Quebec mosque shooter not motivated by racism, his sentence should be reduced: lawyer
QUEBEC — The Quebec City mosque shooter entered a Muslim prayer space Jan. 29, 2017, armed with two guns, and murdered six men — but there was no evidence he was motivated by deep-seated racism, the man’s lawyer argued Monday at the Court of Appeal.
Defence lawyer Charles-Olivier Gosselin said the misinterpretation of Alexandre Bissonnette’s motive was just one of several errors trial judge Francois Huot of the Superior Court made before sentencing his client last February to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 40 years.
Those mistakes led Huot to make an unreasonable decision, Gosselin said, adding the killer should instead be eligible for parole after 25 years in prison.
Bissonnette’s sentence was also appealed by the Crown, who argued Monday the 30-year-old gunman shouldn’t be eligible for release from prison before serving 50 years. Prosecutor Thomas Jacques told the court Bissonnette, who was not at the hearing, committed possibly the worst hate crime in Canadian history.