Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 18, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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TOP NEWS
A3 SATURDAY JANUARY 18, 2025 ● ASSOCIATE EDITOR, NEWS: STACEY THIDRICKSON 204-697-7292 ● CITY.DESK@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
Fiancé, mother and Portage mayor call for accountability in wake of alleged drunk-driving death
Bride-to-be ‘touched everyone’s life’
K
ELLIE Verwey was planning a
wedding, expanding her thriving
business and tirelessly serving
the community of Portage la Prairie be-
fore her life was cut short in an alleged
impaired driving collision Wednesday.
Police have charged James Lorne
Hilton, 24, in connection to the crash
that killed the 28-year-old bride-to-be.
He’s charged with being impaired and
driving a stolen truck that veered into
oncoming traffic on Highway 26.
The tragedy has united Verwey’s
friends, family and community, who
are demanding accountability from the
justice system — which they say failed
to protect her.
“Kellie touched everyone’s life that
she came in to. She was outgoing, an or-
ganizer, a doer and she had a helper’s
heart,” her mother, Meechelle Best,
told the Free Press.
“She was killed by someone who
never should have been out on the road,
and there needs to be a stop put to al-
lowing these people to disrupt the rest
of society and take the lives of people
who are contributing.
“This can’t happen to other people.
It’s happened to too many.”
Hilton, who RCMP say fled from the
scene, was a wanted man. Mounties had
issued a warrant for his arrest Jan. 9,
after he repeatedly violated bail condi-
tions from a previous offence, RCMP
Sgt. Paul Manaigre confirmed.
Portage Mayor Sharilyn Knox sent a
letter on Friday to senior government
officials that calls for bail reform,
strengthened warrant enforcement and
the prioritization of public safety.
“This loss has shaken our city to its
core, and it demands immediate atten-
tion and action,” Knox wrote in the
three-page letter, addressed to Pre-
mier Wab Kinew, Justice Minister Matt
Wiebe and federal Justice Minister
Arif Virani, among others.
“This is a systemic failure, plain and
simple, and it cost an innocent young
woman her life … We demand a justice
system that prioritizes the safety of
law-abiding citizens over the conven-
ience of leniency for repeat offenders,”
Knox said.
The letter said Verwey worked as
a tourism co-ordinator for Portage,
where she was a driving force behind
initiatives that showcased the city.
Wiebe, who had spoken to Knox, said
the province is working to improve pub-
lic safety through community consulta-
tions and investments in key enforce-
ment programs, including a $3-million
ankle-monitoring program that is being
expanded into rural areas.
“We’ve been clear that we are calling
on the federal government to re-evalu-
ate the (bail) reform that they’ve under-
taken and to continue to prioritize the
safety of communities first,” he told the
Free Press.
Travis Lundy, Verwey’s fiance, de-
scribed her as a “kind, caring and bub-
bly person.”
The couple met around five years ago
and moved to the hamlet of High Bluff,
located 10 kilometres east of Portage,
in June 2022. They had booked the lo-
cal community hall for their wedding
social in April, and were set to get mar-
ried in their backyard in June, he said.
Verwey spent the night before she
was killed planning a bachelorette
party with her girlfriends, who were
going to treat her to a shopping week-
end south of the border, her mother
said.
Her daughter had tried on her wed-
ding dress, and Lundy and his grooms-
men were planning to pick up their
suits in the coming weeks, Best said.
Lundy said Verwey “wanted to be a
mom in the worst way,” and the pair
were looking ahead to their life togeth-
er.
“Everything was in order,” Best said,
her voice breaking. “And now, I don’t
get to see her in her wedding dress and
I don’t get to celebrate her children with
her and her beautiful husband, Travis.”
On the day of the collision, Ver-
wey was driving from High Bluff to
her grandmother’s home in Portage.
Her grandfather, Ferris MacDonald,
had died Monday and she was helping
to prepare a slideshow of treasured
family photos for his funeral, Best said.
She was travelling westbound on the
highway, about three kilometres east
of Portage, around 10:50 a.m., when
RCMP say Hilton — also headed west-
bound — drifted over the centre line,
went into a ditch and rolled.
Another truck, driven by a 21-year-
old Portage man who was travelling
eastbound, swerved to avoid Hilton
and collided with Verwey’s SUV, police
said.
The second victim was taken to
hospital in stable condition and then
released; Verwey died at the scene,
RCMP said.
Known for being tenacious, whip-
smart and bold, Verwey leaves behind
an inspiring legacy for her community.
“She very, very likely would have
been the mayor of Portage in another
10 years. That’s the kind of person she
was,” said Ron Best, her stepfather.
“She had a very kick-ass, straight-for-
ward, no-nonsense approach to all as-
pects of her life,” her mother said. “She
was going to be one of the community
influencers of the next generation,
without question.”
Kellie graduated with honours from
the Asper School of Business at the
University of Manitoba in 2019. During
university, she studied in England and
Iceland.
She and Lundy launched their busi-
ness, Roasts and Toasts, in 2021. The
mobile cocktail and coffee bar catered
special events and weddings.
Last year, the company was recog-
nized by the Portage la Prairie Cham-
ber of Commerce, when the couple
were presented with an Outstanding
New Entrepreneur of the Year award.
When she wasn’t serving her com-
munity, spending time with her family
or “dropping everything in a moment”
to help people in need, Kellie enjoyed
listening to country music, travelling
and spending time outdoors, Lundy
said.
She will be remembered for how
she lived, not how she died, but Lundy
hopes the tragedy will change the way
the justice system handles repeat of-
fenders, he said.
“I’m going to miss my best friend. I
can’t get her back, but I want there to
be a change from this, some kind of
justice brought in Kel’s honour,” Lundy
said.
In July 2024, when Hilton pleaded
guilty to drug possession in Selkirk,
court heard he had three grams of
meth, cannabis and opioid pills in his
possession when he was picked up by
RCMP.
His lawyer told provincial court
Judge Tony Cellitti he was not a daily
drug user, but had been struggling with
substance use. He wasn’t working, and
was in the process of moving out of
his ex’s place, with whom he shares a
daughter who was three at the time.
Hilton was given a six-month condi-
tional discharge and unsupervised pro-
bation.
That same day, he was charged with
break-and-enter. He was arrested in
September for alleged trespassing, pos-
sessing tools for break-and-enter and
failing to comply with his curfew.
He was charged with violating his re-
lease conditions on Dec. 14, 17, 31 and
Jan. 1.
— With files from Erik Pindera
tyler.searle@freepress.mb.ca
TYLER SEARLE
SUPPLIED
Kellie Verwey, 28, with fiance Travis Lundy. They were to marry in June. She was killed in a collision caused by an alleged drunk driver
on Jan. 15. Lundy said he hopes to see a change in the way the province handles repeat offenders as a measure of justice for Verwey.
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