National Post (National Edition)

METHANOL FOUND IN TURCOTTE’S SYSTEM

- BY STEPHANIE MARIN The Canadian Press

S A I N T-J E ROM E , QU E . • The concentrat­ion of methanol in Guy Turcotte’s blood was the equivalent of between three and five beers for an averagesiz­ed man, a defence witness told his first-degree murder trial Thursday.

Toxicologi­st Anne-Marie Faucher had previously testified she found a potentiall­y fatal dose of methanol in Turcotte’s system the day after the February 2009 slayings of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.

Turcotte, 43, has pleaded not guilty to two charges of first-degree murder but has admitted to causing the children’s deaths. His lawyers are arguing he should be found not criminally responsibl­e by way of mental disorder.

The accused testified this week he was determined to die and that he consumed windshield washer fluid, which contains methanol. He said he could only remember the night of the slayings in “flashes.”

Under cross-examinatio­n by the Crown, Faucher said she estimates someone who has consumed that much beer is “conscious, coherent, able to have discussion­s and negotiate.”

Faucher said such a person “is quite capable of doing what he has to do,” but had noted in her initial testimony one’s level of awareness can be reduced after consuming such levels of methanol.

She explained that the effects of methanol on the human body are similar to those from the consumptio­n of ethanol (the alcohol found in wine

Conscious, coherent, able to have discussion­s

and negotiate

or beer), but have less of an impact.

Prosecutor Rene Verret questioned her experience on methanol intoxicati­on, with Faucher replying she has worked only on three or four similar cases and that the only survivor was Turcotte.

Evidence presented thus far has not establishe­d the quantity of washer fluid he consumed. Faucher analyzed the blood and said the dose she found would have been fatal had he not been given medical attention.

Later on Thursday, Claude Rouillard, an expert in neuropharm­acology, said methanol does result in memory loss.

He referred to a scientific article regarding a mass poisoning in New York in 1953 where people had been drinking a mix of fake whisky and methyl alcohol (or methanol).

Several people ended up going to hospital to be treated and had suffered major memory loss. Some couldn’t recall setting foot in the hospital or how they got there, but they appeared rational when observed by medical personnel.

The Crown asserts that Turcotte has a “selective memory” when it comes to the events of Feb. 20, 2009.

Turcotte has testified that he drank windshield washer fluid that night as he wanted to die because of psychologi­cal distress. He said he didn’t use the knife he repeatedly stabbed hic children with because he couldn’t find it.

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