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‘Selfless, brave and full of love’: OPP officer killed in crash honoured at funeral

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An Ontario Provincial Police officer who died in a highway crash while on duty is being remembered as a brave and compassionate man committed to his community.

A funeral was held in Cobourg, Ont., on Wednesday for Sgt. Brandon Malcolm, who was killed in a single-vehicle collision involving a motorcycle on Highway 401 east of Toronto on April 27.

Malcolm, who was 33, joined the provincial police force in 2020 and served on its precision motorcycle team, the Golden Helmets.

Officials including Ontario Lt.-Gov. Edith Dumont, Premier Doug Ford and OPP Commissioner Thomas Carrique joined Malcolm’s loved ones and thousands of officers and first responders in honouring him.

Malcolm’s wife, Vashti Persaud, said their meeting in Toronto a decade ago “turned into a love that became my home, my strength, and my greatest blessing.”

Malcolm wasn’t “just a husband,” she said. “He was my best friend. He knew how to make me laugh when I didn’t want to, how to calm me when life felt overwhelming, and how to remind me about what truly mattered.”

Her husband carried the responsibility of protecting people with pride and courage, she said.

“Losing him this way is something I can’t fully put into words. It just doesn’t feel real.

“Even in this unbearable pain, I know this: He died doing what he believed in, and that is the kind of man he was — selfless, brave and full of love.”

Malcolm’s brother, a constable with York Regional Police, said the officer had a profound impact on people around him.

“Brandon was the kind of person you don’t forget: strong willed, competitive, driven,” Jared Malcolm said.

“If you knew him well, you knew that competitive edge wasn’t just about winning. It was about pushing himself and quietly pushing the people he cared about to be better too,” he said,

Growing up, the two brothers challenged each other constantly, he said.

“There’s always this unspoken understanding between us that we’re on the same team even when we were competing,” he said.

“Life got busy, careers, responsibilities, everything that comes with being adults, but that connection between us never really went away. We still checked in. We looked out for each other in our own way. He actually became a thorn in my side trying to recruit me to the OPP.”

Ford said the province grieves the loss, highlighting Malcolm’s accomplishments as a veteran of the Canadian Armed Forces, a former auxiliary officer with Toronto police, and a member of the OPP motorcycle team.

“Sgt. Malcolm dedicated his life to serving his country, our province and the community here in Northumberland. Very few people in this country could ever say they served all three,” the premier said.

Malcolm was a “big man” with an “even larger” heart, Ford continued.

“When he was at community events, what I’ve heard, kids would come up to him when he was on the motorcycle, and that made his day,” Ford said.

“Every one of us here today has a responsibility to celebrate Sgt. Malcolm’s life, honour the standard of excellence he set and … never ever forget his sacrifice.”

The procession departed from a funeral home in Oshawa, Ont., around 8:30 a.m. and travelled east on Highway 401 to arrive in Cobourg an hour later.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 6, 2026.