Surprise guilty plea puts brakes on Windsor trial into Hwy. 401 deaths

May Be Interested In:The $10 million club: College basketball’s portal recruiting hits unthinkable levels of financial chaos


Article content

In the midst of a Superior Court trial underway in Windsor into a Highway 401 crash that killed two in Lakeshore in 2022, the accused and his lawyer made an appearance before an Ontario Court judge across the street and entered a guilty plea.

Brampton trucker Lovepreet Singh, 29, pleaded guilty to a single count of careless driving causing death under the Highway Traffic Act.

Article content

“It’s somewhat odd, and not odd — he’s effectively taking responsibility for what happened that day,” acting deputy Crown attorney Bryan Pillon told the Star.

Singh had been five days into a trial scheduled for up to four weeks before Superior Court Justice Bruce Thomas. The judge was advised late Friday afternoon that a resolution had been reached in the case in the lower court.

A sentencing hearing is scheduled for June 12 before Ontario Court Justice Daniel Topp.

Singh had been charged with two counts of dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death in connection to a Sept. 23, 2022, crash that killed two — Syed Mehdi Hussein Bokhari, 55, of Mississauga, and Syeda Samina Sudhra Bokhari, 62, of Calgary.

The trial opened April 7 with jarring dash camera footage of a multi-vehicle collision at around 7:24 p.m. in the eastbound lanes near the County Road 27 eastbound on-ramp. The crash occurred at a highway construction zone where three lanes of traffic were merging into a single lane, and video entered as trial evidence showed a truck barreling into the rear of the last of several slow-moving vehicles in front.

Article content

The vehicles involved in the collision included a 2019 white Freightliner tractor with an attached white utility van trailer; a 2022 white Toyota Corolla; and a 2016 black Subaru Legacy. Both deceased — siblings heading to Toronto from Windsor and occupants of the Toyota — were pronounced dead at the scene.

Singh, the driver of the truck, was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. The occupants of the Subaru Legacy — family members of the victims who were also travelling to Toronto — were treated at the scene for minor injures.

With the guilty plea, said Pillon, “we believe justice has been served.”

Recommended from Editorial

He said there won’t be a joint sentencing submission from the Crown and the defence at June’s hearing. He said a pre-sentence report is being prepared on the offender and that victim impact statements are anticipated to be introduced.

Pillon told the Star he expects Singh will be handed a jail sentence, as well as a probation order and driving suspension.

[email protected]

twitter.com/schmidtcity

Share this article in your social network



share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Ipso logo
Corrie to ‘mirror hit Netflix show’ as Amy Robbins makes ‘cruel’ return
Current concern
Britain’s efficiency trap
headshots of Dr. Alberto Ascherio and Dr. Stephen Hauser
$3 million Breakthrough Prize goes to scientists behind groundbreaking MS research
Australia Divided In DeepSeek Response
Australia Divided In DeepSeek Response
NOAA scientists refuse to link warming weather to climate change
NOAA scientists refuse to link warming weather to climate change
Rwanda and DRC officials sit down for second round of talks as M23 meets mediators
Rwanda and DRC officials sit down for second round of talks as M23 meets mediators
The Power of Now: Breaking News at Your Fingertips | © 2025 | Daily News