Jennifer Neville-Lake and her husband, Edward Lake, removed their glasses and cried and Dawn Muzzo looked straight ahead without emotion as the verdict was read.

Muzzo will receive eight months of credit for time served, meaning he will serve a further nine years and four months, and he is banned from driving for 12 years after his time in custody. He will be eligible for parole in three years, at which time he will face a parole board review.

He plead guilty last month.

The collision killed Daniel Neville-Lake, 9, his brother Harrison, 5, their sister Milly, 2, and their grandfather, Gary Neville, 65.

The facts of the case involve Muzzo getting off a private jet in Toronto Sept. 27 after his bachelor party in Miami.

He then jumped in his Jeep Cherokee to drive home to King.

In the lead up to the crash, Muzzo was driving 85 km/h, slowed to 54 km/h and then 43 km/h, removed his foot from the brake and then T-boned the Neville-Lake’s Caravan 3.7 seconds after first applying the brakes, according to data recovered from the vehicle.

He slowed, but did not stop at the stop sign, even though conditions were ideal for visibility, according to witnesses.

After the crash, Muzzo’s vehicle then collided with a white Mercedes.

After the Neville-Lake vehicle ended up in a ditch, a number of witnesses said Muzzo wasn't acting "normal”, suggesting his eyes were glossy and he was stumbling.

Police said Muzzo had urinated himself and couldn't understand basic directions.

An initial breath test indicated he had 192 mg of alcohol per 100 ml of blood. A second test showed 204 mg., which is nearly three times the legal limit.

By the time his breath sample was taken, all the children had died, the court heard.

Watch yorkregion.com for more on the story as it develops.