Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Mosque Shooter Couldn't Believe Man He Shot Seven Times Survived: Fellow Inmate

Darpan News Desk, 26 Apr, 2018 11:20 AM
    Quebec City mosque shooter Alexandre Bissonnette told a fellow inmate he couldn't believe a man he pumped seven bullets into didn't die, a Crown prosecutor told his sentencing arguments Wednesday.
     
     
    Francois Godin said Bissonnette made the comment when he saw Aymen Derbali on TV.
     
     
    Derbali lost the use of his legs in the January 2017 murderous rampage and is confined to a wheelchair.
     
     
    The Crown said the other prisoner told Quebec provincial police this past February that Bissonnette became enraged when he saw a TV report about a campaign to raise funds to buy Derbali a wheelchair-accessible home.
     
     
    "My parents will have nothing" and Derbali will get a house, Bissonnette reportedly told the inmate.
     
     
    The Crown did not explain why it did not file the prisoner's declaration as evidence during Bissonnette's trial but brought it up Wednesday during the cross-examination of a psychiatrist hired by the defence.
     
     
    The prisoner's comments constitute hearsay as he did not testify at the trial, and Superior Court Justice Francois Huot said he will not take into account the exchange when he decides on a sentence for Bissonnette.
     
     
    Bissonnette, 28, pleaded guilty in March to six charges of first-degree murder and six of attempted murder related to the deadly mosque shooting.
     
     
     
     
     
    The first-degree murder conviction carries an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.
     
     
    But Bissonnette can also receive consecutive sentences, which means he could spend up to 150 years in prison.
     
     
    Godin mentioned the reported exchange between Bissonnette and the other convict as he cross-examined psychiatrist Marie-Frederique Allard about what he viewed as the killer's lack of empathy toward his victims.
     
     
    Even the judge weighed in on the subject, telling Allard that Bissonnette had remained impassive while hearing "blood-chilling" testimony from victims' loved ones but that he immediately burst into tears when his own family was mentioned.
     
     
    "Then the waterworks are turned on," Huot said.
     
     
    Allard said she believes Bissonnette has made certain progress in terms of showing empathy and that he has the capacity to further develop it.
     
     
    The defence announced Wednesday it has completed its arguments.
     
     
     
     
    In order to answer the defence's psychiatric assessment, the Crown asked that Bissonnette meet on Wednesday afternoon with a psychiatrist of his choice.
     
     
    That person may testify Thursday morning

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Heavily intoxicated' Man Allegedly Drove To Detachment, RCMP Say

    'Heavily intoxicated' Man Allegedly Drove To Detachment, RCMP Say
    ANTIGONISH, N.S. — Nova Scotia RCMP didn't have to go far to arrest a suspected drunk driver: he came to them.

    'Heavily intoxicated' Man Allegedly Drove To Detachment, RCMP Say

    Approaching Monsoon Season Sparks Concerns For Refugees In Bangladesh

    Approaching Monsoon Season Sparks Concerns For Refugees In Bangladesh
    International Development Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau says aid organizations are already overwhelmed by the massive influx of Muslim-minority refugees from neighbouring Myanmar.

    Approaching Monsoon Season Sparks Concerns For Refugees In Bangladesh

    Tooba Yahya, Mother In Shafia Murder Case, Has Permanent Resident Status Revoked

    Tooba Yahya, Mother In Shafia Murder Case, Has Permanent Resident Status Revoked
    MONTREAL — A woman found guilty of murdering her three daughters in a so-called honour killing was stripped of her permanent residency Thursday and ordered deported from the country.

    Tooba Yahya, Mother In Shafia Murder Case, Has Permanent Resident Status Revoked

    Alberta Family Murdered And Burned: Four Years Later, Friends Still Wonder Why

    Alberta Family Murdered And Burned: Four Years Later, Friends Still Wonder Why
    CASTOR, Alta. — More than four years after three members of a central Alberta family were murdered, the biggest question still remains unanswered for their friends — why?

    Alberta Family Murdered And Burned: Four Years Later, Friends Still Wonder Why

    Man Who Pledged Millions To B.C. Hockey Team Sentenced On Unrelated Fraud Charge

    Man Who Pledged Millions To B.C. Hockey Team Sentenced On Unrelated Fraud Charge
    A man who promised millions of dollars to a junior hockey team in southeastern British Columbia has been placed on six months of probation after pleading guilty to an unrelated fraud charge.

    Man Who Pledged Millions To B.C. Hockey Team Sentenced On Unrelated Fraud Charge

    Jagmeet Singh Says Canada Should Declare Anti-Sikh Violence In 1984 A Genocide

    Jagmeet Singh Says Canada Should Declare Anti-Sikh Violence In 1984 A Genocide
    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Canada should declare that the anti-Sikh violence that took place in India more than three decades ago was a genocide.

    Jagmeet Singh Says Canada Should Declare Anti-Sikh Violence In 1984 A Genocide