Toronto Star

Former player sues QMJHL over hazing

HOCKEY

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

A former player in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League has filed an applicatio­n for a class-action lawsuit of more than $15 million against the league and its teams over alleged hazing abuse.

Carl Latulippe played in Quebec’s main junior league between 1994 and 1996 and claims he was abused during hazing rituals with two teams.

Latulippe, 45, says that during training camp he was forced by veteran players of the Chicoutimi Saguenéens to undress and masturbate in front of teammates on a team bus, with full knowledge of the coaches. He also alleges team veterans assaulted rookies with soap wrapped in towels.

The plaintiff’s accusation­s were made public last month in an article in La Presse, at which time the league said it had already opened investigat­ions into sexual and physical abuse among its franchises.

Latulippe was Chicoutimi’s firstround pick in the 1994 QMJHL draft when he was 16. After the masturbati­on incident on the bus, he left the team without saying why, but the head coach convinced him to return. Latulippe said he discussed the behaviour of veteran players with his coach, who allegedly replied that the hazing would only last a year and helped to build character. He played six regularsea­son games with the Saguenéens.

His applicatio­n for a class action says he was later traded to the Drummondvi­lle Voltigeurs and was also abused by members of that team during hazing rituals. Latulippe alleges that Voltigeurs rookies were required to cover themselves in shampoo to make it difficult for veterans to grab and assault them in the shower.

One Voltigeurs veteran allegedly tore the anus of a rookie by shoving a hanger inside him. Latulippe also describes being forced to binge drink at a team initiation event in Drummondvi­lle.

After the Voltigeurs, the plaintiff played for the Beauport Harfangs, who have since become the Quebec City Remparts. He said no abusive hazing incidents occurred while he was on that team.

The class action seeks to represent “all hockey players who have experience­d abuse while they were minors and playing in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League … starting from July 1, 1969.”

Latulippe says he suffered from several psychologi­cal consequenc­es as a result of the alleged abuse; he says he became addicted to drugs and gambling, which prevented him from maintainin­g his income. As well, he says he hasn’t been able to set foot in an arena since his time in the Quebec league, and he refuses to allow his son to play hockey out of fear the child would suffer similar abuse.

The request to launch the class action dated Tuesday was filed at the Quebec City courthouse, and a Superior Court judge must authorize the case before it can proceed.

Latulippe’s applicatio­n targets the Quebec league, its member franchises and its umbrella organizati­on — the Canadian Hockey League — and seeks $650,000 for the plaintiff in damages, including pain, suffering and humiliatio­n, as well as lost productivi­ty and therapy. Another $15 million is to be shared among other alleged victims.

The proposed lawsuit notes that both the CHL and QMJHL have codes of conduct in which teams have the obligation to supervise players. A bylaw for Quebec’s league states that players must evolve “in a safe and formative environmen­t to prepare them for their life as an adult.”

Latulippe’s lawsuit says that the defendants, “when they had an obligation to protect the members of the class and to look after their well-being, witnessed the abuse, encouraged it, neglected, tolerated, covered up or ignored it.”

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