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The intersection where Daniella Clarke lost her life on Dec. 2, 2023. (Image Credit: Nigel Maxwell/paNOW)
"It was her choice not to stop and call the police"

Two-year prison sentence for driver in Daniella Clarke’s fatal crash 

Jun 2, 2026 | 12:43 PM

The 25-year-old woman responsible for the collision that killed Daniella Clarke near Prince Albert’s Kinsmen Park will spend the next two years in a federal prison. 

Kayla Walker was sentenced at Court of King’s Bench on June 2 after being convicted of criminal negligence causing death and dangerous driving causing bodily harm

Justice Hildebrandt stated Walker had safer options she chose not to take before handing down the sentence. 

“She elected not to use any of these safer options. It was her choice not to stop and call the police,” she said. 

The Crown’s submission for a sentence of four to five years was rejected by Hildebrandt as being too harsh, while the defence’s submission of a two year sentence served in the community, was dismissed as being too lenient. 

Walker had not been drinking, had no criminal record and was newly pregnant when the collision happened on Dec. 2, 2023

In the events leading up to the collision, she told the jury at her trial in January that she was being pursued by Christina Vlahos, who followed her around the city to multiple locations. 

At one point, both vehicles stopped and Walker got out with a tire iron and approached Vlahos’s vehicle, but her boyfriend talked her out of it. Vlahos then got out, approached Walker and punched her in the face. 

After both drivers got back into their vehicles, Vlahos resumed pursuing Walker. The chase ended when Walker ran the red light at Central Avenue and 28th Street. She was driving nearly 90 km/h in the moments leading up to the collision and struck the vehicle in which Clarke was a passenger, killing her. 

Hildebrandt pointed out that decisions such as driving to a more secluded place, where the punching incident occurred, factored into her sentencing decision. 

At the same time, Walker’s role as the mother of a now two-year-old son, a subsequent miscarriage and her remorse were also factors. 

While judges have no say in which institution offenders are placed, because that is the sole responsibility of the Correctional Service of Canada, Hildebrandt agreed to make a recommendation for Walker to serve all or a portion of her sentence at a healing lodge.

Once she is released, Walker will have a three-year period of probation and a seven-year driving ban.

susan.mcneil@pattisonmedia.com