Quantcast
Channel: Montreal Gazette - RSS Feed
Viewing all 2437 articles
Browse latest View live

Former notorious Hells Angel spent months in jail for road-rage incident

$
0
0

A former Hells Angel who took part in one of the most notorious crimes committed in Quebec when he and other bikers slaughtered fellow gang members three decades ago is a free man again, despite having recently pleaded guilty to assaulting someone during a road-rage incident in Montreal.

Jacques Pelletier, 63, was a full-patch member of the Hells Angels in 1985 when the gang decided to slaughter several members of its now-defunct Laval chapter. The gang members who were killed in what became known as the Lennoxville Purge were considered unruly drug dealers whose actions affected relations with other organized crime groups, notably the leaders of Montreal’s West End Gang who supplied the gang with cocaine.

On March 24, 1985, five Laval members were shot to death after they were summoned to a Hells Angels’ clubhouse in Lennoxville, just outside Sherbrooke. Several Hells Angels were present that day and played a role in the slaughter, but only four — including Pelletier — were convicted of first-degree murder and received life sentences.

Pelletier was granted full parole in 2013, but returned behind bars a couple of times for parole violations. For example, in October 2017, he was returned to a penitentiary after police noticed his motorcycle parked outside a strip bar frequented by known criminals.

In November, he was returned to a penitentiary again following his arrest, by Montreal police, for his role in a road-rage incident during which he got into a shoving match with another driver on Oct. 18.

According to court records, the incident was considered minor by the judge who ultimately sentenced Pelletier, on Feb. 6, to pay a $1,000 fine after he pleaded guilty to one count of simple assault. But Pelletier remained behind bars because he also had to explain himself to the Parole Board of Canada for having violated his release by not keeping the peace.

On Wednesday, the parole board decided to lift the suspension of his parole after having heard Pelletier’s version of events. According to a written summary of the decision, Pelletier feels he was the victim in what transpired in October.

He told the board he was driving home from work when he stopped at a light and the driver of another vehicle got out and challenged him to a fight. The other driver apparently felt that Pelletier had cut him off. He said he tried to discuss things with the man, who grew more aggressive and ended up tearing Pelletier’s jacket. The man pulled out his cellphone and took photos of Pelletier as well as the licence plate on his car.

Pelletier called his parole officer immediately to report the incident, and a co-worker who was riding in his car later told the police that Pelletier wasn’t the instigator in the dust-up. The judge who heard Pelletier’s short trial this month at the Montreal courthouse did not believe the other driver, who claimed Pelletier had punched him. The judge found Pelletier guilty of using excessive force while he tried to take the man’s cellphone from him.

According to the parole board, Pelletier quit the Hells Angels in 1995.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related


Parolee back behind bars as suspect in killer's prison breakout

$
0
0

A Montreal man who was out on parole has been returned behind bars following his arrest as a suspect in the prison escape of killer Denis Bégin last week.

The 56-year-old man was arrested on Saturday, the day after Bégin left the Federal Training Centre, a minimum-security federal penitentiary in Laval normally used for offenders who are preparing for a release.

The Sûreté du Québec detachment in Mascouche has taken over the search for Bégin. They recently located a vehicle in Dollard des Ormeaux that they believe was used in the escape‎.

SQ spokesperson Sgt. Eloise Cossette sai‎d the suspect will likely face charges of being an accomplice to a crime.

Bégin received a life sentence for killing a 19-year-old man in St-Léonard. The victim was celebrating Halloween inside a bar when Bégin walked in and shot him with a rifle.

Bégin was also an informant for the police in the past.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Kirkland family called 911 moments before boy, 5, was shot

$
0
0

A man charged with attempting to murder his two sons in Kirkland owns five firearms and exhibited strange behaviour just before the November shooting, according to court documents.

The 36-year-old Dollard-des-Ormeaux resident remains detained and has yet to have a bail hearing.

He was arrested on Nov. 9 and is charged with attempted murder of both of his sons and aggravated assault of his father-in-law. He has been ordered to undergo at least two psychiatric evaluations.

The name of the accused cannot be published because of a court order intended to protect the identities of the children.

Montreal police have filed a request with the court seeking an order prohibiting the accused from possessing firearms. The request describes what happened inside the home just before the shooting occurred.

“On Nov. 9, at around 6:50 p.m., a call was made to to 911 by the wife of (the accused) to request an ambulance to examine her husband because he was not in his normal state,” the document reads.

“Between the moment the call was made to 911 and the arrival of first responders, (the accused) became disorganized and looked for a Glock 9 mm handgun on the second floor of the residence. He then headed directly to the basement where several members of his family were and began to open fire in their direction.”

The man’s five-year-old son was shot in the stomach and his father-in-law was shot in the foot while he attempted to disarm him, according to the document.

The Glock handgun was seized as part of the investigation but Montreal police also want an order to prohibit the man from possessing four other firearms that were seized “without a warrant” — a Beretta .45 calibre revolver and three rifles.

While the man is accused of attempting to murder both of his sons, one of the boys was not injured in the shooting.

The accused is also charged two counts of using a firearm to commit aggravated assault, as well aggravated assault of his five-year-old son.

The case returns to court next week.

pcherry@postmedia.com 

Related

Father of murdered West Island teen to fly to B.C. for parole hearing

$
0
0

Tara Manning was killed nearly 25 years ago, but her memory will be well represented next week when her father will travel more than 4,500 kilometres to a federal institution on the southern tip of Vancouver Island in an attempt to prevent her killer from being released.

Gregory Bromby, 42, killed Tara on May 5, 1994, inside her family’s home in Dorval. He stabbed the 15-year-old girl 51 times after having raped her. Her father, Michael Manning, discovered Tara’s body the following morning in her bedroom and has vivid memories of his futile attempts to revive her while a 911 operator implored him to keep trying until first responders arrived.

“It’s very important to be there,” Michael Manning told the Montreal Gazette as he prepared for his trip to Vancouver to deliver a victim-impact statement that he could have submitted in writing to the Parole Board of Canada. “If you are there and able to address the parole board in person it hits them in the heart and maybe they’ll make the right decision.

“For me, it is something that never goes away. It is something I think of every day. I just don’t think he is ready or that he will ever be ready.”

To Manning, the only “right decision” would be to keep Bromby behind bars for the rest of his life. When Bromby was convicted in 1997, youth criminal laws in Canada were different. Even though he was a minor when he killed Tara, he was tried as an adult, an option that no longer exists. He automatically received a life sentence but, because he was a youth, his period of parole ineligibility was set at 10 years, instead of the standard 25 years.

“For me, it is something that never goes away. It is something I think of every day,” says Tara Manning’s father, Michael, of the day she died.

Bromby was unlawfully at large from a juvenile detention centre when he killed the teenager, a fact that was not lost on the parole board when it rejected him for releases in 2007 and 2012.

