Canadian True Crime - FLIGHT 108: The Sault-au-Cochon Tragedy

Episode Date: August 1, 2022

The story of one of the first instances of in-flight bombing, one of the worst mass murders in Canadian history, and the last woman to hang. In 1949, a passenger plane fell from the sky in the Sa...ult-au-Cochon area of Quebec, killing everyone on board...Look out for early, ad-free release on CTC premium feeds: available on Amazon Music (included with Prime), Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast. Full list of resources, information sources, credits and music credits:See the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Canadian true crime is a completely independent production, funded mainly through advertising. The podcast often has coarse language and disturbing content, and it's not for everyone. Around 350 to 400 million years ago, give or take, a meteorite entered our atmosphere and crashed to Earth, landing on Turtle Island in what's now known as the province of Quebec. The meteorite was estimated to be about two kilometers in diameter. and the force of its impact completely changed the terrain. The crater, or impact structure left by the meteorite, is about 50 kilometers in diameter, an area known today as the Charlevoix region, located an hour or two east of Quebec City.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Part of the crater lies directly under the Saleron River, and the rest of the area boast some of the most unique landscape our planet has to offer. Rolling terrain, dense forest, fjords, headlands and bays. The local tourism website describes a falling meteorite sculpting dramatic landscapes in its wake and leaving behind, quote, a particular magnetism and energy where visitors stop, breathe and reawaken their senses. The Charlevoixie region is a nature-lovered. heaven, and because it's also an internationally protected UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve,
Starting point is 00:01:37 hopefully it will stay that way. But while the area has had an incredible and magnetic history, it hasn't been immune from attracting tragedy. It was a warm September morning just after 10.40 a.m. And 35-year-old fisherman Patrick Sima was in the Charlevoire region, checking the eel traps he'd set on the Celeron River. He was fishing a long stretch of unpopulated and undeveloped shoreline, near the hamlet known as Soto-Cachon, located about 40 kilometres east of Quebec City. He heard the sound of a plane's engine overhead, and while it seemed to be a bit louder than
Starting point is 00:02:25 usual, he thought nothing of the sound. But then, all of a sudden, there was an explosion overhead. The fisherman turned his head and saw a passenger plane with white smoke billowing out of it, almost as though it had been hit by something or shot out of the air. He had never seen a plane flying so low over the area, and against the backdrop of a clear sky, he could clearly see debris falling from the plane. Suddenly it veered sharply to the left and plunged nose first behind a tree line, atop some rocky bluffs, leaving only a flume of white smoke in its wake. Patrick didn't hear any kind of landing, and at first he wondered if he had imagined the whole thing.
Starting point is 00:03:14 He decided it couldn't have been a dream and started climbing up a nearby hill to see if he could get a better view of the terrain. After finding a good vantage point, he peered out over the area and saw something nestled in the bushes at the top of another hill, the wreckage of a white plane. A crew of five men were working alongside railway tracks closer to where the wreckage landed when they heard the explosion, like a crash of thunder. They ran from their posts on the tracks, through the trees, towards the steep area where the plane came down. One railway worker would tell reporters that they thought they'd find the plane erupted in flames, but were surprised.
Starting point is 00:04:02 to find that it wasn't. Although parts of the plain were scattered throughout the bush and lined the forest floor, a large part of it remained intact, and quote, there was no fire at all, just a mass of wreckage and all those bodies. The shocked workers said they would never forget
Starting point is 00:04:23 what they saw that day as long as they lived. A quote from the Montreal Gazette. The front of the plane seemed to be in one piece and it was jammed with broken and twisted bodies as if they had been thrown forward in the crash. The rail workers described seeing body parts that had been torn off and it was clear to them that there were children on board. It seemed likely that there were no survivors,
Starting point is 00:05:17 and if there were, there was nothing that the railway workers could do. In a state of shock, they hurried back to their work site to report it. Rescue teams and investigators took a while to get to the wreckage. Even today, the terrain in the Charlevoire region remains virtually untouched and can only be navigated with an off-road vehicle and an experienced guide. But this was back in 1949, just after World War II and there were even less options. Rescue teams started arriving in the afternoon, some taking a train to the final railway stop
Starting point is 00:05:57 and then continuing on foot to the steep wreckage site, a trek that took about an hour. And those who drove in motor cars as far as they could before the road ended had an even further trek to make. As the day's light started to fade, the teams of investigators and undertaker's assistance used torches to illuminate their way through the terrain. The plane had cracked,
Starting point is 00:06:24 atop a wooded hillside in a nature wildlife area called Cap Tormont, hitting some rocky bluffs as it fell, splintering the trees under the force. There were also pieces of the plain found in tree branches. Just as the sun set, the first responders came upon the main part of the wreckage, where they saw that same horrific site that was etched into the railway workers' minds. The bodies jammed together.
Starting point is 00:06:54 mangled, the remains of the passengers virtually indistinguishable from the remnants of their belongings. From witness descriptions, investigators knew that the plane had gone down nose first, flinging most of the passengers into the same area of the plane. There were also partial remains scattered on the forest floor, some found over 200 feet from the wreckage. It took three days to remove the deceased. a somber journey that required the rescue teams to carry all the remains a mile and a half down the slope to an awaiting medical train carriage.
Starting point is 00:07:39 A small number of salvageable items were found, including what appeared to be storage receipts for two suitcases containing jewelry that had been stored at a warehouse in the city of Bay Colmo, located northeast of Quebec City. That's exactly where the plane was headed. It had been identified as Canadian Pacific Airlines Flight 108, operating a Quebec Airways route from Montreal, northeast to Bay Como, with one stop along the way.
Starting point is 00:08:12 The aircraft was a Douglas DC3-2-engine propeller plane with a capacity of 21 to 32 passengers. After a stopover at Quebec City to let some passengers off and board some new ones, the plane took off again only five men. minutes later than scheduled for the final leg of the journey. Unfortunately, it never made it to its final destination. Only 20 minutes into the flight, it crashed to the ground. All four crew members on board were killed.
