All three Lac-Megantic accused found not guilty on Day 9 of jury deliberations
SHERBROOKE, Que. — A teary-eyed Richard Labrie, one of the three men acquitted Friday in the Lac-Megantic rail disaster, paid tribute to the 47 people killed in 2013 and said he hopes the trial delivered the answers they and local residents were looking for.
“Even though I never spoke, I always thought of you,” the rail traffic controller said, his voice cracking. “I would like to say that Lac-Megantic residents, with what they had to go through, showed us a lot of courage and help and lots of resilience.
“I wasn’t expecting to cry. (The ordeal) was hard, it was long, but now it’s finished. I just hope we can easily turn the page and slip back into the anonymity that was ours before July 5, 2013.”
That was the night one of Labrie’s fellow accused, train engineer Tom Harding, parked the oil-laden convoy for the night in nearby Nantes.