Despite being eligible for full parole since May 5, 2005, Bromby has yet to be released but Manning is concerned he is being prepared for day parole. The minimum-security institution he is in can hardly be described as a penitentiary. According to the description on Correctional Service Canada’s website, the Willian Head Institution is a “standalone institution redesigned in the 1990s based on a residential design, composed of five neighbourhoods of clustered duplexes. Each neighbourhood of duplexes is intended to function as a community.”

The website also notes “three sides of the institution are surrounded by the Pacific Ocean.”

“It’s the Taj Mahal of prisons,” Manning said with a sigh. He does not know why Bromby has gradually moved westward as he served his sentence. He began at a penitentiary north of Montreal. Several years ago, he was transferred to an institution in Saskatchewan and now he is in B.C.

Despite the distance, Manning sad there was no doubt he will attend the hearing on Tuesday.

“I want to let the parole board know I’ve done everything in my power to make sure he (remains incarcerated),” Manning said.

In 2007, while serving time in Saskatchewan, Bromby finally put an end to years of denial and admitted he killed Tara. He also admitted he raped two other young women before and after he killed Tara and he “came close” to raping a fourth victim. He made the admissions just before he went before the parole board while seeking permission for unescorted temporary absences.

“Your version of this murder is that (Tara) was your on-and-off girlfriend and after arguing, she told you it was over and she threatened to call the police. Being tired of rejection, you became upset, then raped and murdered her,” the parole board noted in its decision in 2007. It rejected his request for unescorted leaves even though a psychiatrist assessed him then as a low risk of reoffending. A local police force in Saskatchewan opposed Bromby’s plans because they would have involved him walking past schools while he went from a penitentiary to a location where he hoped to take part in a rehabilitation program.

During that 2007 hearing, Bromby told the parole board he did not “see (himself) as a psychopath, but more of a person with anger issues.”

In 2012, Bromby’s request for day parole was turned down. In that decision the parole board wrote: “Despite extensive programming and counselling while incarcerated, professionals assigned to your case assess your risk to reoffend as moderate to high.”

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Man charged with armed robbery of victim in St-Léonard double homicide

$
0
0

A 21-year-old man has been charged with carrying out an armed robbery on one of the two men who were killed in a shooting in St-Léonard on Dec. 24.

A bail hearing at the Montreal courthouse is scheduled for Monday for Fodil-Abderhamane Lakehal, a resident of Laval. He was arrested this week by the Montreal police as part of their investigation of the deaths of Davis Arbour, 38, of Anjou, and Marc-Hilary Dasilma, 41.

Both men were killed as part of what police believed was an argument that involved several people inside an apartment on Jean-Talon St. E., near du Come St.

Lakehal is not charged with either homicide but he is charged with committing the armed robbery of Arbour, a man who according to La Presse was a member of the Devils Ghosts, a support club of the Hells Angels. The robbery is alleged to have occurred on the same day Arbour was shot. According to a source familiar with the investigation, homicide investigators believe Lakehal was at the scene of the shooting and left before police arrived. No one else has been charged in connection with the double slaying.

Shortly after Arbour and Dasilma were killed, Montreal police said they believed several people were inside an apartment in the 10-storey residential building when the shooting took place. Almost everyone had fled before police arrived but they found a 25-year-old woman at the scene. She was uninjured but had to be taken to a hospital to be treated for shock.

Lahehal has a criminal record that includes convictions for relatively minor offences. In June 2018, he pleaded guilty to forging or falsifying credit cards and received a sentence that involved an unconditional discharge.

In 2002, Dasilma was referred to, in a court decision, as a member of the Bo-Gars, a Montreal street gang that originated in Montreal North in the 1980s. He was alleged to be a leading member of the gang despite being only 25 at the time.

At the time of his death, Davis was still serving a 15-month prison term he received, in January 2018, for trafficking in drugs like cocaine and ecstasy from a residence in Repentigny.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Judge rules rights violated, acquits alleged mobster Leonardo Rizzuto

$
0
0

Alleged Montreal Mafia leader Leonardo Rizzuto was acquitted Monday on charges related to a police operation in which two guns and five grams of cocaine were found inside his home.

The decision by Quebec Court Judge Julie Riendeau is the second in a little more than a year to declare that evidence gathered in an investigation dubbed Project Magot violated the accused’s constitutional rights. 

Riendeau also ruled that the violation to Rizzuto’s rights did not outweigh the seriousness of the nine charges he faced and that a well-informed person would not lose faith in the justice system if evidence obtained illegally were excluded from a trial. 

“The impugned conduct (of the police) is serious and has a great impact on (Rizzuto’s) constitutional rights. The importance to see that similar conduct is not condoned advocates in favour of excluding the evidence,” Riendeau said as she read from a 21-page decision.

Faced with the decision, prosecutor Marie Christine Godbout announced the Crown had no more evidence to present in Rizzuto’s trial and asked that he be acquitted.

Riendeau acquitted Rizzuto, 49, with no hesitation.

“I’m just glad it’s over,” was all Rizzuto would say as he exited the courtroom.

On Nov. 19, 2015, police searched Rizzuto’s home in Laval’s Ste-Dorothée district as part of a lengthy investigation into three organized crime groups operating in Montreal, including the Montreal Mafia and the Hells Angels.

The investigation resulted in the arrests of Rizzuto and roughly 18 other people, including Loris Cavaliere — at the time a lawyer who owned a firm in Little Italy.

Rizzuto, also a lawyer, listed Cavaliere’s firm as his place of work with the Barreau du Québec.

On the same day the arrests were made, the Sûreté du Québec alleged that Rizzuto and his longtime friend, Stefano Sollecito, 51, were considered to be leaders in the Montreal Mafia.

Rizzuto and Sollecito were charged with committing a crime under the direction of, or in association with, a criminal organization and with conspiring to traffic in cocaine between 2011 nd 2015.

When the police executed the search warrant inside Rizzuto’s home, they found a loaded semi-automatic Walther P99 .40 calibre pistol and a Browning 6 mm pistol in a kitchen cabinet above a fridge. The serial number on the Walther pistol had been removed.

Police also found five grams of cocaine inside the pocket of a suit jacket as well as more than $30,000 in Canadian currency and $18,000 in U.S. currency.

On Feb. 19 last year, the Crown announced it would no longer prosecute either man on the gangsterism and conspiracy charges after Superior Court Justice Éric Downs ruled conversations secretly recorded by the police inside Cavaliere’s law firm violated Rizzuto and Sollecito’s constitutional rights because it was where Rizzuto practised as a lawyer and because Sollecito was consulting a lawyer who worked there.

As part of his written arguments that the search of Rizzuto’s home also violated his Charter rights, defence lawyer Frank Addario wrote that: “The basis for the search of the Rizzuto’s home was the intercepted communications at the law office, surveillance and some additional uncorroborated information from a confidential informant.”

Therefore, Addario argued, if the recordings made inside Cavaliere’s office were illegal they tainted the search warrant obtained to search Rizzuto’s home.