Starting point is 00:08:46 30-year-old pilot Captain Pierre Lauren was a seasoned flyer, having flown in bomber raids all over Europe. He was a husband and father, and his wife was heavily pregnant with their second child, a child who would never meet their father. His co-pilot, First Officer Gordon Alexander, perished on the flight as well, along with First Engineer, Emil Taryan, and the stewardess or flight attendant Gertrude McKay. As the media began to report more facts about the terrible tragedy and release the names of the four crew and 19 passengers who died, there were many questions. plane travel had begun to be more widely accepted, no longer just an option for the wealthy class,
Starting point is 00:09:36 and it was assumed that plane travel was safe. The public were shocked to learn that there were children on the flight. One child was just a baby. His parents, Henri Paul Bouchard and his wife, referred to only as Mrs. H. Bouchard, were all on the flight returning home after a vacation. mother and baby had been identified by heartbroken relatives, but father, Henri Paul, was still unaccounted for. According to the passenger manifest, he was sitting closest to what was believed to be the original location of the blast. In fact, that seat was completely missing. Investigators
Starting point is 00:10:21 momentarily wondered if perhaps he was involved, although it seemed like an unlikely prospect since his wife and baby were with him. A few days after the crash, Henry Paul's relatives were told that there were leftover remains at the morgue that likely belonged to him. But it was a false start because they belonged to someone completely unrelated to the crash. Once the mistake was known, rescue teams were sent out to comb the woods again, but Henry Paul's family were told to prepare for the possibility that his body may have been broken beyond recognition. It was almost too horrific to fathom. The other passengers who boarded the plane at the start of the journey in Montreal
Starting point is 00:11:11 included three New York business executives from a copper company, identified as Russell J. Parker, Arthur D. Stork, and Earl T. Stannard. The plane's final destination, the city of Bay Como, was and is a forestry centre for the pulp and paper industry, and two of the passengers, Ed Kalnan and Bill Shuler, were employees of the Ontario Paper Company in St. Catherine's Ontario. Also on board were two inspectors for the Bank of Montreal, Cecil Omphreys and A.R. Kala, as well as 24-year-old mechanic garage owner Lionel Delair, who also perished on the flight, returning home after a visit to Montreal to see his sister. The last passenger who boarded at Montreal was 47-year-old Beatrice Furlot,
Starting point is 00:12:06 a widow who was also visiting relatives. At the Quebec City stopover, some passengers disembarked, making way for new passengers to board, including high-finding. school teacher Harold Pye and two married women, Mrs. R. Duret, and Mrs. J. Gay. The identities of the married women were all reported using their husband's initials and surname, but Mrs. Gay's first name was Rita, and she was a 28-year-old housewife and mother of one. Rita Gay was the only crash victim whose face was distinguishable when the wreckage was found, although it was badly bruised. She left behind a grieving husband and four-year-old daughter
Starting point is 00:12:55 who had to face the prospect of life without her. There was another married woman on the plane. Mrs. R. Chapado was accompanied by her three children, 14-year-old daughter Florette, 13-year-old son Jean-Claude, and an unnamed 11-month-old baby boy, whose body was found in his mother's protective grip when they were both recovered. The only person from the family who remained was the one who wasn't on the flight,
Starting point is 00:13:25 the father, Romeo Shepado, who was devastated to learn his entire family were killed on the way home from a family visit in Quebec City. With 23 fatalities, the crash of Flight 108 was determined to be the third worst accident in the history of Canadian aviation at the time. It was eclipsed by two earlier crashes in the 1940s, the 1943 crash of a B-24 bomber jet that killed 24 military men just north of Montreal. And three years after that, in 1946, an international commercial flight crashed soon after taking off from Newfoundland, killing all 39 people on board. A key factor in both those crashes was unfavourable weather conditions, but on the day that Flight 108 crashed, the skies were clear. An investigation into the crash was immediately opened by Canadian Pacific Airlines.
Starting point is 00:14:32 After a preliminary investigation, the airline released a statement that read in part, early inquiries by line officials reveal no explanation of the accident, although the possibility, of an explosion in the luggage is not ruled out. The rear end of the plane, it was said, was fairly well intact, and all controls at the front were believed to be intact as well. The airline stated that there was nothing to indicate the crash had been caused by the weather or any mechanical issues with the plane, adding that over 50 million passengers had been flown on that route without any incident. Behind the scenes, though, despite the initial explosion that caused the crash, the plane itself had not caught on fire.
Starting point is 00:15:23 And investigators had found that the propellers were bent forward in a way that indicated they were spinning right up until the moment of impact when the plane crashed into the hillside. So engine failure was obviously not the cause of the crash. After Canadian Pacific Airlines announced that they could not rule out the crash, possibility of an explosion in the luggage compartment, a coroner's jury was scheduled. Coroner Paul Marceau found no evidence of gross negligence and agreed with the airline that the likely cause of the crash seemed to be a mysterious explosion originating from one of the luggage storage compartments. That particular section of the plane was near the aisle that led from the cabin to the control room, on the left side of the plane.
Starting point is 00:16:15 The passenger seat that was closest to that compartment, the seat that Henri Paul Boucher had been occupying, had since been found a quarter of a mile from the main site of the wreck, indicating that it had been expelled from the plane while it was still in the air. And his body was finally located two weeks after the crash, a similar distance from the wreckage. At least his family got closure. When it came to figuring out how whatever it was that had exploded ended up on the plane in the first place, investigators spoke to airline and aviation authorities
Starting point is 00:16:56 who provided information about the procedures for checking in passengers and luggage. This led them to zero in on the Quebec City stopover. Because it was the final destination for some passengers, a special section of the plane's luggage compartment had been designated to ensure their luggage could be easily retrieved, leaving space behind to store the luggage of the new passengers getting on, along with a number of parcels and packages to be sent via airmail.
