Waterloo Region Record

Ottawa police identify three people who died in bus crash

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA — A “beautiful soul,” a mother with extended family in the Netherland­s and a dad beloved for his sense of humour were the people killed in Ottawa’s horrific bus crash last week, the city’s police revealed Monday.

All three were public servants in the federal government. The collision injured nearly two dozen more and its cause is still uncertain.

Bruce Thomlinson, 56, Judy Booth, 57, and Anja Van Beek, 65, were fatally hurt when a doubledeck­er bus slammed into a shelter at a station west of downtown Ottawa at the start of the evening rush hour on Friday. It was on an express route from downtown, beginning a long stretch without a stop on its way to a western suburb.

Thomlinson worked for the Canada Border Services Agency and Van Beek worked for the federal Treasury Board. Booth had retired from the National Capital Commission but still worked there part-time on contract.

In separate statements, the three families remembered their loved ones as they mourned their tragic and unexpected losses.

“Bruce was dedicated to his family and will be missed by his wife and his two boys, and extended family and friends,” Thomlinson’s family wrote, adding that he “gave us great joy in life through his silliness, sense of humour and love of the outdoors.”

“Judy was a cherished wife to Ches and loving mother to both of her girls, Holly and Karen,” Booth’s family wrote. “She was an absolute treasure and a beautiful soul that will be profoundly missed by her family and many friends.”

Van Beek similarly left behind a husband and two daughters as well as an extended family in Ottawa, Toronto and the Netherland­s. “As you can understand, her family is grieving and would appreciate if you respected their privacy.”

While the families of the three grappled with their loss over the weekend, some federal civil servants only learned what had happened to their co-workers upon returning to work on Monday.

An email sent to CBSA staff Monday said one employee there had been killed and one seriously injured, and two other workers had family members hurt in the crash.

One employee told The Canadian Press that Thomlinson had only recently moved to a new position in the agency, and that many staff members were in tears after learning that he had been killed.

Writing on Twitter, the Treasury Board said: “We are sad to report that one of our own, Anja Van Beek, lost her life in Friday’s tragic accident in Ottawa. We send our most sincere condolence­s to her family and all who were close to her.”

Besides Thomlinson, Booth and Van Beek, 23 people were injured badly enough to be taken to hospitals after the bus slammed into the station shelter, the roof slicing into the vehicle’s upper deck. Nearly a dozen of those hurt worked at the Department of National Defence.

Several of the survivors had limbs amputated, said Ottawa police Const. Chuck Benoit.

The Ottawa Citizen reported Monday that the driver of the bus, who was arrested and briefly detained by police after Friday’s crash before being released without charge, had been on the job for less than a year and involved in two previous collisions.

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson, however, asked people to refrain from jumping to conclusion­s.

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