An Inconsequential Penalty for Criminal Negligence
"I was a happy person. A happy kid. I played volleyball. I liked to hang out with friends. Ride my bike. Anything and everything a normal kid would do. My goal was to start up a babysitting business.""Then February 13, 2022, happened. I was hit by a car -- your car. You hit me, backed up to see what you hit, then drove off. You lied to the police when they asked about your involvement. You said you'd sold your car the day before.""All this while I was lying in a hospital bed for weeks and weeks, crying in pain. We begged you to come forward and take responsibility for what you did. But you didn't.""I get that you are young and afraid, but I was much younger and more afraid.""I want you to look into my eyes and know that you are guilty. I actually want you to live a very long life knowing that you're guilty. You should be ashamed of yourself."Serene Summers, 14, hit-and-run victim, Ottawa, Ontario
"We were hoping for something different. We had some hope that the sentencing would be a little bit higher, especially hearing that he's admitted to driving the vehicle.""It's confusing."Anita Armstrong, mother of Serene Summers"Why are you smirking?""She has injuries that will potentially last the rest of her life. You're here to [be] give[n] a fine. The difference is quite different.""I hope you listened to her. She's upset. Rightly upset. Fates crossed at that moment, but there are consequences for life for her."Justice of the Peace Louis Dibblee, Provincial Offences Court, Ottawa
February 13, 2022, Super Bowl Sunday, Serene Summers and her girlfriend Eva Salinas had taken a bus to the Merivale Mall Dollar Store. They returned by bus, crossed Meadowlands Drive close to where their homes were on Orkney Private. A young man by the name of Mahmoud Ghanam happened to be driving west with a passenger "at a high rate of speed", striking Serene "causing her to fly in the air and land on the roadway".
Photo:Jean Levac/Postmedia |
In an effort to identify the driver, friends and supporters placed posters with images of the black, two-door Honda Civic all around the area. The image had been captured by a nearby security camera. Eventually the driver contacted police himself, denying he had been driving the car, claiming to have sold it earlier that very day of the accident.
It took six weeks following the injury that the young girl sustained before she was cleared to leave hospital, with plans to attend a concert along with her friend Eva. Her memory of being struck and critically injured, that the driver after hitting her reversed, looked back, and then sped off will remain with her forever.
Serene was 13 when she was so dreadfully injured. Now, a year later, at 14, she has been left with a permanent brain injury. When first taken to hospital she was kept in a medically induced coma for several days. After that she was able only to communicate with her family through American Sign Language, a skill she had been taught at school.
When Serene delivered her victim impact statement her right leg remained in a brace. She described her recurring dreams of dying. She spoke of the personality change that had come over her. That she had severed personal relationships. That school work became difficult to concentrate on. That she continues to experience chronic pain, albeit reduced in intensity from the severity of the months following her injuries.
Mahmoud Ghanam, now 23, stared ahead, turning on occasion to meet the young girls eyes. Justice of the Peace Dibblee admonished Ghanam: "Why are you smirking?" In the sentencing on charges of failing to remain at the scene of an accident, failing to render assistance, and failing to provide his information to police, a plea agreement led Ghanam to plead guilty.
Justice Dibblee had put off the hearing until Friday from its original schedule for the week before because Ghanam and his lawyer did not appear in court in person, but chose to watch via Zoom. A victim impact statement had greater effect when rendered and heard in person, said Justice Dibblee; he was "significantly offended" by the defence's physical absence from the court.
And the sentencing? A fine of $2,000 and loss of Ghanam's driver's licence for a period of a year. A rather underwhelming consequence for the commission of a grievous assault and the inexcusable reaction of heartlessly leaving the scene of the accident he was directly responsible for, permanently altering the life and prospects of a young girl whom he could have left for dead, for all he cared. Ashamed of himself? Not likely!
Labels: Hit-and-Run Accident, Lifelong Consequences, Uncaring Perpetrator, Young Girl's Injuries
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