With the evidence of the conversations recorded inside Cavaliere’s law firm set aside, Riendeau was left to decide if there was other evidence gathered in Project Magot to support the issuance of a warrant to enter his home.

In 2013 an informant identified only as J.J. in an affidavit used to request the warrant told his handler that Rizzuto, Sollecito and two other men — Tonino Callocchia and Vito Salvaggio — were “decision makers” in the Montreal Mafia.

J.J. also alleged that Cavaliere and Rizzuto used their positions as lawyers to pass along messages among gangsters.

In subsequent conversations with the handler, J.J. did not mention Rizzuto as having influence among the group under investigation.

“The court concludes that the reliability of what J.J. said concerning the accused is not sufficiently substantiated to retain (the allegations in the affidavit),” Riendeau said.

The case will return to court in March for a hearing to decide what items the Crown will return to Rizzuto.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

D.D.O. man accused of trying to murder his sons declines bail hearing

$
0
0

A Dollard-des-Ormeaux resident who was charged with attempting to murder his two sons has waived his right to a bail hearing and remains detained. 

The man, 36, was arrested at a Kirkland home in November after his five-year-old son was shot.

The man was also charged with aggravated assault on his father-in-law, who was also shot.

Both shooting victims survived. 

The name of the accused cannot be published, to protect the identity of his children.

According to a court document, the father-in-law was shot in the foot when he tried to disarm the accused. The five-year-old boy was shot in the stomach.

The document describes how the boys’ mother became concerned when her husband began acting in a strange manner and called 911 for an ambulance in the moments before the shots were fired.

On Tuesday, a prosecutor told Quebec Court Judge ‎Mélanie Hébert that after “long discussions” with the man’s lawyers a decision was made to skip the bail hearing stage of the case and to proceed to a preliminary hearing. 

Hébert agreed with the recommendation. 

The prosecutor made no reference to two court-ordered psychiatric evaluations that have been done on the accused since his arrest.

Related

Charges filed in cases of three organized crime hits in St-Léonard

$
0
0

Charges were filed Tuesday in connection with three murders carried out in the St-Léonard borough in December.

In one case, Giovanni Presta Jr., 33, of Terrebonne is accused of first-degree murder in the death of Sébastien Beauchamp, 44, a former member of a Hells Angels support club who was gunned down on Dec. 20 at a gas station in the borough.

Presta appears to have no criminal record in Quebec, but he was charged on Monday at the Montreal courthouse, along with a woman named Sonia Langlais, 30, with being in possession of loaded, restricted and prohibited firearms in Terrebonne. They were also charged with fabricating firearms as well as the improper storage of guns. On Tuesday, Langlais was ordered to be released after she agreed to deposit $10,000 as bail. Presta remains detained and his case returns to court on March 27.

According to La Presse and the Journal de Montréal, an alleged hit man who was arrested on Saturday, Frederick Silva, 38, is a suspect in Beauchamp’s murder. Silva was charged with two murders on Saturday, but he is not charged with killing Beauchamp.

Also on Tuesday, Fodil-Abderhamane Lakehal, 21, was charged with manslaughter in the Dec. 24 deaths of Davis Arbour, 38, and Marc-Hilary Dasilma, 41. Both men were shot to death inside an apartment on Jean Talon St. E., near the corner of du Come St. Arbour is reported to have been a member of the Devil’s Ghosts and Dasilma was described in court documents as an influential member of a Montreal street gang.

Last week, Lakehal was charged with robbing Arbour on the day he died. On Tuesday, the armed robbery charge Lakehal faces was withdrawn, but he was ordered to remain detained for a bail hearing to be held on March 1. Police sources have said the double homicide appeared to have been the result of a drug deal that went bad.

Shortly after Arbour and Dasilma were killed, Montreal police said they believed several people were inside an apartment in the 10-storey residential building when the shooting took place. Almost everyone had fled before police arrived, but they found a 25-year-old woman at the scene. She was uninjured, but had to be taken to a hospital to be treated for shock.

There is nothing in the charges filed on Tuesday to indicate the two cases are related.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related


‘He is everywhere I go’: N.D.G. mayor testifies in harassment case

$
0
0

Côte-des-Neiges—Notre-Dame-de-Grâce Mayor Sue Montgomery took the witness stand on Tuesday to testify against a man she says has been harassing her for years.

The case heard at the Montreal courthouse is only one of four brought against Robert “Robin” Edgar, 59, an unemployed former photographer, since 2017. He was originally charged with having criminally harassed Montgomery before and after she was elected borough mayor in 2017. The case heard by Quebec Court Judge Dennis Galiatsatos on Tuesday alleges Edgar violated his release conditions by communicating with Montgomery.

Edgar’s long history with Montgomery originated around 1998 or 1999, when he began protesting against “clergy abuse” outside the same Unitarian church she attends.

Edgar was charged in January 2018 and showed up at Montreal city hall March 26, 2018, to ask Mayor Valérie Plante and opposition leader Lionel Perez for their opinion on an exchange between him and Montgomery eight days earlier. He said the exchange took place outside the church where he regularly holds his protests. Both Plante and Perez essentially replied by telling Edgar to stop wasting city council’s time. Montgomery, a former reporter with the Montreal Gazette, was present at the council meeting, but had removed herself to an antechamber.

Galiatsatos was shown a video recording of Edgar asking his questions to Plante and Perez.

“I just don’t know what this guy is going to do. He is everywhere I go,” Montgomery said. She said the incident Edgar was referring to involved her showing up at the church on a Sunday and noticing Edgar had set up a series of signs.

She said Edgar had previously put up signs calling her part of a coverup of the abuse he alleges, so she “pushed his signs with my foot” and called the police because she believed at the time that Edgar had violated his conditions by being near her. She said the police informed her there was nothing they could do because Edgar wasn’t violent.

“I said: ‘This is psychological violence,’ ” Montgomery testified Tuesday. She added she would often become nervous when she would see Edgar at city hall.

Edgar took the stand in his defence and said he felt he had successfully had his conditions modified to a point where he was allowed to ask a question at city hall as long as he didn’t put the question directly to Montgomery.

“The conditions were modified to say that I could go to (city hall) meetings that were open to the public,” Edgar said. “I wanted to bring (what happened outside the church) to the attention of Valérie Plante, or no, actually to all of city council. I knew I could not communicate directly with Sue Montgomery.

“I would say I had every right to be there, even if I did see her.”

Defence lawyer Jordan Trevick argued the case boils down to whether Edgar actually communicated with Montgomery on the day he asked the questions in city hall.

“The definition of communication, I believe, is to send information from one party to another,” Trevick said. “He has to have intended to communicate with Mrs. Montgomery in order for him to have violated his conditions. (They were) certainly not questions destined for Mrs. Montgomery.

“I believe he was acting in good faith — in a certain way.”

Prosecutor François Allard countered by arguing that the Latin definition of communication means to share information and that was Edgar’s intention knowing that Montgomery was probably at city council on the day in question.

“The accused played with fire by going there,” Allard said.

