Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Court Acquits Man In Hells Angels Slaying After Key Witness Admits Lying

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2016 01:01 PM
  • Quebec Court Acquits Man In Hells Angels Slaying After Key Witness Admits Lying
MONTREAL — The Quebec Court of Appeal has acquitted a man in the April 2000 slaying of a high-ranking Hells Angels member because a key prosecution witness admitted to lying on the stand.
 
The court acquitted Tony Duguay today in the death of Normand (Biff) Hamel, a member of the gang's former Nomads chapter.
 
Three appeals court justices reached the decision after a Crown witness — an informant named Sylvain Beaudry — admitted to lying in court about details of a confession he gleaned from Duguay.
 
Beaudry acknowledged elements of his testimony came from evidence supplied to him by his police handlers.
 
Hamel was chased around a parking lot at a pediatrician's clinic north of Montreal before being shot several times as he sought refuge between two cars.
 
A jury convicted Duguay of first-degree murder in December 2006 and he was sentenced to life in prison.
 
The Crown and the defence concluded in a letter sent to the court a few days ago it would be unlikely the alleged crime could be proven beyond a reasonable doubt at a new trial and that Beaudry wouldn't be called again.
 
"The prosecution therefore declares its intention not to hold any new trial in this matter," the letter read. "We therefore jointly agree to recommend that the court acquit the appellant of the alleged offence."
 
The slaying took place during the height of Quebec's infamous biker war — a turf war over drug territory that claimed more than 150 lives between 1994 and 2002.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Court Dismisses Bid To Stop Feds Revoking Citizenship Without A Hearing

Federal Court Dismisses Bid To Stop Feds Revoking Citizenship Without A Hearing
  Federal Court Justice Russell Zinn has dismissed a case brought by the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers and the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.

Federal Court Dismisses Bid To Stop Feds Revoking Citizenship Without A Hearing

Canadian Soldiers Hold Their First Remembrance Day Service In Sikh Gurdwara

Canadian Soldiers Hold Their First Remembrance Day Service In Sikh Gurdwara
The Event Brought Members Of The 7th Toronto Regiment Of The Royal Canadian Artillery To Gursikh Sabha Canada

Canadian Soldiers Hold Their First Remembrance Day Service In Sikh Gurdwara

Watch: Spooked Horses Crash Carriage Into Stanley Park Seawall

Watch: Spooked Horses Crash Carriage Into Stanley Park Seawall
The carriage was stopped for the protesters, when someone in a car sounded a horn and spooked the horses. 

Watch: Spooked Horses Crash Carriage Into Stanley Park Seawall

Ebola Scare In Winnipeg: A Look At Some Facts About The Deadly Virus

WINNIPEG — An employee at the National Centre for Foreign Animal Disease in Winnipeg may have been exposed to the Ebola virus after a tear in a protective suit was noticed during decontamination.

Ebola Scare In Winnipeg: A Look At Some Facts About The Deadly Virus

Liberals Win Yukon Election, Toppling Yukon Party

Liberals Win Yukon Election, Toppling Yukon Party
WHITEHORSE — There'll be many new faces in the Yukon legislature after the Liberals swept to power in Monday's election.

Liberals Win Yukon Election, Toppling Yukon Party

Evacuation Warning As Rivers Rise Near Port Alberni, B.C.

Evacuation Warning As Rivers Rise Near Port Alberni, B.C.
PORT ALBERNI, B.C. — The Tseshaht First Nation on central Vancouver Island says the Somass River rose rapidly Monday night and continues to swell today, threatening flooding in the community.

Evacuation Warning As Rivers Rise Near Port Alberni, B.C.