Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Corruption-Related Preliminary Hearing Begins For Ex-Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2015 11:35 AM
    MONTREAL — Former interim Montreal mayor Michael Applebaum appeared in court on Monday as his preliminary hearing began on corruption-related charges.
     
    A publication ban was ordered on the evidence being heard before Quebec court Judge Yvan Poulin as Applebaum listened intently and jotted down notes.
     
    He was arrested and charged about two years ago with 14 counts including fraud, corruption, conspiracy and breach of trust involving two real-estate projects in the local district he represented from 2002 until 2012.
     
    Applebaum served as interim Montreal mayor for roughly seven months, beginning in late 2012, after Gerald Tremblay stepped down.
     
    He was the first anglophone mayor of the city in 100 years and his time in office ended one day after his arrest by Quebec's anti-corruption unit in June 2013.
     
    Applebaum, a longtime city councillor and borough mayor before occupying the city's most powerful elected seat, has maintained his innocence and vowed to fight the charges.
     
    His lawyer, Pierre Teasdale, has said his client wants the case heard as quickly as possible.
     
    The accusations relate to his time as borough mayor of Notre-Dame-de-Grace/Cote-des-Neiges, the city's most populous district.
     
    The first witness to take the stand for the Crown was Hugo Tremblay, a former political attache to Applebaum.
     
    At least four other witnesses are expected to follow over the next week and perhaps longer if needed.
     
    Evidence being heard will permit a judge to determine if there is sufficient reason to order Applebaum to stand trial.
     
    The defence has said it won't contest a committal to trial and has opted for a jury trial.
     
    Two others arrested with Applebaum have since pleaded guilty to similar charges.
     
    Saulie Zajdel and Jean-Yves Bisson pleaded guilty late last month to some of the charges they were facing.
     
    Both received suspended sentences, probation, community service and were required to make a donation to community groups.
     
    Zajdel, a longtime municipal politician himself, also dabbled in federal politics as the Tory candidate in the Montreal riding of Mount Royal in 2011, losing to Liberal Irwin Cotler.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Acceptance Reversed For 400 Would-be Nurses At Thompson Rivers University

    Acceptance Reversed For 400 Would-be Nurses At Thompson Rivers University
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Hundreds of want-to-be nurses have been told they weren't actually accepted to the Thompson Rivers University program, despite receiving confirmation they were in.

    Acceptance Reversed For 400 Would-be Nurses At Thompson Rivers University

    Const. Sheldon Shah Testifies He Was Shot Several Times Trying To Protect Another Officer

    Const. Sheldon Shah Testifies He Was Shot Several Times Trying To Protect Another Officer
    WETASKIWIN, Alta. — An RCMP officer was trying to arrest a man in the living room of an Alberta farm house when the Mountie saw the muzzle of a gun pointing out of a doorway.

    Const. Sheldon Shah Testifies He Was Shot Several Times Trying To Protect Another Officer

    Bank Of China Awarded More Than $672 Million In B.C. Supreme Court Case

    Bank Of China Awarded More Than $672 Million In B.C. Supreme Court Case
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has ordered two defendants to pay the Bank of China more than $672 million in an international breach of trust and fraud case. 

    Bank Of China Awarded More Than $672 Million In B.C. Supreme Court Case

    Advocates Hope Murder-Suicide Inquest Will Help Families With Autistic Children

    Advocates Hope Murder-Suicide Inquest Will Help Families With Autistic Children
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — The family of a British Columbia mother who killed herself and her severely autistic son is hopeful that an inquest will bring something positive out of the tragedy, says an advocate.

    Advocates Hope Murder-Suicide Inquest Will Help Families With Autistic Children

    Four Members Of Royal Navy Face Sexual Assault Charges In Halifax

    Four Members Of Royal Navy Face Sexual Assault Charges In Halifax
    HALIFAX — Four members of the Royal Navy have been charged with sexual assault causing bodily harm at a Canadian Forces base in Halifax.

    Four Members Of Royal Navy Face Sexual Assault Charges In Halifax

    Canada's Greenhouse Gas Emissions Continue Slow Climb: Report

    Canada's Greenhouse Gas Emissions Continue Slow Climb: Report
    OTTAWA — The latest emissions inventory from Environment Canada shows the country's overall greenhouse gas output climbed 1.5 per cent between 2012 and 2013, continuing a slow, but steady, upward trend since the global recession of 2009.

    Canada's Greenhouse Gas Emissions Continue Slow Climb: Report