Starting point is 00:17:28 The reason this luggage compartment became a focus of the investigation was that this was where the explosion was believed to have happened. Investigators started looking into the passengers who got off, the ones who got on, their luggage, of course, those mail packages. They examined and itemized every entry in the airmail logbook, learning that all the packages on board had been registered by established shipping companies. That is, except one.
Starting point is 00:18:01 The only parcel in that luggage compartment that wasn't from a shipping company had apparently been dropped off by a woman in a taxi at the last minute. An airport employee remembered her as tall, stocky and dressed all in black, as she rushed to get her parcel on board the plane before it departed just minutes later. According to the logbooks, the box weighed about 25 pounds or just over 10 kilos. It was stamped with the word fragile, and according to the address label, it was to be sent to a Mr. Alfred Plouffe at 180 Levile. Rale Street, Bay Como.
Starting point is 00:18:44 Investigators looked into this person and soon realized the name and address were fake, so the next step was to search for the mysterious woman independently, starting with locating the taxi driver who had driven her to the airport. He described her as an elegant woman who actually made the trip miserable, ordering him to drive slowly and be careful because her parcel was fragile. The taxi driver wasn't a suspicious person, so just wrote it off as her being fussy. When they arrived at the airport, she told him to wait so he could drive her back home. He told investigators he didn't know her name, but what he did have was the address that he dropped her off at.
Starting point is 00:19:32 Investigators decided to stake out the street, hoping that they would find this mysterious woman in black. Meanwhile, a journalist for the Canadian press decided to make some phone calls of investigation himself. Edmund Schatz had been tipped off to a story that a woman had taken a taxi from a downtown railway station to the airport with a parcel to be shipped on that fatal flight. When the journalist found out that the police had located the taxi driver, he spent a full day investigating and making phone calls to find. out more, convinced that there was something nefarious going on. While he didn't learn the name or identity of the woman in black, what he did discover was that she was just the runner, someone else
Starting point is 00:20:22 had given her the parcel. Fired up about unraveling a mystery, the journalist started reporting on his findings before the police released the information publicly. This effectively ruined their stakeout operation. As funerals were being arranged for the victims of the crash, the media began referring to the mysterious woman as La Corbeau, or The Raven in French, and for a time, the investigation stalled. But ten days after the crash, there was a lucky break.
Starting point is 00:20:59 A man came forward to tell the police that he knew who the woman in black was. It was his younger sister, and the man told investigators that if they went to see her, she would be able to tell them who was responsible for the package. Investigators had their next lead. Marguerite Peter was a middle-aged mother of two who lived in Lower Town, an area of the historic neighbourhood of Quebec City, now known as Old Quebec. And the police didn't have much tracking to do, because she was actually in hospital.
Starting point is 00:21:47 It appeared she had tried to take her own life by overdosing on a sedative, which was grounds for arrest since suicide was illegal in Canada at the time. Petrified, she told the police that the morning of September 9th, the day of the plane crash, she received an unexpected phone call from a friend and business associate who asked her to rush and meet him at the train station. He said he needed her to do him a favour. According to Marguerite, her friend ushered her to a storage locker that contained a box. He carefully picked it up and passed it to her slowly,
Starting point is 00:22:29 telling her that it was a fragile statue that his wife was supposed to take with her on a flight that day. He explained that unfortunately his wife had hastily left for the airport without it, but there was still time to rush it onto the plane since the scheduled flight hadn't left yet. Marguerite was only too happy to help her friend out. The instructions were as follows. Marguerite was to take the box to the airport and proceed directly to an agent to check it in as airmail. If she happened to see the man's wife there, she wasn't to bother her with the package as she would be preoccupied with boarding the plane. Marguerite told police that she did exactly as instructed and then caught the same taxis.
Starting point is 00:23:17 back home again. When she was told that the package likely contained dynamite, Marguerite was shocked. After police put their important new witness in protective custody, pending charges for attempted suicide, they announced to the press, quote, We have definite proof that explosives were placed aboard the plane to get rid of a woman, and we believe we can prove who did it. The name of Marguerite's friend and business associate was J. Albert Gay, a 31-year-old married father of one who lived in Quebec City. His wife was 28-year-old Rita Gay, one of the passengers who boarded Flight 108 during the stop over there.
Starting point is 00:24:05 As you'll recall, Rita was the only victim whose face was still able to be recognised through the bruises. After her death, her husband, Jaelbert Gay, found himself a single father to the couple's four-year-old daughter. As it turned out, he was already known to first responders because they intercepted him as he walked up to the wreckage. After learning about the crash and the hours after it happened, Jais Albert and his brothers-in-law had driven to the area and trekked over to where the crash site seemed to be. After investigators told them to turn back because there were no survivors, he begged them to get to the bottom of what caused the crash. Jé albert Gaye had been responsible for organizing a lavish funeral for Rita,
Starting point is 00:24:57 ordering a five-foot cross made up of red roses to lay on top of her coffin. In the middle of the cross was a separate heart made up of white roses and inscribed with the words from your beloved Albert. And after the service, he was observed shaking hands with every person who came to pay their respects and were seen taking leave from his own grieving to console the loved ones of the other passengers on the flight. Aside from the fact that Je al-Bergé was the one who had given that package to Marguerite Peter, he otherwise seemed to be an ordinary grief-stricken husband. But when investigators did some quick digging around, they soon made an ill-a-old.
Starting point is 00:25:46 interesting discovery. Just two months beforehand, Jaal Beir had been charged with attempted assault with a deadly weapon, after using it to threaten a young woman who was also believed to be his mistress. The assault charge had been downgraded to a legal possession of a weapon, but the circumstances and timing, in the context of the plane crash, were highly suspicious. And there was more. They discovered that in the weeks before the plane crash, Jealbert had taken a life insurance policy in his wife Rita's name, which would pay $10,000 in the event of her death.
