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Lawyer Urges Son Of Ex-hells Angels Boss Boucher To Turn Himself In

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2015 10:55 AM
  • Lawyer Urges Son Of Ex-hells Angels Boss Boucher To Turn Himself In

MONTREAL — The lawyer for the son of former Hells Angels boss Maurice (Mom) Boucher has appealed to his client to surrender as quickly as possible.

Francis Boucher, 39, walked out of Montreal's Bordeaux jail in broad daylight Monday, two months before the end of a sentence he was serving for uttering death threats against police officers.

There has been speculation Boucher was able to get out with help from someone on the inside but his lawyer said he does not believe that was the case.

"I was informed by Bordeaux (90 minutes after it happened) that it was an administrative error," Dimitrios Strapatsas told The Canadian Press on Wednesday.  

Strapatsas also said he's afraid Boucher's last name will lead to police overreacting in the event of any showdown.

"Police confrontations in the past have turned out bad," he said.

Strapatsas added that provincial police have told him a tactical unit is actively looking for Boucher.

He said he has no means to contact Boucher and his client has not tried to get in touch with him either.

"If he does, my message is very clear: 'please surrender yourself as quickly as possible in a safe, timely manner'," Strapatsas said.

Boucher was serving a 117-day sentence for uttering death threats against police officers — a sentence due to be completed at the end of May.

He was previously sentenced to 10 years for gangsterism, conspiracy to commit murder and drug-trafficking.

Boucher was a member of the Rockers, a Hells puppet gang.

Maurice Boucher was a household name in the late 1990s and early 2000s because of the bloody battle between the Hells and the Rock Machine as well as subsequent high-profile legal proceedings.

Boucher was sentenced to life in prison in 2002 after being convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the killings of prison guards that were aimed at destabilizing the justice system.

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