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An accused murderer and rapist, a man who allegedly sexually assaulted a woman and a man police believe tried to rob Bitcoin dealers at gunpoint have all been charged with attempting to kill a fellow inmate in a jailhouse attack last week.
Homicide detectives have charged Mohamed Barkhadle, 32, Pierre Senatus, 22, and Jimmy St. Hilaire, 19, with attempted murder after the April 11 jailhouse beating that left 36-year-old Marco Michaud in an induced coma.
No weapons are believed to have been used in the attack, which occurred at the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre’s day room.
Michaud, who was in detention awaiting trial on a charge of second-degree murder, was taken to hospital after the attack that left him with severe life-threatening head injuries. He remained there Tuesday.
Michaud had turned himself in to homicide detectives just weeks ago, on Feb. 24, after police obtained a warrant for his arrest for what was an ultimately fatal beating in Vanier.
Detectives allege Michaud attacked 53-year-old Gerald Leduc inside Leduc’s Selkirk Street apartment in July 2017. That drug-related beating left Leduc in a coma for six months. He succumbed to his injuries in January, at which point, police started investigating the attack as a homicide. Michaud had been housed at the jail since turning himself in.
Michaud, originally from Timmins, On., and a father of one, is a convicted drug dealer with a lengthy criminal record dating back nearly two decades. He has spent considerable time in and out of jail for convictions of drug possession, possessing a dangerous weapon, arson and robbery.
All three alleged attackers in the jailhouse fight have outstanding criminal cases against them.
Barkhadle was charged by Ottawa police last year with killing a 35-year-old woman, whose name is shielded by a publication ban, in her Mechanicsville apartment in March 2017, leaving her toddler son to fend for himself for days.
Coincidentally, Michaud and Barkhadle were represented by the same criminal defence lawyer, Diane Condo, in their separate cases. Condo has since dropped Barkhadle as a client.
Barkhadle, 31 at the time, was out on the streets at the time of the woman’s homicide after an Ottawa judge in October 2016 denied the Crown’s request to brand him either a dangerous or long-term offender. The first designation would have seen him behind bars for an indeterminate sentence; the second would have come with strict supervision conditions upon release back into the community.
In May 2017 — after the woman’s homicide in 2017 but before his arrest for her killing — Barkhadle was arrested and charged with attempted murder and aggravated sexual assault for an attack on another woman in which she was choked.
Barkhadle, also known as “Akon,” is a former Crips gang member and has a lengthy criminal record, dating back to 2009, which includes convictions for assault and robbery.
Senatus was charged in 2016 by human trafficking detectives after a violent encounter in a Sandy Hill apartment left two women with injuries and one of them sexually assaulted.
Police alleged that the then 21-year-old Senatus pistol-whipped and sexually assaulted a woman.
He was also charged with eight gun-related counts, including pointing a gun and carrying a concealed weapon. He also faces multiple assault charges, including sexual assault with a weapon, assault with a weapon and aggravated assault as well as failure to comply with judicial release conditions.
St. Hilaire was charged in January of this year after a failed armed robbery at a Nepean Bitcoin business where four employees were bound.
Police said the suspects tried to coerce employees into completing a transaction but a fifth employee in another office called police, causing the suspects to flee empty-handed.
St. Hilaire was arrested near the scene and charged with five counts each of robbery, pointing a firearm and forcible confinement plus wearing a disguise and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence. He has also been charged with carrying a concealed weapon and having a loaded gun to commit a crime while banned from having firearms.
All three men were expected to appear in court Wednesday.
syogaretnam@postmedia.com
twitter.com/shaaminiwhy
查看原文...
Homicide detectives have charged Mohamed Barkhadle, 32, Pierre Senatus, 22, and Jimmy St. Hilaire, 19, with attempted murder after the April 11 jailhouse beating that left 36-year-old Marco Michaud in an induced coma.
No weapons are believed to have been used in the attack, which occurred at the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre’s day room.
Michaud, who was in detention awaiting trial on a charge of second-degree murder, was taken to hospital after the attack that left him with severe life-threatening head injuries. He remained there Tuesday.
Michaud had turned himself in to homicide detectives just weeks ago, on Feb. 24, after police obtained a warrant for his arrest for what was an ultimately fatal beating in Vanier.
Detectives allege Michaud attacked 53-year-old Gerald Leduc inside Leduc’s Selkirk Street apartment in July 2017. That drug-related beating left Leduc in a coma for six months. He succumbed to his injuries in January, at which point, police started investigating the attack as a homicide. Michaud had been housed at the jail since turning himself in.
Michaud, originally from Timmins, On., and a father of one, is a convicted drug dealer with a lengthy criminal record dating back nearly two decades. He has spent considerable time in and out of jail for convictions of drug possession, possessing a dangerous weapon, arson and robbery.
All three alleged attackers in the jailhouse fight have outstanding criminal cases against them.
Barkhadle was charged by Ottawa police last year with killing a 35-year-old woman, whose name is shielded by a publication ban, in her Mechanicsville apartment in March 2017, leaving her toddler son to fend for himself for days.
Coincidentally, Michaud and Barkhadle were represented by the same criminal defence lawyer, Diane Condo, in their separate cases. Condo has since dropped Barkhadle as a client.
Barkhadle, 31 at the time, was out on the streets at the time of the woman’s homicide after an Ottawa judge in October 2016 denied the Crown’s request to brand him either a dangerous or long-term offender. The first designation would have seen him behind bars for an indeterminate sentence; the second would have come with strict supervision conditions upon release back into the community.
In May 2017 — after the woman’s homicide in 2017 but before his arrest for her killing — Barkhadle was arrested and charged with attempted murder and aggravated sexual assault for an attack on another woman in which she was choked.
Barkhadle, also known as “Akon,” is a former Crips gang member and has a lengthy criminal record, dating back to 2009, which includes convictions for assault and robbery.
Senatus was charged in 2016 by human trafficking detectives after a violent encounter in a Sandy Hill apartment left two women with injuries and one of them sexually assaulted.
Police alleged that the then 21-year-old Senatus pistol-whipped and sexually assaulted a woman.
He was also charged with eight gun-related counts, including pointing a gun and carrying a concealed weapon. He also faces multiple assault charges, including sexual assault with a weapon, assault with a weapon and aggravated assault as well as failure to comply with judicial release conditions.
St. Hilaire was charged in January of this year after a failed armed robbery at a Nepean Bitcoin business where four employees were bound.
Police said the suspects tried to coerce employees into completing a transaction but a fifth employee in another office called police, causing the suspects to flee empty-handed.
St. Hilaire was arrested near the scene and charged with five counts each of robbery, pointing a firearm and forcible confinement plus wearing a disguise and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence. He has also been charged with carrying a concealed weapon and having a loaded gun to commit a crime while banned from having firearms.
All three men were expected to appear in court Wednesday.
syogaretnam@postmedia.com
twitter.com/shaaminiwhy
查看原文...