Inquest into slain officer: Quebec doctors say it’s hard to get patients to take meds
MONTREAL — Psychiatrists who treated a mentally ill Quebec man who killed a provincial police officer told a coroner’s inquest on Tuesday about the challenges in getting patients to follow conditions from the province’s mental-health board.
The inquest involves the March 27 killing of provincial police Sgt. Maureen Breau, while she and her colleagues attempted to arrest Isaac Brouillard Lessard, in Louiseville, Que., about 100 kilometres northeast of Montreal. The 35-year-old Brouillard Lessard stabbed Breau with a kitchen knife and seriously injured her colleague, and was shot dead by police moments after in his apartment building.
The inquiry, which began Monday, has heard that Brouillard Lessard had a history of mental-health illness and despite concerns raised by his parents, he was on his own and in crisis when Breau and her colleagues tried to arrest him for uttering threats and breaking probation.
On Tuesday, Dr. Marc Tannous, who supervised Brouillard Lessard starting in 2019, testified about a November 2021 event when the man’s mother told him she was concerned her son was having a psychotic relapse and suspected he wasn’t taking his medication. Tannous said he spoke to Brouillard Lessard by phone and determined the man was not an imminent threat.


