ohbkba Ameziane-hassani was biking in the middle of the night in October 2021 when he was struck by an impaired driver in Montreal. The force was enough to knock him to the ground before the car drove down an alley, dragging his bike beneath it.

Ameziane-hassani's ear was almost torn off in the incident, requiring surgery to reattach it. His hand, arm and elbow were injured to the point he was kept in a hospital for 10 days. He remains too anxious to ride a bike to this day.

In a recent decision rendered at the Montreal courthouse, the driver, Alen Kovac, received an 18-month sentence to be served in the community, despite Crown prosecutor­s urging the court to impose jail time.

“Despite the very significan­t and lasting injuries to the victim,” Quebec Court Judge Suzanne Costom ruled, “the sentence to be imposed must prioritize denunciati­on and deterrence but also leave room for the continued rehabilita­tion of the accused.”

On the night in question, Kovac, 34, had spent the evening celebratin­g his daughter's birthday with his family. He told the court that during the celebratio­n, he received a call informing him his mother had fallen critically ill in Croatia.

Kovac decided to go for a drive to clear his head, he said, despite having drank whisky throughout the night. It was around 2 a.m. when he struck Ameziane-hassani, though he testified he didn't realize he hit someone in the moment.

When he then drove down an alley, dragging the bike behind his car, the noise was enough to wake neighbours. When he stopped, they witnessed him get out of his car, screaming and raising his arms after taking his shirt off. Once arrested and taken to a police station, breath samples yielded results of 220 and 200 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitre­s of blood. The legal limit in Quebec is 80 mg of alcohol per 100 ml of blood.

Kovac told the court he has almost no recollecti­on of driving around that night or of the collision itself. Still, he pleaded guilty to the charge of impaired driving causing bodily harm.

Both the defence and the Crown agreed Kovac should receive a 15-month sentence. The defence argued it should be served in the community, while the Crown urged the court to impose jail time.

In her decision, Costom noted higher courts have said severe sentences are needed in impaired driving cases, “given the huge societal problem (it) represents and the devastatin­g damage caused by individual­s who take the wheel after consuming alcohol.”

But Costom ruled jail time was not necessary in Kovac's case, opting instead to impose an 18-month sentence to be served in the community: nine months of 24-hour house arrest and nine more to be served between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.

That period will be followed by 18 months of probation and 240 hours of community work. Kovac was also ordered to not consume alcohol during his sentence and was given a two-year driving ban.

Aggravatin­g factors included Kovac's “very high” blood alcohol levels, the significan­t injuries he caused and how recklessly he drove. Mitigating factors included his guilty plea and absence of prior conviction­s. The decision also took into account Kovac's immigratio­n status as a permanent resident and how the sentence could jeopardize his right to stay in Canada.

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