From the CBC:
“Man charged
with 2 counts of 1st-degree murder after Halloween sword attack in Quebec City”
A 24-year-old
man has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder and five counts of
attempted murder after allegedly attacking seven people with a sword in the
historic district of Quebec City while dressed in a medieval outfit on
Halloween night. Court documents identify the accused as Carl Girouard. The
tall, thin man with dark hair appeared before a judge by video conference on
Sunday. He is expected back in court on Thursday. The documents do not reveal
Girouard's home address, but Radio-Canada has learned he is from
Sainte-Thérèse, Que., a town located about 20 kilometres northwest of Montreal.
Police issued a
statement on Twitter on Sunday afternoon saying that the coroner had identified
the two victims who lost their lives as François Duchesne, 56, and Suzanne
Clermont, 61. The court has ordered a publication ban on any information that
could identify the other five victims in this case, according to a spokesperson
for the director of criminal and penal prosecutions. On Halloween night, police
were contacted at about 10:30 p.m. and discovered victims in at least four
locations, including near the Château Frontenac hotel, on du Trésor Street, and
on des Remparts Street, according to Radio-Canada.
Who are the
victims in the Quebec City stabbing attack? After a two-and-a-half-hour
manhunt, a man was arrested shortly before 1 a.m., about one kilometre north of
the area in the city's Old Port. Quebec City police Chief Robert Pigeon
said during a news conference Sunday morning that the man came to the capital
"with the intention of doing the most damage possible." Pigeon
said that "everything leads us to believe he chose his victims at
random," adding that he believes the crime was premeditated. He
said the police investigation has found that the accused is not associated with
any terror group. The man was carrying a Japanese katana-style sword,
Pigeon said. The police chief said Girouard does not have a criminal
record, but he did reveal five years ago in a "medical context" that
he wanted to commit a violent act. Pigeon said police currently have no
reason to believe the attack was motivated by religious or political reasons.
The accused was initially taken to hospital for evaluation. Police say they do not fear for the lives
of any of the five people who sustained injuries in the attack. "Quebec
is waking up after a night of horror. Words fail me to describe such a tragedy.
I offer my condolences to the loved ones of the victims," Quebec Premier
François Legault wrote Sunday morning on Twitter. In a release issued
later in the day, Legault wrote that "the Quebec population is once again
put to the test." "As tragic as these events are, don't lose
sight of the fact that this is not representative of a community that is
characterized by its warmth," he said in the statement. "The
city and the citizens of Quebec can count on the firm support of the government
during this terrible tragedy."
Quebec City
Mayor Régis Labeaume told reporters on Sunday morning that he felt like he was
reliving the events of January 2017, referring to a shooting at a mosque that
left six people dead. He called the stabbing incident "terrifying"
and "impossible to understand." Labeaume offered his sympathies to
the families of the victims and those who were injured. Public Security
Minister Geneviève Guilbault said she was "devastated" when she
learned about the incident in the early hours of Sunday morning. "It
really plunges us into a scene of horror," she said, noting that Quebec
City is a typically safe and calm place. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also
tweeted his response to the attack, saying his thoughts were with the victims
and thanking the first responders.
Witnesses
describe heavy police presence Martin
Rioux was walking with his partner toward the Dufferin Terrace late Saturday
night when they saw two police cars and a body on the sidewalk. "We
were really witnesses to the manhunt," he said. "There was a lot of adrenaline,"
Rioux said. "Especially when you see police officers walking and running
with their weapons drawn." According
to Radio-Canada, a security guard at the Quebec City Port eventually spotted
the man and alerted police. Police arrested Girouard in the area of the
Espace 400e business park on Abraham-Martin Street shortly before 1 a.m. on
Sunday. The Quebec City police department deployed all of its efforts to
control the situation, Pigeon said during Sunday's news conference. Investigators
have their work cut out for them, with 25 areas being treated as potential
crime scenes where evidence is being gathered. The flag at the National
Assembly in Quebec City has been lowered to half-mast in honour of the victims.
^ This kind of
attack doesn’t usually happen in Quebec City so it is very surprising to hear
about. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-city-police-stabbings-1.5785401
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