Edgar was scheduled to have a second trial, on Wednesday, in another case alleging he had breached his conditions in a similar manner, but Allard asked the the trial be postponed until after Galiatsatos delivers his decision on March 12.

pcherry@postmedia.com 

Related

No parole for Tara Manning’s rapist and killer, board decides in minutes

$
0
0

Michael Manning got a surprise on Monday when it took the Parole Board of Canada less time than he requires to smoke a cigarette to decide the man who killed his daughter should not receive any form of release.

Gregory Bromby, 42, killed 15-year-old Tara Manning inside the family home in 1994 after having raped the girl. In a trial held at the Montreal courthouse in 1997, he was convicted of first-degree murder but, because he was a minor at the time of the slaying, he automatically received a life sentence with a parole eligibility set at 10 years instead of the standard 25.

Despite being eligible for parole since May 5, 2005, Bromby, who has admitted he raped two other girls before and after he killed Tara, has never been granted any form of release. The parole board turned down his requests in 2007 and 2012 and, according to Michael Manning, he was turned down again on Monday following a hearing at a federal minimum-security institution held in British Columbia.

“They held the hearing and the parole board members said they would deliberate. So I went outside to smoke a cigarette and before I could finish it I was being called back in,” Manning said while adding it was clear to him, based on what was said at the hearing, that Bromby is still not ready to be released.

The victim’s father also said he was surprised to learn that Bromby was only requesting permission to have access to escorted leaves from the institution on Vancouver Island. Offenders reside in a collection of duplexes on land surrounded on three sides by the Pacific Ocean. Manning likens it to an all-inclusive vacation resort for criminals.

“I had prepared my victim-impact statement to (argue against) him being released on day parole and then I found out he was asking for escorted leaves,” Manning said.

Escorted leaves are considered the first step an offender takes as they prepare for a request for parole. The leaves are usually used to carry out volunteer work, take part in rehabilitation programs or visit relatives who might eventually take an offender in as he settles into society.

According to evidence presented in his case in the 1990s, Bromby was abandoned as a baby at an orphanage in Haiti and was adopted by a couple from Quebec in 1977.

It is unusual to see an inmate request permission for escorted leaves when they are well beyond their period of parole ineligibility. It is also considered a step backward for Bromby, as in 2012 he requested day parole and in 2007 he was seeking unescorted leave privileges.

Manning said the parole board rejected Bromby’s release because his plan was weak and because it was clear that, as he is incarcerated in B.C., he has no family available to support him if he were to be released.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Killer who escaped Laval penitentiary had similar plans three years ago

$
0
0

Denis Bégin, the killer who escaped from a minimum-security penitentiary this month, was caught planning to do the same thing three years ago.

The 58-year-old murderer was incarcerated at the Federal Training Centre, a minimum-security penitentiary in Laval when he escaped Feb. 15. Staff at the institution discovered he was missing just after noon that day.

The Sûreté du Québec is handling the search for Bégin. In the early stages, they believed Bégin was heading to Gatineau or the Outaouais region. The day after the escape, the provincial police force arrested a 56-year-old man as a possible accomplice in the escape. They also seized a vehicle in Dollard des Ormeaux that they believe was used to help Bégin flee the institution. The man who was arrested was out on parole and his release was revoked following his arrest. SQ spokesperson person Éloïse Cossette said on Wednesday that the alleged accomplice has yet to be charged in connection with the escape but he remains behind bars for the parole violation.

According to Bégin’s records, in November 2015, the Parole Board of Canada decided to allow Bégin unescorted leaves to a halfway house. The plan was considered a step toward parole and to size up Bégin’s “capacity to respect rules in a structured environment and to augment (his) credibility within the very progressive framework of being reinserted into society.”

Two months later, Bégin found himself before the parole board again after authorities “came upon new information indicating you planned to escape” during one of his unescorted leaves. The parole board revoked his access to the leaves and Correctional Service Canada made plans to re-evaluate his security level.

Bégin has not had a parole hearing since then.

In 2003, Bégin received an automatic life sentence when he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of Ricardo Gizzi, a 19-year-old man who was shot inside a bar on Jean-Talon St. on Halloween night in 1993. Gizzi was wearing a goalie’s mask during the Halloween festivities when Bégin arrived wearing a similar mask and shot him with a rifle.

According to Bégin’s parole records, the murder was carried out as part of “a settling of accounts among drug dealers” and he was with an accomplice when he shot Gizzi.

“At the time, you were considered (by police) to be someone involved in local and international drug trafficking and described as an associate of the Hells Angels as well as certain people in a Colombian drug network,” the parole board stated in the decision made in 2015. “According to police information, you were implicated in another murder in 1993, accompanied by another accomplice, but that information was never followed up on.”

In 2008, a psychologist who evaluated Bégin found his capacity for introspection was limited and felt he matched the profile of a psychopath. Another psychologist who evaluated him in 2014 disagreed and withdrew the damning classification.

During the 2015 parole hearing, Bégin denied being involved in the other murder and claimed he lied to the police about it when he sought to become a police informant before he was arrested in Gizzi’s murder in 1996. In 1998, Bégin testified as a prosecution witness in an unrelated trial involving the death of a child. And while he was on the witness stand, he was questioned about claims he made to the police that he knew who was responsible for the bomb that killed Daniel Desrochers, an 11-year-old boy who was killed in 1995. Desrochers’s death was considered a turning point in the biker gang war, a conflict between the Hells Angels and other organized crime groups that ran from 1994 to 2002. The police believed someone in the Hells Angels intended to use the bomb to kill a rival gang member. No one has ever been charged with Desrochers’s death.

The same decision noted that, as of 2015, Bégin was not considered to be affiliated with any criminal organizations but was still classified as a “protected” inmate, likely because of his work as an informant.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Ahuntsic-Cartierville man, 23, charged in death of his girlfriend

$
0
0

A 23-year-old resident of the Ahuntsic-Cartierville has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of his girlfriend.

Ali Mahadi Mahamat said little Wednesday as he appeared before Judge Dennis Galiatsatos at the Montreal courthouse via a video linkup with the Riviére-des-Prairies Detention Centre where he is detained.

Defence lawyer Michael Morena asked Galiatsatos to issue an order that the accused be taken to the jail’s infirmary while he remains detained in the case.

Outside the courtroom, Morena said that for privacy reasons he was unable to comment on why he made the request.

According to a source familiar with the investigation, Mahadi Mahamat appeared to be delusional following his arrest.

Noemie Lavoie, 24, was found unconscious and had sustained injuries to her upper body after police were called to the couple’s apartment on Allée Sauriol near Meunier St. at 9 p.m. Tuesday in response to reports of an altercation.

Attempts by ambulance technicians to resuscitate Lavoie were unsuccessful.

In November 2017, Mahadi Mahamat was sentenced to prison after he was found guilty in an assault case. He had 19 months left to serve but was out on parole when he was arrested Tuesday.

Lavoie, originally from Saguenay, was charged in the same assault case and pleaded guilty to being an accomplice.

