Pilot who targeted Quebec power lines gets 7-year term
ST-JEROME, Que. — A Quebec man who targeted Hydro-Québec power lines in an aerial attack that left tens of thousands without power in December 2014 was sentenced Monday to seven years in prison.
Normand Dubé, an entrepreneur, was found guilty in September of using his small plane in what the Crown described as an unprecedented strike on institutions and ordinary Quebecers.
Dubé, described in local media as a “pilot to the stars” for his past life transporting Quebec entertainers, was impassive as Quebec court Judge Paul Chevalier handed down his sentence Monday on three counts of mischief.
Although Dubé, 56, has no previous criminal record, his responsibility for the crimes was complete, Chevalier noted.
“The modus operandi of his crime shows that he carefully prepared it and did not act impulsively,” the judge said. “The motive held by the court — vengeance — underlines his moral culpability.”
The Crown had sought the maximum 10-year sentence for the attack on two power lines northwest of Montreal, described by prosecutors as the jugular and spinal column of the HydroQuébec network.
The way the crime was committed and the extent of the damages made it a first in Canada, with neither the Crown nor the defence able to find legal precedents. But Chevalier concluded the Crown’s recommendation was excessive.
The exact method used to create a short-circuit in the Dec. 4, 2014, attack cannot be reported under a publication ban imposed in the interest of national security.
Much of the trial took place with the public barred, and the decision finding Dubé guilty in September is partially redacted.
The defence had argued for a much shorter sentence — either three years in prison or less than two years in a provincial jail followed by three years probation.
A lawyer for Dubé, Mario Lavigne, said he plans to appeal the verdict.
The Crown said a hearing on the defence request is expected before the Quebec Court of Appeal on Thursday.
The pilot, inventor and entrepreneur held a deep grudge against Hydro-Québec that stemmed from a dispute over work done by the utility on land he owned in Ste-Anne-des-Plaines, north of Montreal.
According to the prosecution, Dubé also blamed the utility for his tax problems.