Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Actions of three ex-railway employees caused Lac-Megantic disaster: Crown

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2017 11:00 AM
    But for the negligent actions and omissions of three former railway employees, the deaths of 47 people in Lac-Megantic would not have happened, a Crown prosecutor told jurors at the opening of a criminal trial into the derailment on Monday.
     
    The oil-laden locomotive weighing more than 10,000 tonnes was not properly secured the night of July 5, 2013, leaving it resting precariously on a slope, 10 kilometres away from downtown Lac-Megantic, Veronique Beauchamp told the court.
     
    Former train driver Thomas Harding, traffic controller Richard Labrie and manager of train operations Jean Demaitre were all responsible in their own way for ensuring the train was safe, Beauchamp said.
     
    Lac-Megantic was partly destroyed after the runaway train barrelled into the town, derailed and exploded, killing 47.
     
    "Evidence presented will show that beyond a reasonable doubt, all three were criminally negligent ... they contributed to the deaths of the 47 victims," she said.
     
    "You'll see that the number of brakes applied to the (train) was clearly insufficient," Beauchamp added.
     
    She said one of the accused, supervisor Demaitre, was even told of the train's mechanical deficiencies before the derailment.
     
    All three men stand accused of one count of criminal negligence causing the death of 47 people and each pleaded not guilty Monday before Quebec Superior Court Justice Gaetan Dumas.
     
    The Crown has signalled it will call 24 civilian and 11 police witnesses, and one expert witness in a trial that is expected to last until December.
     
    Beauchamp said jurors will also be shown video and listen to audio recordings of conversations between railway employees the night of the derailment.
     
    First on the witnesses stand Monday will be officer Steven Montembeault.
     
    The bankrupt former railway company Montreal Maine and Atlantic Railway has also pleaded not guilty to causing the deaths of 47 people and will face a separate trial at a later date.
     
    The trial is being held in Sherbrooke, Que,. 150 kilometres east of Montreal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer
    Chan, 50, learned he had nasopharyngeal carcinoma not long after he won his Toronto-area seat of Scarborough—Agincourt in a 2014 byelection.

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer

    Two UBC Students Hitchhike Across Canada, Spending A Total Of $10

    Two UBC Students Hitchhike Across Canada, Spending A Total Of $10
    Philippe Roberge, 22, and Ori Nevares, 23, hitchhiked from Whitehorse to St. John's over the summer in an effort to see the country and mark Canada's 150th anniversary.

    Two UBC Students Hitchhike Across Canada, Spending A Total Of $10

    B.C. Crown Wants Four Years For Man Who Created Revenge Website Against Ex-Wife

    B.C. Crown Wants Four Years For Man Who Created Revenge Website Against Ex-Wife
    VANCOUVER — A Crown prosecutor is asking a British Columbia judge to deliver a sentence of up to four years to a man convicted of criminally harassing his ex-wife through a revenge website.

    B.C. Crown Wants Four Years For Man Who Created Revenge Website Against Ex-Wife

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Celebrating South Asian Excellence

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Celebrating South Asian Excellence
    It’s that time of the year again! DARPAN is all set to present the most-exciting event of the year in Surrey – Darpan Magazine’s Extraordinary Achievement Awards 2017.

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Celebrating South Asian Excellence

    Canada Won't Be Rushed Into Peacekeeping Mission: Harjit Sajjan

    Canada Won't Be Rushed Into Peacekeeping Mission: Harjit Sajjan
    OTTAWA — The Trudeau government will not be rushed into making a decision on where to send Canadian peacekeepers, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says.

    Canada Won't Be Rushed Into Peacekeeping Mission: Harjit Sajjan

    Commercial Truck Blitz Underway In Vancouver As More Than Half Fail Safety Check

    Commercial Truck Blitz Underway In Vancouver As More Than Half Fail Safety Check
    Vancouver Police say more than half of the commercial vehicles checked during a recent road-safety blitz were so badly maintained they were immediately ordered off the road.

    Commercial Truck Blitz Underway In Vancouver As More Than Half Fail Safety Check