She was sentenced to a prison term of 105 days and was ordered to perform 160 hours of community service.

Mahadi Mahamat’s criminal record also includes convictions for mischief and identity theft.

The murder case returns to court on March 4 for a formality hearing.

The murder was the fifth homicide recorded this year by Montreal police.

Morgue attendants place the body of a slain woman into a transport vehicle outside an apartment building in Ahuntsic-Cartierville Feb. 27, 2019.

The victim was found unconscious and had sustained injuries to her upper body when police arrived to the building on Allée Sauriol.

Related

Alleged Montreal hit man has spent much of his life behind bars

$
0
0

The man who was arrested Saturday and charged with carrying out two murders as well as a failed hit on the brother of an alleged leader in the Montreal Mafia spent much of his adult life behind bars before he allegedly became a hit man.

Frédérick Silva, 38, was arrested by heavily armed members of a tactical squad while he was out for a walk around 1 a.m. in Old Montreal, near the corner of Duke St. and de la Commune St. W. His arrest put an end to a long search that began on June 2, 2017, after a warrant was issued for his arrest in the first-degree murder of Daniel Somoza-Gildea, a Concordia student who died on May 24, 2017, after he was shot when an argument that started inside the Cabaret les Amazones spilled out into the strip bar’s parking lot.

According to police sources, Silva is believed to have operated as a hit man for organized crime groups before and after he went into hiding to avoid being arrested for Somoza-Gildea’s death. Just months after Somoza-Gildea was killed, another warrant was issued for Silva’s arrest in a case in which he is alleged to have tried to kill Salvatore Scoppa, the brother of alleged Montreal Mafia leader Andrea Scoppa, in a failed hit carried out in Terrebonne on Feb. 17, 2017.

Hours after he was arrested on Saturday, Silva was also charged at the Montreal courthouse with the first-degree murder of Alessandro Vinci, 31, the sales manager of a Laval car dealership who was gunned down on Oct. 11.

Silva is also reportedly a suspect in the death of Sébastien Beauchamp, a former member of a Hells Angels support club called the Rockers, who was shot in St-Léonard on Dec. 20. Silva has not been charged in connection with Beauchamp’s death, but Giovanni Presta Jr., a 33-year-old Terrebonne resident who was also arrested on Saturday, has been charged with first-degree murder in that case. According to La Presse, police believe Presta Jr. rented, drove and helped hide the vehicle used in the hit on Beauchamp.

Presta and a woman named Sonia Langlais also face eight charges in connection with what the police found inside their home in Terrebonne on Saturday, including the possession of prohibited firearms and silencers.

On Wednesday, Silva’s case was brought before Quebec Court Judge Julie Riendeau for what turned out to be a formality hearing. Silva was not required to be present for the brief hearing and Riendeau carried the case over to March 13. Prosecutor Marie-Claude Bourassa made no mention of whether other charges might be filed against Silva. According to an article published by the Journal de Montréal earlier this month, Silva is being investigated as a suspect in up to a dozen murders tied to organized crime, including a few murders in the Toronto area.

The most wanted man in Quebec before his arrest on Saturday started his criminal career at the age of 18 when he and an accomplice carried out a series of armed robberies inside 14 banks and eight Italian cafés in Montreal in 1998. Their modus operandi was to walk into a bank or café armed with a sawed-off shotgun and a fake handgun while they ordered everyone inside to lie on the floor and hand over their valuables.

In 1999, Silva received a five-year prison term after he pleaded guilty to several armed robbery charges. According to his parole records from that period, his criminal record was initially believed to be attributable to his addiction to drugs. But a few months after he was sentenced, Silva underwent an evaluation and the psychologist who performed it found: “Your criminality is not totally dependent on your addiction to drugs. (The psychologist) found two parallel problems: depressed and painful feelings from a very difficult childhood and the second being a misdirected expression of hatred toward parental figures, displaced toward authority figures.”

Related

While out on parole on July 15, 2001, Silva stabbed his own friend by accident after they got involved in an altercation inside a night club in Montreal. At the time, the police believed that Silva started the trouble inside the club and that he pulled out a knife as he and his friend tried to leave and that he stabbed the man in the process.

Just eight months after the sentence he received for the robberies carried out in the cafés and bars expired, Silva resumed his criminal career by co-ordinating a series of violent home invasions along with two other men. During one of the robberies, a grandmother was assaulted while her children and grandchildren watched in horror. In 2007, Silva received a 66-month prison term after he was convicted on charges related to the home invasions.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Adele Sorella jury ends first full day of deliberation with no verdict

$
0
0

The proof that Adele Sorella killed her daughters, and intended to do so, is in the lies she told her family before and after the children died.

That is part of the Crown’s summary of the long trial that is now in the hands of a jury at the Laval courthouse. The jury ended its first full day of deliberation on Thursday without reaching a verdict on the five options Superior Court Justice Sophie Bourque left them with when she provided her final instructions on Wednesday.

Sorella, 52, was charged with the first-degree murders of her daughters Amanda, 9, and Sabrina, 8, but Bourque has also given the jury the options of finding her guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter. They can also find her not guilty or not criminally responsible by reason of a mental disorder.

Bourque’s instructions included summaries of the positions taken by both sides of the trial that began early in November.

“While the cause of the deaths remains undetermined and it is not necessary to establish that beyond a reasonable doubt, it is probable that the two children died inside the hyperbaric chamber through a lack of oxygen. The evidence shows that on the morning of March 31, 2009, the accused lied to her mother and to (her daughters) with the goal of keeping them home, under the pretext that they had a medical appointment,” the prosecution wrote in its position statement.

The “lies” are key to the Crown’s case because the jury was given no definitive evidence of how the girls died. The prosecution’s theory is that Sorella somehow got the girls inside a hyperbaric chamber that was inside the home to treat Sabrina’s juvenile arthritis and kept them inside it long enough to let them die a gradual death. The chamber is designed to increase a person’s supply of oxygen, but when it is sealed and no oxygen is being supplied inside it, two small people can die after an hour. There were no signs of violence on the girls’ bodies when they were found.

The Crown also argued Sorella told another series of lies after the girls were dead. She called her mother, Teresa Di Cesare, to say something had gone wrong with the appointment and she left messages with her brother and brother-in-law in the hopes they might look inside her house after she had left.

“Our position is that the accused knew, at that moment, that the children were dead and she wanted to save her mother the shock of discovering the bodies,” the Crown stated in its position.

Di Cesare ended up discovering the bodies with her sons Enzo and Luigi.

Related

The position the defence supplied to Bourque is that the prosecution “in no way met its burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that (Sorella) was the author” of Amanda and Sabrina’s deaths.

“If it is decided that she was the author, the defence of Mrs. Sorella submits that she could not have taken criminal responsibility because she suffered from a mental disorder that rendered her incapable to judge the nature and the quality of the actions taken or to know they were wrong.”

