The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Woman injured after drunk driver hits vehicle

Thomas Michael Archibald will be sentenced Feb. 27 for operating a motor vehicle while impaired, causing an accident resulting in bodily harm

- BY MAUREEN COULTER Colin.MacLean@JournalPio­neer.com @JournalPma­cLean

A 27-year-old man who was more than 2.5 times over the legal limit will be sentenced Feb. 27 after causing a car accident in Charlottet­own, resulting in bodily harm.

Thomas Michael Archibald pleaded guilty in provincial court in Charlottet­own on Jan. 22.

On Oct. 20, police were dispatched to a traffic accident with possible injuries at the intersecti­on of St. Peters Road and the arterial highway.

Upon arrival, police spoke with witnesses who told them they were eastbound on St. Peters Road and waiting for a green light to proceed through the intersecti­on when a blue truck attempted to take a left hand turn on to St. Peters Road from the arterial highway in front of them.

A vehicle travelling north on Riverside Drive attempted to go straight through the intersecti­on on to the arterial highway.

The truck struck the vehicle. The witnesses were adamant that the truck had a red light when it entered the intersecti­on.

Police spoke with the female driver of the vehicle. She complained of pain in her left arm, and it was later determined she had a broken bone in her forearm.

After speaking with Archibald, who was driving the truck, police determined he was impaired.

He was taken to the police station, where breath samples showed he was 2.5 times the legal limit.

Archibald does have prior impaired driving charge from September 2014 and an outstandin­g accounts receivable balance of $1,672.

The defence sought a report prior to presentenc­e sentencing.

The University of Prince Edward Island has a student union president-elect after a byelection spurred by the abrupt resignatio­n of Hammad Ahmed earlier this month.

According to the unofficial results on the student union’s website, first-year student Chelsea Perry, who is from Halifax, received 432 votes to Justin Clory’s 377. There were 868 votes cast, with 59 abstention­s.

The results will not be official until the student union council approves them on Jan. 28.

Ahmed resigned abruptly in early January, several months before his term as president was up. He did not provide a reason in his resignatio­n letter. According to Perry’s campaign Facebook page, she plans to push for greater mental health resources for students, work to revise the university’s sexual assault policy and create more openness and transparen­cy between council and the students.

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