The Province

RCMP sergeant may have seen TV coverage on day of his suicide

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A sergeant who became the public face of the RCMP after Robert Dziekanski was fatally stunned with a Taser at Vancouver’s airport may have seen TV news coverage connected to the case the morning of his death by suicide, his widow says.

A coroner’s inquest began Monday into the death on July 29, 2013, of Pierre Lemaitre, who was 55.

Sheila Lemaitre said that morning that their TV was showing news coverage announcing that the verdict in the perjury trial of one of the officers involved in the Dziekanski case was coming out that day. She muted it and switched channels, but he may have seen it, she recalled.

“Pierre had been having a difficult time listening to any news, radio or watching it on TV because of his name coming up and the situation,” she told the inquest.

He seemed quiet that morning, but she followed her routine of walking their dogs and picking blueberrie­s on their farm in Abbotsford. When she came home, she found her husband’s body in the basement.

Lemaitre handled media relations in the days after Dziekanski’s death in October 2007 and was later accused of misleading the public about what happened during the Polish immigrant’s fatal confrontat­ion with police.

Lemaitre said Dziekanski was only stunned twice, but it emerged later that the Taser was deployed five times. He also told the CBC that there was no video camera in that area of the airport. But it turned out there was a video shot by a witness and Lemaitre had watched portions of it before issuing the first news release about the death.

When the video became public a month later, it appeared to contradict official RCMP accounts. Lemaitre had repeatedly called Dziekanski “combative,” and while Dziekanski was seen throwing furniture and yelling, he appeared relatively calm when Mounties arrived.

By the time the video came out Lemaitre was no longer handling media inquiries about the incident.

Lemaitre testified at an inquiry into Dziekanski’s death that he was simply relaying to the public what a homicide unit spokesman had told him about the altercatio­n. The inquiry concluded Lemaitre wasn’t aware that some of the informatio­n he released was incorrect.

Sheila Lemaitre told the coroner’s inquest Monday that her husband had struggled with anxiety and depression for years. The first time he was prescribed medication for these conditions was in 1993, she said.

 ?? JON MURRAY/PNG FILES ?? RCMP Sgt. Pierre Lemaitre leaves the Braidwood Inquiry in April of 2009 into the Tasering death of Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver airport.
JON MURRAY/PNG FILES RCMP Sgt. Pierre Lemaitre leaves the Braidwood Inquiry in April of 2009 into the Tasering death of Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver airport.

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