During the trial, the defence presented evidence to argue Sorella suffered from depression long before the girls died and that she had reached “a state of pathological disassociation” the day they were killed.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Adele Sorella guilty of second-degree murder in deaths of daughters

$
0
0

Adele Sorella has been found guilty of second-degree murder in the deaths of her two daughters.

The jury had been deliberating since Wednesday, tasked with reaching a verdict on the five options Superior Court Justice Sophie Bourque gave them in her final instructions earlier that day.

Sorella, 52, had been charged with the first-degree murders of her daughters, but Bourque had also given the jury the options of finding her guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter or of finding her not guilty or not criminally responsible by reason of a mental disorder.

A second-degree murder conviction carries an automatic life sentence, with the possibility of parole after at least 10 years. However, Crown prosecutor Nektarios Tzortzinas said shortly after the verdict that his team will consider their options.

Sorella’s daughters — Amanda, 9, and Sabrina, 8 — died on March 31, 2009, inside the family’s home in Laval. Their bodies were discovered by Sorella’s mother and her two brothers. There were no signs of violence on the bodies and the police initially believed they had been poisoned. When that was ruled out, the focus of the investigation turned toward a hyperbaric chamber that had been purchased to treat Sabrina’s juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.

Sorella was arrested the next day, after her car crashed into a utility pole in another part of Laval.

During the trial, Sorella was represented by brothers Pierre and Guy Poupart and the Crown was represented by prosecutors Tzortzinas and Simon Lapierre.

The hyperbaric chamber that was found inside Adele Sorella’s home.

The Crown was unable to produce any witnesses who were present when the girls died. The crux of their theory came from Caroline Tanguay, a pathologist who testified that the most likely cause of death was that the girls were somehow kept in the sealed hyperbaric chamber until they died from a lack of oxygen.

When she testified in her defence, Sorella said the chamber was purchased by her husband while he was on the lam to avoid arrest in Project Colisée, a Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit investigation that resulted in the 2006 arrests of six Montreal Mafia leaders, and dozens of their associates. Husband Giuseppe (Ponytail) De Vito had conspired with members of the Rizzuto organization to smuggle more than 200 kilograms of cocaine in through Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport.

In 2010, police found De Vito living in St-Léonard, where he was living with another woman. He was later convicted on drug smuggling and drug trafficking charges and was serving an 11-year sentence when he died of cyanide poisoning on July 8, 2013, while incarcerated at a maximum-security penitentiary near Quebec City.

Sorella told the jury that while he was on the lam, De Vito had a friend install the chamber inside her home, to replace an older model, without her permission and against her will. She also said she had no idea how the newer model worked and that she never used it.

Tanguay testified that if Amanda and Sabrina somehow remained in the sealed chamber long enough, and no oxygen was supplied to it, they would have died gradually from a lack of oxygen, wherein the victim loses consciousness before dying. The jury was told that oxygen levels inside a sealed chamber, like the one found in Sorella’s home, would have become critically low after 90 minutes.

The trial presided over by Bourque was the second time Sorella was tried on charges she murdered her daughters.

Jury selection in the first trial, held before Superior Court Justice Carol Cohen, began on April 22, 2013 and it came to an end on June 24, 2013. In that case, the jury took more than three days to convict Sorella on two counts of first-degree murder.

Adele Sorella walks to court in her trial in the deaths of her two daughters with lawyer Guy Poupart at the Palais de Justice de Laval in Laval on May 29, 2013.

Adele Sorella and lawyer Guy Poupart at the Palais de Justice de Laval on May 29, 2013.

Sorella appealed, and on Dec. 4, 2017, three Quebec Court of Appeal judges unanimously agreed to quash the verdicts and ordered a new trial. Sorella’s lawyers successfully argued that Cohen had made errors in her instructions to the jury before they began deliberating.

A major difference between the first trial and the second was that Sorella testified in her defence in the second one. She told the jury she could not recall the day when her daughters died. She said her closest recollection was when people approached her car after it crashed.

Her testimony appeared to change the defence’s strategy from the first trial. Unlike in the first trial, Pierre Poupart called psychiatrist Gilles Chamberland as a defence witness. He said there was little doubt that Sorella was suffering from a “major depression” at the time her daughters died and that she was in a state of disassociation. Chamberland also said that, because of the state she was in at the time, Sorella could not tell right from wrong.

Doves were released as mourners stood outside the church at the funeral service on Wednesday April 8, 2009, for Sabrina, 8, and Amanda, 9, who were found slain inside their mother’s Laval home.

Another significant difference between the two trials was that on Dec. 17, during the second trial, Bourque ruled on a motion to exclude a roughly four-hour long video of Sorella’s interrogation by Laval police after she was arrested. Throughout the video, Sorella refused to answer most of the questions put to her and insisted her daughters were still alive.

Comments Sorella made about the hyperbaric chamber during the interrogation significantly contradict what she said when she testified in January.

For example, when she testified she said she never used the hyperbaric chamber and that only De Vito knew how to use it to treat Sabrina’s arthritis. But while she was being interrogated in 2009, Sorella said she used to give Sabrina treatments twice or three times a weak and that she had given her a treatment as recently as “six or eight months ago.” That was long after De Vito had gone into hiding in 2006.

The jury in the first trial was allowed to see the video.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Presse Canadienne contributed to this story.

Correction: The original web version of this story gave an incorrect name for husband Giuseppe De Vito. The Montreal Gazette regrets the error.


Five Montreal men detained while they challenge extradition order

$
0
0

Five men who are alleged to have participated in a Quebec-based fraudulent telemarketing scheme that targeted Americans were ordered detained at the Montreal courthouse as they continue to challenge an extradition order that might send them south of the border to face justice.

Superior Court Justice Myriam Lachance issued the order on Tuesday after the five men — Itcace Abramovici, 69, of St-Laurent; Sebastiano Torino, 57, of Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue; Michael Dissos, 67, of Westmount; Konstantinos Filippas, 72, of Montreal; and Michael Pare, 54, of Stratford, Ont. — consented there was enough evidence to have them detained on the extradition order. If they are sent to the U.S., they face fraud charges filed against them in a courthouse in Pennsylvania.

The five men are alleged to have collected $1.35 million that victims based in the U.S. sent to financial institutions or currency exchange counters in Quebec in 2012 and 2013. There is no evidence to suggest they made the telephone calls.

While the five men consented to be detained for the moment, Lachance was informed they will make immediate requests, before the Quebec Court of Appeal, to be released again while they ask Canada’s justice minister to reject the extradition request.

Lachance also delivered a decision ordering that Reouven Dreiblatt, 73, also of Montreal, be committed to custody while he awaits a possible extradition. But she also allowed him a 30-day period before he has to report to a detention centre in case he also files a request for a judicial interim release. Dreiblatt’s case is different from the other five because he did not consent to be detained.

Dreiblatt is alleged to have collected $3,600 U.S. from a Western Union counter that was sent by one of the victims of the telemarketers. The telemarketers used prepaid cell phones listed under fictitious names to go after their targets. They would claim the person had won a lottery prize but that they would have to send large sums of money, to cover things like taxes, duties and processing fees, in order to collect their prize.