Starting point is 00:26:27 And when he purchased her plane ticket, he paid 50 cents to purchase an additional flight insurance policy. All up, if his wife died in an accident on that specific flight, the payout would be $30,000, which today would be worth over $350,000,000, and it would all go to him as beneficiary. On September 23rd, 1949, two weeks after the bombing, police set out to pick up Jaelbert Gay and bring him to the station for questioning. He had been staying at the home of his in-laws,
Starting point is 00:27:09 but he suddenly left for his mother's place, which is where the police found him. He was arrested and the next day charged with murdering his wife, Rita. As investigators continued to gather evidence and conduct interviews, the media had been reporting everything they knew about the mysterious event and the people who may have been involved. At trial, the full picture would come out, but at this point it was clear that the case boiled down to this. Jé Albert Gaye decided his wife had to die,
Starting point is 00:27:47 so he put her on that plane along with a bomb. Quebec locals were outraged when they realised all those other passengers were just collateral damage in one man's quest to murder his wife. Some cynical locals remembered a recent tragedy in Toronto where a boat caught fire and 132 passengers were tragically killed. There were reportedly many sarcastic comments made that Je al-Bergé had probably hired someone to set the ship ablaze just to get rid of a pet he no longer wanted. Dark humor, but it drove home just how senseless and absurd the crime was.
Starting point is 00:28:31 Jé albert Gaye seemed unfazed by his arrest, not to mention the possibility that if he was found guilty, he would surely be sent to the gallows. In fact, he boldly threatened to sue the government for a loss of earnings, saying he'd been unfairly detained. But the public weren't having it. At the preliminary hearing held in the weeks following his arrest, mobs of angry people congregated to get a glimpse of him,
Starting point is 00:29:01 some of them spitting at the man who took down a plane of innocent people, including two families, just because he was having problems in his personal life. After the hearing, a trial was scheduled, but there was some news that caused a delay. As you'll remember, there were three passengers on the plane who were business executives from a New York City copper company. One of the men, Russell J. Parker, had an 18-year-old son who was obviously devastated by his father's death. Just two months after the crash, Patrick Parker was arrested and charged for armed robbery.
Starting point is 00:29:41 He told police he needed money for a flight from Boston to Montreal, adding, quote, I was going to Canada because I wanted to get revenge and kill the man responsible for my father's death, the man who had the bomb put on the plane before takeoff. As a result of this information, Je albert Gay's defense counsel asked for adequate protection for his client at trial, just in case there was another shot at his life. In a statement to the media, the lawyer commented about the presumption of innocence, how it would be a tragedy to add a 24th victim in error to an already lengthy list.
Starting point is 00:30:28 Jé albert Gay's trial for the murder of his wife started in February of the next year, 1950. In his opening address, the Crown prosecutor told the court that through witness testimony, they were going to prove that Jé Albert Gay orchestrated the purchase of dynamite, the construction of a time bomb and the placing of that bomb onto the flight that he had already booked his wife on, that he spent a great deal of effort coming up with a plan to make sure there would be no incriminating evidence found on the plane wreck, but something backfired which led to his arrest. And then, woven through the testimony of 80 crown witnesses, the court heard the story of what Je al-Ber-Gay did, and it's a strange, strange.
Starting point is 00:31:17 tale. Joseph Albert Gay was born in September of 1917, the youngest of five children and a working class Quebec City family. When he was just five, his railway worker father tragically passed away in a train accident, and the family moved to a poorer area of Quebec City. In French-speaking Quebec, it's customary to give children two hyphenated Christian names, but many people choose to go by the second name in their daily life. So Albert was what his friends and family called him in childhood, but as he grew up, he developed a need
Starting point is 00:32:03 to set himself apart from others, so he swapped out the Joseph for just the lettered J, forming the distinctive name of J. Albert. An article in the New Yorker written by E.J. Khan Jr. described J. Albert as someone who always made an impression on people, a flashy dresser with handsome features, curly black hair and an engaging smile. He went out of his way to charm people. In fact, he had been using his charisma to hustle since he was young. By age 16, he was a regular in the area, someone who bought and sold things for profit, like watches and jewelry. And as his hustle started paying off, he liked to make a public show of giving money to those who needed it. It wasn't so much because he was a charitable person, but he enjoyed the attention he received from his generosity, and he also enjoyed having people
Starting point is 00:33:04 owe him favours. When World War II started, the federal arsenal became the main employer in the Quebec City region. In fact, most of the people in the lower town area were employed there to help produce firearms to be used in the war. Jé Albert would usually have been drafted to the military to serve, but he managed to avoid it by applying for a deferment. During this time, he worked at the Arsenal as a machine operator. and supplemented his income with his jewelry resale business, eventually saving enough to become one of the few residents of the area who owned a motor car. But before that, soon after he had started working at the arsenal,
Starting point is 00:33:52 a woman named Rita Morel had caught his eye. The couple, then aged in their early 20s, married that year and moved into a modest apartment. Margaret Peter, the woman who carried the package on board the plane, worked at the Arsenal too. In fact, that's where she met Jaelle Berge. Marguerite was in her mid-30s, nine years his senior, and his flashy personality impressed her. She'd reportedly had a rough childhood that became a rough adulthood, and she established a reputation as a hard, industrious woman with a caustic tongue. She had two children, one from her first marriage and another from her second,
Starting point is 00:34:41 although it was reported that she'd given birth to many more children who weren't in her care. While Marguerite was working at the Arsenal, she grew very fond of Je Albert, flattered that someone with such drive and promise would pay her attention. She considered herself a rung or two lower than him on the social class ladder. They soon established a quid pro quo-type business relationship, was Jé Albert lending her money from time to time when she needed it, and in exchange she was available to help him out when he needed it. Although Marguerite told people she looked at Jé albert like a son,
Starting point is 00:35:26 her own husband wasn't so convinced and accused her of having an affair with the younger man. There doesn't appear to be any evidence that this was the case, and both parties denied it. In fact, Jaalbert scoffed when he heard the rumours, saying, Have you seen her? After World War II ended and the Arsenal factory shut down, all those workers were out of a job. Marguerite was always on the lookout for opportunities to earn money,
Starting point is 00:35:58 and while she still didn't suffer fools lightly, she was generally quite agreeable when it came to shady business deals. She became known as the woman to see if you needed to lay low, buy illegal alcohol or have an abortion performed. Facing the same employment prospects, Je albert amped up his jewellery side hustle and decided to use his home as a base for a travelling salesman job. He would peddle his wares, engagement rings, watches and other trinkets in local Quebec towns, using his charm and charisma to deliver winning sales pitches. He saw opportunities for business deals wherever he went. When his clients told him they had broken watches,
Starting point is 00:36:44 he devised a scheme where he would offer to repair them as part of his service. But he wasn't repairing them himself, he was just the middleman. He took them to an associate, a skilled watchmaker and repairman, who were said to be a wizard with his hands. and pass the work off as his own. But while his business interests seemed to go well, his family always seemed prone to disaster. Their house was broken into and jewelry was stolen,
Starting point is 00:37:17 one of his businesses burnt down more than once, and just months before the plane crash that would kill his wife, her car had suddenly burst into flames while being inspected by a mechanic. That poor mechanic would spend months in hospital being treated, being treated for burn injuries. Each time these disasters happened, J. Albert would always express relief that he was insured, and then he would receive a lump sum from his insurance company.
