Montreal

Bodyguards weren't told about threats against Pauline Marois before shooting, court hears

According to an SQ report referenced as part of a lawsuit, Marois, then leader of the Parti Québécois, had been the target of several threats as the election results came in.

6 threats were made before fatal election night shooting at Metropolis in 2012

Parti Québécois leader Pauline Marois is removed from the stage by SQ officers as she speaks to supporters in Montreal, Tuesday, September 4, 2012 following her election win. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

Key information may not have been given to former Quebec Premier Pauline Marois's security team, the night of a fatal shooting and attempted assassination at the Metropolis night club nearly a decade ago.

The information came to light at a civil lawsuit tied to the 2012 Quebec election night shooting.

Former stagehands are suing the Sûreté du Québec (SQ) and Montreal police for negligence and for the trauma they say they suffered. 

One stagehand, Denis Blanchette, was killed when Richard Bain opened fire as he tried to make his way inside the club where Marois was on stage giving a victory speech on Sept. 4. Blanchette's friend and colleague, Dave Courage, was seriously wounded by the same bullet.

The court heard that Marois had been the target of several threats as the election results came in — six threats were recorded between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. — however, her bodyguards on the scene were never informed.

According to testimony from Marina Dobos, an SQ civilian advisor whom prosecutors introduced as the author of an SQ report about the night of the shooting, there was a lack of communication between provincial and Montreal police, in part because they operated on different radio frequencies.

The court also heard that there were no police stationed at the back door of the venue, despite this being Marois's evacuation route. Bain used the back door to access the Metropolis.

Dobos testified that she didn't have any say in what went into the report, and was instructed to write what an SQ captain told her.

Virginie Dufresne-Lemire, the lawyer representing the stagehands, is claiming the police services did not have accurate security in place to guarantee the safety of those inside.

Judge Philippe Bélanger will deliberate on whether the full report will be submitted into evidence, making it publicly available.