In one case alone, a victim from California sent more than $525,000 in five payments sent between Oct. 31, 2012 and Jan. 16, 2013. According to a court document prepared as part of the extradition request, the prosecution in the U.S. alleges it can prove the money ended up in accounts controlled by Abramovici, Filippas and Torino.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Harassment case: Accused violated release conditions, judge rules

$
0
0

A Quebec Court judge has ruled that a Notre-Dame-de-Grâce resident was “determined and uncompromising in his will” when he showed up at Montreal city hall last year to ask questions about borough Mayor Sue Montgomery while he was under an order to not communicate with her.

On March 26, 2018, Robert (Robin) Edgar, 59, showed up at Montreal city hall for the regular question period with the goal of asking Mayor Valérie Plante questions about a confrontation he had with Montgomery days earlier outside a Unitarian church. Montgomery, the mayor of the Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough, attends the church and Edgar had posted signs outside it as part of a protest he has staged for two decades against “clergy abuse.”

At the time, Edgar was subject to a condition he agreed to in order to be released while he was charged with harassing Montgomery before and after she was elected as borough mayor. Initially, he was ordered to not communicate with Montgomery at her home or her place of work. But because her place of work includes council meetings, he asked that the condition be modified so he could attend public council meetings.

On March 26, he attended a council meeting and filled out a card, with just the name “Montgomery” written on it, and submitted it in a random selection process through which people are chosen to ask questions at city hall. When his turn came up, Edgar asked Plante and an opposition councillor what they thought about how, eight days earlier, Montgomery had spotted Edgar preparing signs for his protest outside the church when she called the Montreal police and asked if he was in violation of his release. A police officer told Montgomery there was nothing they could do as long as Edgar was not violent.

While Edgar did not address Montgomery directly with his questions it was clear his intent was to send her a message, Judge Dennis Galiatsatos ruled in his 30-page decision.

“In coming to this conclusion, I also consider, in my assessment of the evidence as a whole, that the accused has been persistently challenging and accusing Mrs. Montgomery for almost 20 years. While the complainant testified that ‘he was everywhere she went’ for the last 20 years, the accused did not deny said allegation at any point in his testimony,” Galiatsatos said. “This shows an extreme — and alarming — level of persistence and relentlessness that contradicts the accused’s professed efforts of compliance with his condition. I note, parenthetically, that in his testimony, the accused repeatedly referred to the complainant as ‘Sue,’ a strange sign of familiarity that is difficultly explained. The evidence showed they are neither friends nor acquaintances.

“It is clear from Mrs. Montgomery’s testimony that her interactions with the accused have left her emotionally exhausted. Her exasperation was palpable.”

After having established that Edgar’s intentions were clear, the judge was left to determine if he actually “communicated” with Montgomery by posing the questions he did during what Galiatsatos characterized as a “soliloquy.”

“To be clear, I accept that the accused wanted to bring (what happened outside the church) up in this public forum to denounce what he perceived as unjust treatment by the councillor. To do so however, he attempted to send her a message as well — then and there. As such, his motive in communicating with her should not be conflated with the level of volition and intent requisite (to the crime he was charged with),” the judge said.

Edgar is scheduled to begin his trial in the harassment case on April 23. Defence lawyer Jordan Trevick and prosecutor François Allard agreed that Edgar’s sentence hearing for having breached his condition should be delayed until he is tried in the harassment case.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Woman who defrauded elderly woman might end up serving jail time

$
0
0

A woman who admitted she violated the conditional sentence she received for having defrauded an elderly woman she was supposed to be looking after asked a judge that she be allowed to continue her house arrest so she can keep taking her daughter to horseback riding lessons.

Quebec Court Judge Dennis Galiatsatos said he was appalled when he heard the common suggestion made on Tuesday by prosecutors François Allard and Annick Pelletier as well as defence lawyer Jean El Masri on what they felt was an appropriate sentence for Anita Obodzinski, 54, of Montreal.

On Jan. 9, 2018, Obodzinski and her husband Arthur Trzciakowski, 51, pleaded guilty to having defrauded Veronika Piela out of her life savings when the victim was 89 years old. In 2013, Obodzinski obtained a protection mandate that allowed her to take control of Piela’s life, steal more than $474,000 from her and force the victim out of her home.

Obodzinski pleaded guilty to obstructing justice, mischief and knowingly using forged documents. She received a sentence of two years less a day that she could serve in the community, including a period of house arrest.  She has since admitted she violated her house arrest twice by not being home when her probation officer called her home last summer to check to see if she was respecting her conditions.

On Tuesday, the lawyers on both sides of the case said they agreed that extending her period of house arrest by more than two months was fair because it would leave Obodzinski with four months of house arrest left to serve.

The judge reacted by saying he was appalled that a person who already caught a break by receiving a a sentence she could serve in the community should expect another break “after having defrauded (an 89-year-old) woman while she was in the final years of her life.” Piela died in December of 2016.

Galiatsatos is somewhat bound by a precedent set by the Supreme Court of Canada, in 2016, in cases involving joint submissions on a sentence. But the judge noted he was aware of the precedent when he said he was shocked by what the lawyers recommended.

Obodzinski asked that she be allowed to continue serving her sentence in the community because she is the only person who can take her teenage daughter to horseback riding lessons on Saturdays. She said a therapist from Boston recommended the lessons as therapy after her daughter was bullied in school by students who were aware of the crimes her parents committed.

“When she is on those horses she just forgets everything,” Obodzinski said.

Galiatsatos will deliver his decision on March 21.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Tensions high when alleged Montreal Mafia member learned he was target of hit

$
0
0

There was tension in the air when Montreal police approached alleged Montreal Mafia member Antonio Vanelli to inform him he was the intended target of an organized crime hit that resulted in the death of an innocent man.

On June 2, 2016, someone shot Angelo D’Onofrio at the Hillside café on Fleury St. in the Ahuntsic-Cartierville borough. The 72-year-old homicide victim was not known to police, and according to evidence presented at the ongoing murder trial of Joubens Jeff Theus, 27, it took the Montreal police little time to theorize that Vanelli was the target in what police believe was a failed hit.

On Wednesday, Montreal police Det-Sgt. Ian Riddle testified at Theus’s trial and described how he and his partner, Det-Sgt. Denis Hogg, were assigned the task of tracking down Vanelli to inform him that his life was in danger.

Riddle recalled how, at the time, the Montreal police Brotherhood was using pressure tactics and even homicide detectives were asked to wear jeans to highlight the union’s cause. Riddle also noted that he and Hogg arrived at Vanelli’s residence — at around midnight the same day D’Onofrio was killed — in an old minivan that had nothing on the outside to indicate it was a police vehicle.

Riddle said that when he and Hogg arrived at Vanelli’s home, they exited their minivan and they were quickly “high-beamed” by a sports utility vehicle that approached them.