Starting point is 00:37:49 Along with these odd occurrences, though, he liked being thought of as a charitable man and was involved with a Catholic fraternal or men's only organization called the Knights of Columbus, who promoted charitable endeavors and also provided financial security to their members. Jealbert had been recommended by local priests for the highest honor in the Knights of Columbus, but he was rejected at the last minute when they discovered he had a substantial amount of
Starting point is 00:38:19 debts in his name that he didn't seem to be paying down. Jaalbert was devastated because he wanted the clout, but found that all he had to do to get the same attention was to lend money to people. One day he approached Marguerite Peter with an offer. She needed money and this suited him well because he knew someone who desperately needed a place to stay, his teenage mistress, Marie-Aange Robitai. Jealbert was in his late 20s when he met the 17-year-old waitress at a cafe she worked at, although she apparently told him she was 19.
Starting point is 00:39:00 And he wasn't exactly truthful either, leading her to believe he was. was a successful businessman and eligible bachelor. They struck up a conversation, felt an attraction and started a relationship. For Je Albert, it was, of course, an affair, and he fell madly in love with the young waitress. Rita was busy keeping house and caring for their two-year-old daughter, Lees now, too busy to give him all the attention he clearly craved. But Marijonge was unencumbered. with seemingly endless time and energy to devote to her new suitor.
Starting point is 00:39:38 The first few months were a whirlwind. But at some point, Marie Ange discovered that he hadn't been truthful about who he was, that he was married, the very opposite of an eligible bachelor. But he declared he was planning to leave his wife eventually and used this to manipulate Marantz into continuing the affair. The problem was, divorce wasn't a very important. viable option. In the 1940s, the Roman Catholic Church still had a high level of influence over social and political matters in Quebec, so Jaalbert felt he had no choice but to continue the
Starting point is 00:40:19 affair in secret. Marantre did introduce him to her parents, but she told them that his name was Roger Ange, and he was a successful businessman and eligible bachelor. He courted her several times a week and her parents were thrilled when he presented her with an engagement ring. While it seemed like a very important gesture to make, it really wasn't that grand for a traveling jewelry salesman who had many engagement rings in inventory. It was an easy way to keep up the ruse with her parents. But in other situations, Marie-onge struggled to keep the sordid nature of their relationship a secret. When she said something that she shouldn't have, she was a secret, and and people started talking, Marguerite Peter was often called upon to smooth things over.
Starting point is 00:41:11 It's not that the couple had to hide completely, though. Jé albert had started taking Marie-Onges with him on his sales trips to local towns and cities in Quebec, and he always introduced her as his wife. The whole thing blew up eventually, though, when the rumours that Jé albert had been having an affair with a teenager reached his wife. When Rita learned the name and identity of the young woman, she showed up at Marie-onje's parents' house to tell them the truth, that the man they knew as Roger Ange was not a bachelor.
Starting point is 00:41:49 He was a married father of one named Je albert Gay. Perhaps Rita hoped that this revelation would mean the end of this sordid affair, and she could have her husband back. But it backfired. Mariange's parents were so angry at the deception that they threw their daughter out of the house, prompting her to contact Jealbert to help her find somewhere else to live. He called in a favour from a friend,
Starting point is 00:42:16 asking Marguerite Peter and her husband to put Marianz up at their apartment, and Jaalbert would pay them rent. Marguerite was always eager to get involved with new business deals, especially when it came to Jaalbert, so she was more than happy to oblige. Marillonge moved into the apartment at the end of 1948, about nine months before the plane crash. Just a month or two after that, it was the winter months of 1949, an 18-year-old Mariange decided she'd had enough of the situation with J. Albert and the problems that it had caused with her parents.
Starting point is 00:43:00 She decided to end the affair and return home, arranging with her parents to send her money for a train fare, and to meet her at the station. But Jael Berge followed her onto the train and threatened to make a scene if she didn't get off immediately. The threat worked. He took her back to the apartment and after she was asleep, he hid her gloves and coat. It was freezing outside,
Starting point is 00:43:26 and he knew that she wouldn't be able to escape without them. The next morning, he bit her on her face several times, a cruel act designed to humiliate her and render her too embarrassed to go out in public. And it worked. She stayed put for a while longer, at least. In the meantime, Rita Gay decided she was fed up with her husband's antics. Trying to shut down the affair hadn't worked. So in a raid, she packed some things, took their daughter, Lees and moved in with her parents
Starting point is 00:44:03 until she could figure out her next move. Jealbert wasn't too phased about this as he thought he still had Mariange in his clutches, but she was getting fed up too. Not only was his abusive behaviour ramping up, but she started to realise that he was never going to leave his wife. As soon as she was able, Mariange escaped back to her parents. Jealbert knew he couldn't show up there, so he tracked her down to a restaurant where she was with.
