a man with former ties to the hells angels has been granted full parole for a murder he carried out in rivière-des-prairies more than three decades ago.
stéphane turcotte, 58, killed sylvain bujold, a drug dealer he worked for, on jan. 2, 1994, inside a print shop turcotte owned in eastern montreal. the victim was shot several times and his body was dismembered.
bujold’s remains were never found, but the details behind the homicide were revealed to the montreal police months later when jean-claude bergeron, an accomplice in the slaying, became an informant. bergeron agreed to collaborate with police following his arrest for setting off a bomb early in quebec’s biker gang war. the bomb injured a man who was part of a failed effort to prevent the hells angels from expanding their drug-trafficking turf in montreal. the biker gang war, between the hells angels and a collection of criminal organizations, stretched from 1994 to 2002. more than 160 people were killed during the conflict.
“clear data showed (bujold’s) murder was directly linked to your connections and association with a group presenting a security threat, specifically the hells angels motorcycle club. you were then considered an influential figure in the underworld. your affiliation to this group has been inactive since 2019,” the parole board of canada wrote in a recent decision granting turcotte full parole for the first time since his arrest on march 21, 1995.