A woman from Manitoba in Canada will soon learn whether she'll serve
four years in prison for stabbing her common-law husband, who was
then run over by two separate drunk drivers after collapsing on the road
as he walked to get medical help for the stab wounds. Lois Cook, 39,
pleaded guilty on Friday to manslaughter for the death of Dave Hudson,
32 on May 31, 2010, in the community of Berens River north of Winnipeg.
The community was celebrating Treaty Days and Cook, Hudson and a number
of others had been partying and drinking at a home. At some point in the
evening, the couple got into a dispute.
Cook stabbed Hudson twice in the arm, leaving two three-millimeter stab
wounds. The intoxicated victim appeared fine despite his bleeding arm.
He even spoke to other party guests before walking up the road to a
nearby relative's home to get a ride to the nursing station. The Crown
says he collapsed in the roadway "likely due to the loss of blood." The
court heard
he was run over by a drunk driver and then run over by another drunk driver. Only
the second collision was witnessed - by RCMP on their way to
investigate the stabbing call. The wounds Hudson suffered from being run
over were "extremely dramatic" and he was covered with "significant
road rash."
Believing it was the collision they saw that killed him, RCMP charged
the 27-year-old driver with impaired driving causing death. It wasn't
until after the pathologist concluded his autopsy's careful "second
look" he discovered Hudson actually died of blood loss stemming from a
minuscule nick in an artery from the stabbing, Court of Queen's Bench
Justice Joan McKelvey was told. Police then undertook another
investigation, which saw the first drunk driver come forward to admit he
hit Hudson, but police didn't lay charges. They also arrested Cook for
his death. "There were a lot of issues... law school exam-type issues,"
Crown attorney Dan Angus said. The case went to a preliminary hearing
earlier this year where Cook was ultimately committed to stand trial.
Defense lawyer Scott Newman said the preliminary inquiry was necessary
to sort out the facts of the case. Hudson's fatal stab injury was "by no
means an obvious or significant wound," he said. If it had been caught
in time, it was an "absolutely survivable" injury, Newman said of the
medical evidence. The Crown is seeking four years in prison for Cook,
while Newman is asking for two years minus time served to keep her in
the provincial jail system and placed on probation to help with a
long-standing alcohol problem. "I just want to apologize to the family
for their loss, my loss and the children's loss," Cook said. "I hope
they can forgive me one day." McKelvey will issue a decision on Nov. 21.
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