Quebec coroner inquest told that poor police planning led to killing of officer
MONTREAL — Quebec provincial police didn’t plan properly before they tried to arrest a mentally ill man last March, and as a result an officer was killed, the province’s workplace health and safety board says.
The report by the board — known as the CNESST — was made public on Thursday at a coroner’s inquest into the deaths of provincial police Sgt. Maureen Breau and the assailant, Isaac Brouillard Lessard, a 35-year-old man with schizoaffective disorder who had been found not criminally responsible five times since 2014 for offences he had committed.
On March 27, Breau and three other officers went to Brouillard Lessard’s apartment in Louiseville, Que., about 100 kilometres northeast of Montreal, to arrest him for uttering threats and for breaking probation, following a call from the man’s uncle, Denis Lessard.
Brouillard Lessard attacked one officer and while Breau rushed to her colleague’s aid, the man stabbed her in the neck with a kitchen knife. Brouillard Lessard was shot dead by police moments later; Breau died in hospital.

