Very odd story here – normally the police in a case like this just escort the parents to the hospital.
http://bit.ly/qbkaCU
When his pregnant wife started bleeding onto the car seat, David Weber knew he was in trouble.
The couple was driving home from
Panicked because his wife had a C-section scheduled later in the week following complications during her last pregnancy, the father-to-be had one thought in mind: get to the hospital.
Weber floored the gas pedal. But along the way he was stopped twice by two separate RCMP officers, issued hundreds of dollars in speeding tickets and had 10 demerit points taken off.
Now the 32-year-old is scheduled to lose his licence for five months starting Saturday, and is fighting the provincial government for the right to drive.
“I’m hoping they’ll see the whole picture and have some compassion,” Weber said from the family’s farmhouse near
He’s written to the Ministry of Public Safety, asking it to review the incident. Because he lives in a rural part of the province with no public transit, a car is essential to get to work and buy groceries.
A Ministry of Public Safety spokeswoman said Wednesday that the office had not yet received the letter, which Weber said was sent Monday.
Weber was driving at a speed of 172 km/h in a 100 km/h zone when he was pulled over near Portage La Prairie, about an hour away from the hospital, RCMP spokesman Const. Miles Hiebert said.
At first “we were relieved,” Genevieve Weber recalled. When she saw the flashing lights, she thought the RCMP officer was going to escort them to
Instead, David Weber was ticketed and told to go to Portage La Prairie’s hospital to wait for an ambulance transfer there. The couple was unwilling to wait, Genevieve Weber said, because by that time her contractions were only a few minutes apart. Her physician had warned her earlier that strong contractions could cause a rupture in her uterus due to her previous complications.
The officer let them continue with a warning that “travelling at that rate of speed was extremely dangerous,” said Hiebert, who declined to give the officer’s name.
But about 50 kilometres from
The couple was rushed to Brandon General where she had an emergency C-section and gave birth to a baby girl, Anabela.
In April, a justice of the peace reduced the speeding fines — $964 at the first stop; the second fine had not yet been determined — to $400 in total, David Weber said. However, Manitoba Public Insurance, a Crown corporation that issues licences and provides auto insurance, kept the demerits on Weber’s record.
1 comment:
The first office failed in his duty by not escorting them to Brandon. Why would he think he knew more about the medical facilities in Portage than the couple? Rural hospitals are glorified first aid stations, and if, as a provider of service in the area, he was not aware of this, he should be fined, and an apology given to the couple for endangering the life of the mother and the child.
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