Montreal

Fraud trial for ex-deputy Quebec premier Nathalie Normandeau set for next April

The fraud-related trial for ex-deputy Quebec premier Nathalie Normandeau and five co-accused has been set for next spring.

Crown has said trial, set to begin April 9, could last at least 4 months

Former Quebec deputy premier Nathalie Normandeau, pictured in 2016, is charged with conspiracy, corruption, breach of trust and fraud. (Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)

The fraud-related trial for ex-deputy Quebec premier Nathalie Normandeau and five co-accused has been set for next spring.

Quebec court Judge Jean-Louis Lemay announced the date of April 9 at a preparatory hearing in Quebec City on Monday.

Normandeau, 49, is charged with conspiracy, corruption, breach of trust and fraud in a scheme in which political financing and gifts were allegedly exchanged for lucrative government contracts between 2000 and 2012.

The Crown said earlier the trial could last at least four months.

Normandeau served as a Liberal member of the legislature for a riding on the Gaspé peninsula from 1998 to 2011 and held key cabinet positions as well as being deputy premier from 2007 to 2011.

She and her co-accused were arrested in March 2016.

Normandeau's lawyer said earlier this year the former cabinet minister maintains her innocence.