Starting point is 00:44:38 working as a waitress. One night as she was walking through the darkened narrow streets to work, he accosted her with a gun, threatening to shoot himself and maybe her as well if she didn't return to him. Marianz told him to leave her alone, and he fired a few shots in the air to prove a point. When a police officer heard the commotion, Jaalbert ran off, and the officer escorted Marillonge to the restaurant where she worked and waited there for a while in case the man with the gun showed up. When Jaalbert thought the coast was clear, he entered the restaurant only to be arrested on the spot for attempted assault with a deadly weapon. He asked Marguerite Peter to hire a lawyer for him, who was able to reduce his charge to one count of carrying a gun illegally,
Starting point is 00:45:30 with a fine of $25. But Jaalbert didn't give him. But Jaalbert didn't give him. up lightly. Days after he was released from prison, he was able to convince Marianz to meet up with him, saying that he had something urgent to tell her. He said that his wife Rita believed that Marianch had besmirched or damaged their family name and was planning on having her arrested. It wasn't true, and it was a completely nonsensical point to make, but Mariange was terrified. Jé Albert suggested she needed to go to Montreal. to lay low until the coast was clear, and he offered to go with her. Seeing this as her only option, she agreed.
Starting point is 00:46:16 In Montreal, Marantz saw a whole different side of Jaalbert. He acted as though they were already married, and was really making an effort, treating her much better than she was used to, funding shopping sprees and generally being attentive to her needs. He continued to remind her that he was going to leave his wife, wife, and then they could finally get married for real. He surprised her with plane tickets for them both to fly from Montreal to Bay Como, soaring along the stunning north shore of the same Saleron River where his wife would meet her death in a twisted pile of metal. Marijonj was air-sick
Starting point is 00:46:56 for most of the way, so she didn't think much of the fact that Je albert had moved to a vacant window seat with a watch in hand, intently timing the journey as he watched the terrain out the window. A week later, Marantz realized she'd been had again. She told Je albert she was sick of his stories and his promises, and she was leaving again to return home for good. He allowed her to walk out, but handed her a note that read, I love you terribly, we'll be together again very soon. There was a P.S. on the letter instructing her to destroy it, but she didn't. Jé albert Gay thought long and hard about his predicament. He clearly had no self-awareness about his abusive treatment and manipulation of Marijonge
Starting point is 00:47:51 and concluded that the only reason she wanted to leave him was just because he couldn't marry her, because he was already married to Rita. He decided that marrying Marijonge was the ultimate solution to all his problems. the only thing that would ensure both of them lived a happy life. He had to win her back. But divorce wasn't an option. Jaalbert had thought about killing Rita before, but now his personal situation had devolved to a point where he decided to explore that idea some more.
Starting point is 00:48:26 He also had to keep his jewelry business afloat, so he flew back to Bay Como with two suitcases full of jewelry to sell. as he continued to flesh out his plan. But something was off that summer, and business was not booming, so he cut his losses and returned home, keeping the suitcases of jewelry and storage at Bay Como for next time. The plan to get rid of his wife became his primary focus, but he knew that he couldn't be the one to kill Rita.
Starting point is 00:49:02 It was well known that he was an unfaithful spouse, and the couple were all but estranged since Rie. Rita and their daughter were living with her parents. Jaalbert knew that if Rita was to be killed, all eyes would be on him, so he had to work out a way to cause her death without any chance of it coming back on him. He decided that the first step was to get back into his wife's good graces, at least for appearances. He showed up at his in-law's house and pleaded with her to reconcile their family for good,
Starting point is 00:49:35 telling her that he had seen the error of his ways. Rita took him back again in good faith. So now that the couple were not estranged anymore, Jaalbert discussed his idea with a few associates that he thought he could trust. But one of them was deeply alarmed by what he was suggesting and wrote an anonymous letter to Rita saying, quote, Watch out because something is going to happen to you.
Starting point is 00:50:03 This was in early August about, a month before the plane crash. The note was so vague that she likely didn't know what to make of it, let alone what action she should be taking, if any. In the meantime, Je albert identified two people that would be able to help him with his plan. Marguerite Peter was one, and the other was her older brother, Jean-Eru Ruwe. He was a bachelor of around 50 years old who used crutches and a wheelchair. He had tuberculosis of both hips, which caused him much pain, restricted movement, and caused the deformity of his limbs. Jean-Aru struggled to walk, but his fast and agile hands made up for the loss of function in his legs,
Starting point is 00:50:51 and he earned a living as a skilled watchmaker. When Jaalbert had that side hustle repairing broken watches for clients, Jean-Aru was the watchmaker he took them to for repair. Now, to persuade the brother and sister duo to help him out with this new plan, Jé Albert wanted to leverage the fact that both had financial issues of their own. Marguerite owed him $600, and he promised her that he would write the debt off if she agreed to help him. He also promised to pay Jean Eru some money to get out of a pickle he was in, as well as giving him a discount on jewelry,
Starting point is 00:51:28 with the possibility of buying him a new car if everything went well. After agreeing to terms, tasks were assigned, and everyone went on their way. Je albert resumed the show of reconciliation with his wife, taking Rita on a week-long vacation where he made a special romantic effort to be kind to her. He loved-bombed her, just like he had with Marie-Aange, likely hoping she would tell everyone the good news about their successful reconciliation, and that would later serve to alleviate any possible suspicion that he was involved in her death. When the couple returned from their vacation, he checked in with his brother-sister accomplices to see where they were up to with their tasks.
