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Saanich police nab alleged drunk driver attempting to flee crash

  VICTORIA A Nanaimo man was arrested in Saanich last week after he allegedly crashed a vehicle while impaired. Saanich police say the crash occurred around 1:50 a.m. on July 19 on Cedar Hill Cross Road. Police say that two officers were parked on Shelbourne Street near Cedar Hill when they heard the crash and went to investigate. The officers then spotted damage to a concrete median on Cedar Hill Cross Road, and followed a trail of debris and fluids leading from the median to a parking lot on Ophir Street. At the parking lot, police say they saw a man exit the driver s seat of a car, then run from the scene.

Driver who fled Saanich crash had breath samples more than twice the legal limit

When they pulled up, a man got out of the driver’s seat and ran. One of the officers caught up to him when he couldn’t get over a nearby fence. The man provided breath samples that were over twice the legal alcohol limit of .08. It was also determined that he was prohibited from driving and was on probation for a breaking-and-entering conviction. “This individual made a series of poor decisions that posed significant risks to the public, fortunately only resulting in substantial consequences for him and him alone,” said Const. Markus Anastasiades. A 36-year-old Nanaimo man is facing charges that include impaired driving, driving while prohibited and breach of probation.

Letters May 21: Cats on the prowl; sleepless nights after Vic West arson

300 to 400 million! Think about it: that’s around one million per day, a billion every three years. Are there enough small birds in Canada to sustain this slaughter? I think that, at that rate, we would have run out of birds some years ago. I recently read an article in the Guardian, called “Meaty meals and play stop cats killing wildlife,” about a scientific study done in the United Kingdom, the premise being to understand why some well-fed (but not all) housecats hunt. Their estimate was that cats kill around 100 million animals annually in the U.K., of which 25 per cent are birds. Canada’s human population is about 55 per cent that of the U.K., so assuming that the cat and kill ratios are about the same, that would be about 14 million birds killed in Canada.

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