“I decided very quickly to identify both of us as police officers,” Riddle said, before noting that Vanelli was inside the vehicle accompanied by “three or four other individuals.”

“What was the climate like?” prosecutor Éric de Champlain asked.

“It was a bit tense,” Riddle said. “But the tension dropped fast (when Vanelli realized they were police detectives).”

Riddle appeared to be limited in what he could tell the jury as he was not asked to explain why he was able to give Vanelli the very clear message that he was the one who was supposed to have been shot, not D’Onofrio. Riddle repeated the message twice for the jury and it contained no nuances or conditionals.

“We said he was the victim targeted,” Riddle said.

After the detective left the witness stand, Superior Court Justice Daniel Royer informed the jury that Riddle’s testimony about the message he delivered to Vanelli was hearsay and therefore could not be considered as evidence that Vanelli was the one who was supposed to have been shot. He explained that Riddle was called as a Crown witness to show how tense things were for Vanelli at the time.

Earlier in the trial, the Crown submitted a written statement, prepared by Francis Derome, a Montreal police expert in organized crime, who wrote that at the time D’Onofrio was killed, “a climate of tension reigned over Italian organized crime in Montreal. At the time, murders and acts of violence were committed in connection with this climate of tension. Mr. Antonio Vanelli is a member of Italian organized crime in Montreal.”

Derome noted that on the day of the shooting, Vanelli had attended the funeral of another man who police considered to have been “a member of Italian organized crime n Montreal.”

Vanelli also supplied a written statement for the trial instead of testifying, and confirmed that before D’Onofrio was shot, he was at the café, but left to attend the funeral. He left his white Range Rover parked near the café when he left.

Vanelli also wrote that he went to the café on a regular basis.

After Riddle testified, prosecutor Katerine Brabant announced that the Crown has finished presenting its evidence. Royer then informed the jury that Theus’s lawyers will decide over the weekend whether they will present a defence. The judge said he will allow the defence attorneys several days to consider the option because the trial was altered significantly on Monday when a co-accused, Ebamba Ndutu Lufiau, 30, asked to have a separate trial for health reasons.

The trial will resume on Monday.

pcherry@postmedia.com

An earlier version of this story reversed the name of the accused in an ongoing murder trial with the name of a co-accused in the same case who, earlier this week, asked to have a separate trial for health reasons. The Montreal Gazette regrets the error.

Related

Montreal man pleads guilty in 2016 shooting rampage that killed 2

$
0
0

Quebec’s health-care system failed the man who went on a shooting spree in eastern Montreal that left two people dead two years ago, his lawyer says.

“What we are concerned about is that he receives the treatment he needs” in the future, lawyer Kevin Morasse told reporters at the Montreal courthouse after Frédérick Gingras pleaded guilty to two counts of manslaughter and an assault charge.

“He is a person who suffered for years. It is sad to say but, in my opinion, there were alarms that went off beforehand and for one reason or another he was dropped by the system,” he said. 

Gingras sounded like someone who had just woken up when Superior Court Justice France Charbonneau asked if he understood what he was pleading guilty to.

Among those on hand at the plea hearing were people who were close to Chantal Cyr, one of the two victims killed on the night of Dec. 4, 2016.

Gingras was initially charged with two counts of first-degree murder. The Crown accept his guilty pleas to the reduced charges.

Prosecutor Catherine Perreault asked Charbonneau to hold off making a decision on two attempted-murder charges Gingras still faces so evidence can be presented on whether he should be found not criminally responsible on those two counts.

Charbonneau agreed to hear the evidence on April 4.

A Montreal police officer walks past the scene of a fatal shooting outside an Esso gas station and Tim Hortons café December 5, 2016.

A Montreal police officer walks past the site in Pointe-aux-Trembles where Chantal Cyr was fatally shot in December 2016.

Perrault said she and Morasse will ask that Gingras be sentenced to a 19-year prison term after the judge makes her decision on the attempted-murder charges.

The prosecutor read a long description of what happened on the night of the shooting spree, and an equally long list of Gingras’s mental health problems.

Near the end of November 2016, Gingras was homeless but was staying with a friend — James Jardin — at an apartment in Pointe-aux-Trembles.

Hours before the shooting, Gingras went to see his grandmother and an aunt in the hope of living with them, but they turned him down.

Gingras returned to Jardin’s apartment at around 7 p.m. Five others were present, including a friend of Jardin’s named Samuel Labine.

“The witnesses who were present describe (Gingras) as ‘bizarre’ and ‘in his own bubble’ — he said little and paced around the apartment,” Perreault read.

“Some witnesses said he was talking to the walls and making grand gestures. He said a few times that he wasn’t well in his head.”

At around 10:45 p.m., Gingras and Jardin were in a bedroom looking over Jardin’s shotgun when Gingras used it to shoot him. Jardin cried out in pain and Gingras shot him a second time, in the throat.

As Jardin was dying of his wounds, Gingras approached Labine and pulled the trigger twice but nothing happened. Labine and the others fled the apartment before he could reload.

Gingras grabbed a belt equipped with more than 20 cartridges and headed outside toward a gas station. That is where he spotted Cyr, 49. She was seated in her vehicle waiting for her daughter to finish work.

Gingras shot Cyr in the throat and stole her vehicle. Minutes later he crashed into a lamppost and abandoned the car.

He headed to a nearby home and tried to shoot a woman inside, but she and her children managed to escape.

Gingras rang the bell of another house where Gérald Lalonde was watching television. When he went to answer the door, a shot was fired through the lock and a projectile struck his foot.

Gingras forced the door open, but Lalonde pushed the rifle aside as it fired. Pellets struck Lalonde in the arm and stomach. Gingras then ordered Lalonde to give him the keys to his SUV.

Lalonde was able to call 911 as Gingras drove away. The Montreal police tracked him down as he travelled toward the South Shore, but lost him during a brief chase where he hit an estimated speed of 175 km/h.

On Highway 30, Gingras blew a tire, pulled over and was finally arrested as he walked along the side of the highway.

The same document included a long history of Gingras’s mental health problems. He had seen psychiatrists as a child and was prescribed anti-psychotic drugs at age 13.

In 2014, he was hospitalized four times. In one instance, a court order forced him to stay at the Charles-Lemoyne Hospital for 75 days for evaluation.

There, he was diagnosed as schizophrenic. His psychosis was found to be brought on by frequent use of hard drugs like cocaine.

Late in 2016, he was ordered to undergo another psychiatric evaluation to determine whether he could be found criminally responsible in an unrelated case. A psychiatrist determined he could. Gingras was given an appointment to receive antipsychotic medication by injection on Nov. 30, 2016. He never showed up.

Following his arrest for the homicides, Gingras underwent treatment at the Philippe Pinel Institute but his hallucinations persisted.

As recently as January, he was found to be experiencing hallucinations despite being treated with strong antipsychotic medication and having been off drugs like cocaine since his arrest.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Related

Viewing all 2437 articles
Browse latest View live