Deportation closer for driver in Humboldt Broncos bus crash: Lawyer

by The Canadian Press

A lawyer for the truck driver who caused the deadly Humboldt Broncos bus crash says his client is one step closer to being deported to India.

Lawyer Michael Greene says Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada has rejected one of two last bids for Jaskirat Singh Sidhu to stay in the country.

court gavel
(Photo: iStock)

“The wheels are set in motion now and the (Canada Border Services Agency) is under a legal obligation to remove people as soon as possible,” Greene told The Canadian Press on Thursday.

He said he’s not sure when that might be but plans to ask for a deferral, until a previous application to restore Sidhu’s permanent resident status is decided.

“They have a mandate to move but sometimes they’re reasonable,” Greene said.

Sidhu, a rookie Calgary trucker, drove through a stop sign and into the path of the bus carrying the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League team at a rural intersection near Tisdale, Sask., in April 2018.

Sixteen people died and 13 more were injured, sparking a nationwide outpouring of grief, condolences and tributes.

Sidhu entered guilty pleas to dangerous driving offences and was sentenced to eight years in prison.
Court heard Sidhu, who had arrived in Canada as a newly married permanent resident in 2014, was hired by a small trucking company three weeks before the crash.

A criminal conviction that carries a sentence of more than six months makes a permanent resident ineligible to remain in the country.

Sidhu was granted full parole in 2023. The Immigration and Refugee Board ordered the following year that he be deported.

Greene said his client learned Wednesday that a pre-removal risk assessment was not approved. But it wasn’t much of a surprise.

“It’s a very high bar to achieve and frankly that’s not the crux of his wish to stay in Canada,” said Greene. “His reason to stay in Canada is not based on danger.”

Greene said asking for the pre-removal risk assessment was important because it held off the deportation.

“They couldn’t remove him while the PRRA was ongoing. Once the PRRA is determined, there’s nothing to stop removal.  “It enables them to remove him now.”

Greene said he’s reviewing the pre-removal risk assessment decision and deciding whether to challenge it in Federal Court. And he plans to ask for a deferral while the remaining application to restore Sidhu’s permanent resident status on humanitarian grounds is considered. 

Sidhu has two children, and one has complex medical issues.

“We will ask they do not split up the family and send him back to India. If we didn’t get any deferral at all, I would say we’re probably looking at two to three months,” Greene said.

Sidhu and his wife have been stressed for years, said the lawyer.

“This Sword of Damocles is hanging over them and never goes away. This just intensifies it. He’s attending regular psychological counselling,” Greene added. “While some people have forgiven him, he has not forgiven himself. It’s still something he relives constantly.”

Chris Joseph of St. Albert, Alta., whose 20-year-old son, Jaxon, died in the crash, said he hopes the deportation goes ahead.

“This would be a big chapter for us, and it’s a really important one. If we lose everything else but he gets deported that might be the only thing that gives us a little bit of peace,” said Joseph. “That might the only thing that even begins my forgiveness journey, if I even have room for forgiveness.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 5, 2026.


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  • How many times has Joesph slipped thru a stop sign in life? Just remember everybody the bus driver wasn’t paying attention neither to his driving .

  • Good day to all readers, this guy should have been deported a long time ago, my way of thinking is if you come to our country and you are found guilty for a criminal offence you should be in a plane the next day and return from where you come from and we have enought or our criminal guys here no use to import some, if you read the papers you will see everyday these guys are arrest for drug smuggling and all kinds of crimes and the taxe payers are paying for these imigrants who are doing everything they can to go agains the law and they think they can do everything they want but our goverment is protecting them more than a Canadian born, there is something I don’t undertstant here, just tried to go in there countries and try to make your own law you will not survive two days before they cut your head but here in Canada nothing is done to eliminate these bandits, throw them out of the country again thank’s to Trudeau who imports these bandits, probably we were short of bandits here in Canada and we needed to import many of them now they are here

  • Yes sure , send him back to India so that he can come back to Canada the very next day with a new identity hired by a family member who owns a trucking business and than probably caus even more devastation. This is how it usually works, isn’t it !!!!
    Oh Canada.

  • He should have been deported already he is a risk of offending again because there is no way to stop him from getting into a vehicle and killing more people he needs to be gone now

  • so many people want him out but as a truck driver for over 50 years i blame the trucking company to put a young driver with such a heavy load and very little experince whe i started driving in 1970 the company would not put you on the highway till you worked in the city for a least three years so you got experince with hauling these different tipes of loads just not fair working for very low wages to screw up this young man’s life

  • He ain’t ever getting on a plane back to India. Why are we wasting time on this. There will be an 11th hour reprieve to save him. And the next day he will be driving something.

  • I wonder if he was from Poland or Ukraine or a British person. Everybody would want them deported. I think this all boiled down to skin colour. He admitted to his mistake big time. More remorse than some other people I know I got into trouble. Tk u

  • He made a mistake. Many others have made the same mistake as well. I have had a couple of situations where a truck pulled out in front of me. Fortunately I was able to slow my vehicle sufficiently to avoid the same situation as happened to the bus. Jaskirat Singh Sidhu acknowledge that he was guilty of making this mistake. He has to live his life knowing what happened and is deeply sorry for the incident. My opinion is he will not be making this mistake again, and should not be deported. Especially since it would break up the family that are not guilty of this incident.