The truck driver who caused a fatal multi-car crash that killed world-renowned Canadian figure skater and Olympian Alexandra Paul was sentenced to two and a half years in prison on Wednesday.
Sukhwinder Sidhu was handed a seven-year driving ban in addition to the light sentence in connection with the deadly Aug. 22, 2023, wreck in Melancthon Township, 70 miles north of Toronto, the CBC reported.
In February, Sidu pleaded guilty in an Ontario court to dangerous driving causing death and dangerous driving causing bodily harm.
Paul and her 10-month-old son, Charlie, were among those in one of seven vehicles struck when Sidhu’s out-of-control truck plowed through a construction zone at 66 mph — nearly double the posted 37 mph limit.
Paul was pronounced dead at the scene.
Her infant son miraculously survived the crash and was rushed to a nearby children’s hospital with a broken leg and non-life-threatening injuries. Multiple other people were also injured.
Sidhu had been working for more than 26 hours — at least 16 of them spent behind the wheel — at the time of the deadly crash, the outlet reported.
The judge also noted that Sidhu had multiple prior speeding violations before the wreck.
Ahead of sentencing, Paul’s husband and longtime figure skating partner, Mitchell Islam, recalled the horrifying moment he learned his wife had been killed.
“When the officer told me Alex was gone, it was crippling fog and numbness. I remember buckling into his arms,” Islam told the court in his victim impact statement.
Paul’s father, Gordon Paul, also gave a tearful statement, explaining that his daughter’s death had left him completely shattered.
“I didn’t get a chance to say goodbye,” he said. “I couldn’t give her another hug. She was just gone.”
Her heartbroken father also told the court his daughter had “unlimited possibilities” ahead of her and was building her career as a lawyer after leaving figure skating in 2016 when she was killed.
Sidhu apologized to the victims and accepted full responsibility for the crash.
Sidhu, a father of two, told the court he couldn’t “imagine the pain” Charlie will carry growing up without his mother, and added he wished he could take back his actions that day “in a heartbeat.”
“I know there is nothing I can say that will fix this or make the grief any better. I understand that an apology can never be enough for a loss like this,” he said.
“To every person who was injured or traumatized that day, I am deeply sorry. I know the pain and impact of what happened did not end when the crash ended.”
The judge acknowledged Sidhu’s clean criminal record and close family ties before handing down his sentence, but said his speeding that day and prior driving record made a prison sentence the only appropriate outcome, the CBC reported.
A celebrated Olympian and ice dancer, Paul represented Canada alongside Islam at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, where the duo placed 18th in the mixed ice dance event.
The pair, who started skating together in 2009, won Canada’s junior ice dance title that same year and a silver medal at the ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championship in 2010.
During their senior career, they clinched bronze medals at the Canadian national championships in 2011, 2014, and 2015.
In 2016, the duo retired from competitive figure skating after winning the bronze medal at the US Classic International.
Following their careers on the ice, Paul and Islam married in 2021 and welcomed Charlie in 2022.
After hanging up her skates, Paul earned her bachelor’s degree from Oakland University in Rochester Hills, Michigan, in 2017, then went on to earn her Juris Doctor from the University of Windsor Law School in 2021 and launched her career as an attorney at Barriston Law.
