Calgary Herald

Ex-Montreal mayor faints as guilty verdict read

Applebaum connected to bribery schemes

- RENÉ BRUEMMER

MONTREAL• Former Montreal mayor Michael Applebaum was found guilty of eight of the 14 charges that were levelled against him Thursday afternoon in connection with two bribery schemes that saw roughly $60,000 extorted from developers seeking contracts.

The lengthy judgment read by the justice was interrupte­d 90 minutes in when Applebaum fainted, soon after her ruling appeared to indicate a negative outcome for the former mayor.

Judge Louise Provost of Quebec Court found Applebaum guilty of fraud against the government, breach of trust, conspiracy and corruption in municipal affairs. A stay of proceeding­s was ordered for four charges, and he was found not guilty on two others.

Sentencing arguments have been set for Feb. 15.

During the trial, prosecutor Nathalie Kleber said Applebaum could be sentenced to up to five years in prison if found guilty on all charges.

Three and a half years after provincial anti-corruption officers pulled Applebaum, then serving as the interim mayor of the second-largest city in Canada, from his home early on a June Monday morning to arrest him, Provost pronounced Applebaum guilty at the Montreal courthouse.

In her ruling, Provost said she found the testimony of the chief witness in the case, Applebaum’s former political aide and chief of staff Hugo Tremblay, compelling and credible. The testimony of the other principal witnesses corroborat­ed Tremblay’s testimony, as well as each others, Provost said during the rendering of her judgment.

Applebaum was accused of extorting roughly $60,000 in bribes from business developers between 2006 and 2012 while he was borough mayor of Côte-des-Neiges — Notre-Dame-de-Grâce.

Applebaum was arrested in June 2013 by Quebec’s anti-corruption police force, putting an end to his sevenmonth tenure as interim mayor of Montreal. He maintained his innocence throughout, and opted to be tried by judge alone.

During his trial in November, the prosecutio­n charged that Applebaum extracted $35,000 in bribes from businessme­n Anthony Keeler and Robert Stein in 2007 in exchange for ensuring that their Côte-des-Neiges real estate developmen­t plan would go through.

Hugo Tremblay, who served as Applebaum’s political aide and then chief of staff, testified that Applebaum coached him on how to ask for and collect money.

Tremblay’s testimony was corroborat­ed by Stein and Keeler, although they noted that they never discussed or dealt directly with Applebaum when it came to illicit affairs, only Tremblay.

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