CANADIAN TERRORIST PLEADS GUILTY TO KILLING 6 IN 2017 QUEBEC MOSQUE SHOOTING
Alexandre Bissonnette, a suspect in a shooting at a Quebec City mosque, arrives at the court house in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada |
A former Canadian university student has
pleaded guilty to killing six men who were praying in a Quebec City mosque in
January 2017, a court said on Wednesday, averting a trial in one of the
country’s rare mass shootings.
Alexandre
Bissonnette, 28, handcuffed and wearing leg irons as he entered the Quebec City
courtroom, had asked on Monday to change his previous plea of not guilty.
Quebec
Superior Court Justice François Huot imposed a publication ban on the guilty
plea and ordered Bissonnette to undergo a psychiatric examination to ensure he
knew the consequences of his decision.
Speaking
to the courtroom, which included members of the mosque, the Centre Culturel
Islamique de Québec, Bissonnette said he regretted what he did and decided to
plead guilty to spare the families the hardship of a trial.
anadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau initially described the shooting as a terrorist
attack, although prosecutors did not charge Bissonnette with terrorism.
Police
have described the terrorist as a “lone wolf” attacker.
Mass
shootings are rare in Canada, where gun control laws are stricter than in the
United States.
Sentencing
arguments begin on April 10. Bissonnette faces at least 25 years in prison, and
could receive concurrent sentences totaling more than 100 years.
“I am
ashamed of what I did,” he said. “I am not a terrorist, I am not an
Islamophobe.”
The judge
declared him guilty on six counts of first-degree murder and six counts of
attempted murder.
The slightly
built, dark-haired Bissonnette looked down and at times wiped away tears as the
judge read out the names of the mosque shooting victims.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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