Starting point is 00:52:19 Marguerite had been tasked with buying dynamite and she gave a false name when signing off on the purchase of 20-half-pound sticks of dynamite, detonating caps and a length of fuse. At the trial, she testified that Jaalbert told her it was to clear some farmland, and she knew nothing of the bomb. As for Jean-Eru, he would testify that Jaalbert said he needed to blast some tree stumps and asked him to put together a detonation device for that purpose. But Jean-Eru had no idea where to start, so the two men put their heads together and decided a time bomb would be constructed, with a battery, a detonator and detonating cap, as well as an alarm clock to set the time that the bomb would explode. A test version was first built without the dynamite, and when the detonator went off at the set time, the men cheered. They had just built a time bomb, the likes of which had never really been seen in Canada before.
Starting point is 00:53:24 Jaalbert still hadn't made a final decision about how he would use the bomb, but he was leaning towards a plane crash. That way he could eliminate Rita and avoid being blamed for it. It's highly likely that he'd been inspired by another aviation tragedy that happened a few months earlier. In May of 1949, a domestic Philippine Airlines passenger jet exploded and plunged into the sea near Manila, killing 13 people. The Canadian press reported on the tragedy and the developments, including the announcement of an arrest. it would come out that a jealous man had hired some criminals to conceal a time bomb on the plane
Starting point is 00:54:07 that his romantic rival was going to be on. The assumption was that Jaalbert had followed the news and was inspired to book a test flight to Bay Como, where an air-sick Marijonj was completely unaware that there was an alternate reason for the flight. Jaalbert decided a plane crash was the way to go. But he had a new challenge, it was to figure out a way to get Rita onto the plane in the first place.
Starting point is 00:54:36 Air travel wasn't typically something that married women did without their husbands, so he had to come up with a persuasive reason. He remembered those two suitcases of jewelry that he had put in storage in the city of Bay Como. All he had to do was persuade Rita to fly up there from Quebec City and bring them back. It was the perfect solution, and it was the perfect solution, and, she wouldn't be coming back. Rita wasn't really enthusiastic about the prospect, but since her wayward husband had been making a noticeable effort lately and she felt he was sincere about reconciling their family, she agreed to do it. Jaalbert went to the Canadian Pacific Airlines ticket office
Starting point is 00:55:23 and purchased a return ticket for his wife on the next available plane to Bay Como, which left in three days. He knew that if everything went to plan, she would not be needing that return ticket, but it was still important to deflect any future speculation of his involvement. At the same time, he also purchased the flight insurance policy, which paid out in the event of a crash. He'd already teed up that life insurance policy and Rita's name a few weeks earlier, and he called to confirm that the policy was still active. If Rita died, on that exact flight by accident, he would be paid $30,000, which he reportedly intended to use to fund his new life with Marie-Aange.
Starting point is 00:56:14 With all those details confirmed, Jaalbert focused on three remaining tasks. One, maintain appropriate attentiveness to his wife and child right up until Rita was on that plane. Two, make sure that Jean-Aru was on track to finish engineering the final version of the bomb and three ready up Marguerite to deliver the package to the airport and ensure it gets on the plane. It was September 9th, 1949, the day of the flight, and Jaalbert woke up early to finish off the bomb package with John A. Rue. All they had to do was set the detonation time on the alarm clock and armed the device. When it came to setting the time, Jaalbert had done his homework. His plan was for the plane to plunge into the Saint-Laurent River, one of the largest rivers in North America,
Starting point is 00:57:22 with a width of between one and two kilometers. And thanks to that crater left by the meteorite millions of years ago, the river has a depth of up to 250 feet, the height of a 23-story building. He figured it would be impossible to investigate the wreckage deep underwater. During that test flight he took with Marijonch, he determined that after takeoff it took 20 minutes before the plane started flying directly over the river. The flight he booked Rita on was scheduled to leave at about 10.20 a.m., so the timer was set for 10.45. With that, Jaalbert and Jean-Eru carefully wrapped the small but heavy parcel and labelled it as fragile in bold letters. along with fictional names and addresses for the sender and the destination. Everything had to look completely normal, so as not to raise any suspicions.
Starting point is 00:58:23 The clock was literally ticking now, so from this point on, everything had to be carefully timed to schedule. Package in hand, Jaalbert's next stop was the railway station, where he'd arranged to meet Marguerite Peter at 8.30am. He carefully handed her. her the package, along with money to pay for the airport shipping charges as well as a return taxi fare. Marguerite arrived at the airport in Quebec City just in time to rush the package up to the airmail desk. The agent noticed that the smallish box with the fragile label was
Starting point is 00:59:04 much heavier than it appeared to be. This would normally have been grounds for inspection, but there wasn't any time because the plane was due to take off any minute. The agent went against his better judgment and let it through, something he would later say he greatly regretted because it may have prevented the tragedy. In any event, the fragile box was carefully strapped into the front left side luggage compartment just in time. Now, if the plane had have taken off at exactly the scheduled time,
Starting point is 00:59:38 the bomb would have detonated directly over the Celeron River, just as Jé albert had planned. But unfortunately, it was late. It was only about four minutes, but Jé albert had not allowed any wiggle room in the timing, so when the bomb detonated at 10.45 a.m., the plane had only been in the air for 16 minutes. What this meant was, instead of plunging into the river and sinking to the bottom, It hurtled into rocky bluffs and shattered in a forest. At Jaal Be's murder trial, a ticket sales desk employee testified that he and his four-year-old daughter came to the desk a few hours later to inquire about the flight Rita Gay was on.
