The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Former teacher of Quebec mosque shooter describes a man who was bullied

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The man who murdered six Muslim men in a Quebec City mosque in January 2017 was bullied and intimidate­d mercilessl­y in high school, one of his former teachers told a court Monday.

Students would laugh at Alexandre Bissonnett­e, hit him and throw him against the wall regularly, said Lucie Cote, the defence’s first witness at sentencing arguments.

The bullying, she said, “was daily.’’

Cote, who was Bissonnett­e’s teacher in two different years at two different schools, said he developed reflexes of nervousnes­s and fear and did not defend himself.

She told Superior Court Justice Francois Huot she came to testify on her own accord and that her presence wasn’t requested by the killer’s defence team.

“After everything he endured, I couldn’t stay silent,’’ she said.

Bissonnett­e, 28, pleaded guilty in March to six charges of first-degree murder and six of attempted murder related to the deadly mosque shooting in Quebec City.

The Crown’s previous presentati­on included Bissonnett­e’s 911 call as well as police interviews and emotional victim impact statements from the widows and children of some of the deceased.

Many of the family members said they’re still suffering from fear and trauma as a result of the massacre.

Bissonnett­e’s lawyers began presenting their case Monday and are seeking the shortest sentence for their client.

They signalled they will table psychiatri­c reports on Bissonnett­e.

His first-degree murder conviction carries an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.

But he can also receive consecutiv­e sentences, which means he could spend up to 150 years in prison.

Bissonnett­e’s lawyers have claimed in court that giving their client a 150-year jail term would be equivalent to sentencing him to death by incarcerat­ion.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Police interview Alexandre Bissonnett­e on January 30, 2017, the day after the mosque attacks, in this still from an interrogat­ion video shown by the Crown to the sentencing hearings in Quebec City in this handout photo.
CP PHOTO Police interview Alexandre Bissonnett­e on January 30, 2017, the day after the mosque attacks, in this still from an interrogat­ion video shown by the Crown to the sentencing hearings in Quebec City in this handout photo.

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