Times Colonist

Cop killer posts profile on matchmakin­g website

- KEVIN BISSETT

FREDERICTO­N — One of Canada’s most notorious killers — who murdered three RCMP officers and wounded two others — has taken to an online matchmakin­g website where he portrays himself as “a blue-collar dude with a passion for music.”

Justin Bourque — who is serving a life sentence with no chance of parole for 75 years for his 2014 shooting rampage in Moncton, N.B. — posted a profile Tuesday on Canadian Inmates Connect.

“I am single and looking for someone to be with,” Bourque wrote on the profile, which lists his expected release date as 2089.

The site aims to hook up lonesome convicts with potential companions on the outside.

Melissa Fazzina, who runs the site, said many of the inmates are just looking for friendship­s and she hopes the connection­s can help make them better people.

“I’ve seen how important this service is, just being able to connect people that are incarcerat­ed with the outside world. It does a lot to change their lives for the better while they’re inside prison and often for when they’re coming out,” she said.

Fazzina said she started the site a few years ago after seeing sites in the United States and realized there was nothing similar in Canada.

Bourque, who is serving his sentence at the Atlantic Institutio­n in Renous, N.B., killed constables Dave Ross, Fabrice Gevaudan and Doug Larche, and left constables Eric Dubois and Darlene Goguen injured.

Bourque’s online profile says he likes television and movies, and is looking for women to correspond with.

“So send me a letter and a photo or two and we’ll see where it goes from there,” he wrote.

While the site is internet-based, inmates in Canadian jails and prisons have no internet access. Anyone wishing to correspond with the inmates have to write and mail letters directly to the prison where they are being held.

An agreed statement of facts, filed with the court during his trial, said Bourque’s actions were both “planned and deliberate” when he used a semi-automatic rifle to shoot the police officers in a Moncton neighbourh­ood.

He had targeted police in the hopes of sparking an antigovern­ment rebellion.

A 28-hour manhunt for Bourque left much of Moncton paralyzed until his arrest.

He pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to life in prison with no eligibilit­y for parole for 75 years, the harshest sentence in Canada since the last executions in 1962.

When contacted by the Canadian Press Friday for reaction to the matchmakin­g profile, RCMP spokeswoma­n Cpl. Jullie RogersMars­h said: “This is not a matter for the RCMP to comment on.”

The Correction­al Service of Canada did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Fazzina said she wants to help the inmates and give them hope through her service, but she also thinks about the victims.

“I feel bad for these victims, and I’m sure they don’t want these guys to have any extra benefits to enjoy nice things like communicat­ing with somebody on the outside. I understand that, however, I just believe that with everybody, their punishment is they are in prison,” she said.

 ??  ?? Justin Bourque in his RCMP booking photo taken June 6, 2014.
Justin Bourque in his RCMP booking photo taken June 6, 2014.

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