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Family, friends of young woman killed in Innisfil crash appealing for witnesses (8 photos)

On Nov. 22, 22-year-old Tamerra London was killed in a car accident on 5th Sideroad near Highway 89 in Innisfil, and her family and friends are appealing for any witnesses to come forward to help with the ongoing investigation

Friends and family of a Toronto woman who was killed in a car crash in Innisfil this past fall are appealing for witnesses to come forward to police. 

Twenty-two-year old Tamerra London was on her way home to Toronto from Sudbury on the evening of Nov. 22  when her Honda Accord going southbound on 5th Sideroad near Highway 89 collided with a northbound white Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck, sending both vehicles into the ditch. 

London was pronounced dead at the scene. 

Her death has caused overwhelming pain and grief for her family and friends who are looking for answers as to what went wrong that devastating night. 

London had been on her way home to Toronto from Sudbury that evening, a drive she was very much familiar with. London had completed her undergrad with honours at Laurentian University in Sudbury in April from the Biomedical Biology program. She would drive back and forth from Toronto to Sudbury often, visiting with her boyfriend and friends. 

"There has to be someone out there that maybe knows something," said her good friend from university Erin Bell of Innisfil

Prior to the accident, Bell said London had popped into a friend's house in Orillia before embarking on the last leg of her journey home. 

"It was bad roads that day," remembers Bell, "it was one of our first huge snowfalls, the roads were full of slush and I feel like that had a lot to do with it (the accident)."

Bell says London's family is having a hard time not having the closure needed in order to move on and find peace. 

"It's still open so we don't know a lot at all (about the investigation)," said Bell. "They (London's family) just want closure so they can move on and heal from it instead of wondering what happened."

London was full of life and was loved by many. She is deeply missed by her parents, siblings, cousins, nephews, boyfriend and friends. 

Her boyfriend Thomas Harrington says she always had such a positive outlook on life.

He described her as a night owl with a love of music, adventure and people. 

"She felt like home whenever you were with her," he said. 

Harrington first met London at school in 2017. He fell in love with her zest for life, passion for helping others and caring nature. He has been having a hard time since his girlfriend's sudden passing but will cherish the memories of their time together forever. 

"She was super important to a lot of people," said Harrington. 

London was an active volunteer and community leader.

"She was one of those people who wanted to change the world," said Bell. 

London was very much involved with the Black Lives Matter Sudbury group as chair of the Education Committee and a passionate advocate for Indigenous people's rights.  She spent a lot of her time volunteering in the community and would often send food and clothes to her family's home country, Guyana. She had planned to visit there one day and help volunteer in the field of education. 

Harrington said London was making a name for herself and had recently published two papers, one on fish in Guyana and another on Indigenous culture. 

"She had such a great outlook on life and she had so much to offer the world," said Bell. "It's so true that the good ones really do die young."

After the accident, which was just two weeks shy of London's 23rd birthday, her friends got together in Sudbury for a small socially distanced celebration of life.

The BLM Sudbury Group created a Go Fund Me page to help the family cover funeral expenses which raised $13,000. 

"Any death in any year is hard but in a COVID year it's harder because you can't be there for each other," said Bell. 

"It was really something to see how her family was consoling all of us even though they're really hurting too," added Harrington.

Family and friends have created a memorial, featuring a white bicycle surrounded by lights, flowers and photos at the scene of the accident on 5th Sideroad just south of Highway 89. 

Details surrounding the accident are still under investigation. 

"It's a very tragic case," said  Acting Staff Sgt. Dave Phillips with South Simcoe Police, "I feel for these families, there's a real search for answers."

Phillips sympathizes with their situation, noting these types of investigations take time, looking at the science behind the collision and pouring over reports, which sometimes don't result in any charges. 

He says police are being thorough in examining all the evidence and information before making any conclusions, adding that with COVID-19 there have been delays in the process. 

Phillips says it's refreshing to see family and friends of the victim going to great lengths in order to help with the investigation process. 

Anyone who has any information that may be helpful in the investigation can contact South Simcoe Police directly at (905) 775-3311



Natasha Philpott

About the Author: Natasha Philpott

Natasha is the Editor for BradfordToday and InnisfilToday. She graduated from the Media Studies program at The University of Guelph-Humber. She lives in Bradford with her husband, two boys and two cats.
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