Manitoba

Police cleared of wrongdoing in crash that killed 20-year-old

Manitoba's Independent Investigation Unit says police actions were justified in the leadup to the crash that killed 20-year-old Taylor Renwick.

Van fleeing police hit Taylor Renwick's car in October, killing her

Taylor Renwick died in a head-on crash in October. The van that hit her car was fleeing police. (Submitted)

The Independent Investigation Unit says police actions were justified in the leadup to a crash that killed 20-year-old Taylor Renwick.

On Oct. 9, 2015, during Thanksgiving weekend, two members of the RCMP's Portage la Prairie detachment located a suspect in a van at a Petro Canada station in St. Claude, Man.

The suspect was believed to have been involved in an assault and was possibly driving while impaired, the IIU said.

As the officers got out of their marked police vehicle, the van, with four people inside including the suspect, fled the gas station, taking Highway 2 east at high speed.

Within a minute of starting a chase, police stopped pursuing the van due its speed, which approached 150 kilometres per hour, investigators said.

As the van fled, it moved into an oncoming westbound lane to pass a semi-trailer truck and hit Renwick's car head-on.

Renwick, who lived in Napinka, Man., was the only person in her car. She died at the crash scene. People in the van were seriously injured, but they all survived the crash.

The IIU's civilian director, Zane Tessler, determined the van's driver moved into the oncoming lane when it wasn't safe. He also said the police pursuit was justified, and officers acted prudently.

The 27-year-old driver faces charges including criminal negligence, dangerous and impaired driving and flight from a police officer, the IIU news release said.