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Four henchmen sentenced to two years in prison

Gabriel Auclair 26, Kevin Manno, 25, Marc-André Di Schiavi, 28, and Daniel Santana Terreno, 36, pleaded guilty on September 17, 2018 to the Mont-Laurier courthouse on introductory charges break-in and armed aggression.

Judge Jean-Jacques Gagné immediately sentenced him to two years 'imprisonment, two years' probation, a life ban on possession weapons and the obligation to submit to a life sentence. DNA sampling.

The four individuals, three of whom come from Montreal and one from Deux-Montagnes, have a criminal record in terms of drugs and armed assaults. They are known to the police.

AGGRESSION
On September 6, 2018, four hooded individuals broke into a garage located at the back of a residence on the road to Lac Nadeau in Mont-Laurier. A person was doing mechanical work there. She warned her assailants that there were cameras. The latter hit her in the head and then fled.

A call was placed at 911 at 23:35 to report the break and enter and the assault. About ten minutes later, the four suspects were intercepted in a high-risk operation on Hébert Street in Mont-Laurier. They were arrested and taken to the police station of the Sûreté du Québec (SQ).

During the arrest of the suspects, the police found a baseball bat in the vehicle with traces of blood. It was sent to the Forensic Science and Forensic Sciences Laboratory.

THE APPEARANCE
The four individuals appeared the next day at the Mont-Laurier Courthouse to be charged. They presented themselves in white tracksuits provided by the police, their clothes having been seized and also sent to the laboratory of forensic science and forensics for clues.

The defendants returned to court on September 17 to undergo their bail hearing. They eventually pleaded guilty and, at the joint suggestion of the defense attorneys and the criminal and penal prosecutor, Justice Jean-Jacques Gagné imposed a sentence of two years' imprisonment.

When questioned by Justice Gagné on the theory of prosecution, the criminal and penal prosecutor stated that "the victim has a history of drugs and it is an order to pick him up and bring him somewhere else."

Moreover, the four individuals had been charged with attempted kidnapping, but a conditional sentence was handed down when they registered their plea of ​​guilty. The four men were represented by Mr. Benoit Cliche and Mr. André Laporte, two lawyers known to have defended in the past close individuals or allegedly part of the Hells Angels.

In closing, Justice Gagné added that the accused are doing well. They left the court smiling and even pushed the audacity to applaud.

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