Starting point is 01:00:28 When he was told the plane had gone down, he became hysterical. An insurance company representative told the court that just a week after the crash, he tried to claim the insurance payout. There was also testimony from a pilot, a chemistry professor, airport agents, medical legal experts, railway investigators, aeronautical engineers and other experts,
Starting point is 01:00:53 about the various scientific tests conducted that led them to determine that it was likely a time bomb that had been strapped into the front-left luggage compartment. Traces of a dynamite explosion were found in the wreckage, with physical evidence from a smearment. smashed dry-cell battery that detonated the blast and pieces of an alarm clock that likely timed the explosion. This part of the trial was long and technical testimony, too much for the once
Starting point is 01:01:22 distraught widower in the prisoner's dock. Jaalbert fell asleep. Even though all the passengers had died on the flight, the crown only had to prove that Jaelle Baer intentionally murdered his wife, Rita Gay. The coroner went through her all. autopsy results, telling the court that practically all of the bones in her body were broken. Her skull shattered, her lungs had burst open, and there was an itemized list of damage to each of her organs. Her cause of death was a general hemorrhage as a result of a crushing of the head. And while it was possible that it was a result of the explosion, there was nothing to indicate that Rita was dead before the plane crashed into the mountainside. Photographs of her battle,
Starting point is 01:02:11 badly bruised and broken body were admitted into evidence, resulting in audible gasps from those in attendance. Jé Albert broke his composure for the first time and wept. He had asked friends at Rita's funeral if they thought she had suffered. There was no evidence that she didn't. When it was time for Marijon's Robitai to take the stand, the public was so desperate to hear her story that they lined up at the courthouse at midnight the night before to make sure they got a seat. The teenager had effectively been reduced to tabloid
Starting point is 01:02:49 fodder in the months since Jaalbert's arrest. On the stand, she detailed the two-year affair she had with him before the plane crash and testified that she had no knowledge about his plan. She said that he contacted her after the crash in the brief window of time before he was arrested and she told him she was sorry to hear about the death of his wife. His only comment was that it was too bad, and then he changed the subject, asking Marantz if she still loved him. She told the court, quote,
Starting point is 01:03:23 I said I was quiet at home and that my family didn't want me to go out with him. He said that was all right because he couldn't go out with anybody for six months. Clearly, it was all part of his plan to deflect any suspicion. As you'll remember, the reason the police were able to identify the woman in black was because 10 days after the crash, a man came forward and said she was his sister, Marguerite Peter. It should be noted that this brother wasn't Jean-Aruh the watchmaker, but a different sibling. Police found her in hospital where they were told she tried to kill herself by overdosing on sedatives. Because attempted suicide was illegal in Canada at the time,
Starting point is 01:04:13 A week or so later, she was charged. Unlike her business associate, Marguerite wasn't facing the death penalty, although it would have been highly ironic if she were to be found guilty of attempted suicide and sent to the gallows to be killed by the state instead. She was up for a possible two-year prison sentence. At her trial for attempted suicide, which started just a few weeks before Jaalbert's trial for murder, 41-year-old Marguerite Peter denied that she ever tried to kill herself and said that she'd actually gone to hospital for a completely different reason. As you'll remember, investigators had staked out her street after the taxi driver gave them her address, but she was nowhere to be found.
Starting point is 01:05:03 This was no coincidence. She told the court that Jael Berge had already tipped her off, arriving at her house in a panic waving a copy of the latest. newspaper, he pointed to that article by Edmund Schatz that announced the police were looking for a woman in black, and he told Marguerite that it was only a matter of time before they would be knocking at her door, and then it would be over for her. Marguerite testified that at this point, he told her the parcel that she couriered to the airport had actually contained a bomb. She replied, you told me the parcel only contained a statue, and he said it didn't matter. They would make no exception for her.
Starting point is 01:05:47 She would be blamed for killing the 23 passengers on board Flight 108, he said. And if she wanted to avoid being sent to the gallows, she had two options. Leave town immediately or kill herself now before the police could find her. After dishing out some handy tips for planning a suicide at home, he told her. told her that whatever she decided, she was to leave a note taking full responsibility for the bomb. The story she was to give about motive was that she thought it was Jaalbert on the plane, and she wanted to kill him in an effort to get her $600 debt to him written off. When Jaalbert left after delivering this grim news, Marguerite was terrified,
Starting point is 01:06:34 and later that evening she was taken to hospital with severe abdominal. pain, likely caused by all the stress. Her doctor corroborated this, testifying that he'd prescribed a sedative to treat her abdominal pain and it caused her to fall into a deep sleep. Blood tests showed no sign of overdose and Marguerite Peter was acquitted of attempted suicide. After Marguerite told her older brother that she was in hospital because a man threatened her and told her to kill herself, he called the police straight away. Just before arresting officers caught up to Jaelbert Gay, he was awarded a check for $1,000 from the Knights of Columbus.
Starting point is 01:07:21 The Catholic Manzoni organization hoped it would bring him comfort and alleviate the cost of Rita's funeral, and he graciously accepted it. A detective working on the case would describe him as how he would describe him as having the gall of a canal horse. In closing arguments, the Crown prosecutor would tell the court that Jaelbert Gay had tricked his two accomplices into taking part in his scheme to kill his wife, giving them serious tasks to carry out, but for innocent reasons, like blasting land or tree stumps. There wasn't much to work with when it came to a defence, and his lawyer asked the jury
Starting point is 01:08:03 to decide whether the crash was an accident or a crime. Quote, if it was a crime, then it was the most atrocious, most barbaric and most abominable in history. But even if it was a crime, this does not mean that the accused is responsible for this abominable tragedy.
Starting point is 01:08:23 The defense's case essentially consisted of a collection of witnesses who testified that Jaalbert had a habit of buying insurance. It wasn't indicative of. his guilt. The three-week trial made for many sensational headlines and roused more interest as the days went on. On the final date, the courtroom was packed right up against the side of the judge's bench. The jury took only 17 minutes to return with a guilty verdict. Jaalbert Gay stood expressionless behind the brass railing of the prisoner's box, steering at his feet. The judge was overcome with a motion and struggled to speak at times, as he told the 32-year-old that there was no name for the heinous
Starting point is 01:09:11 crime he committed. Quote, The hatred you had for your wife, and the vice that gnawed at you, made you commit the diabolical crime of which you've been accused. The vicious passion which drove you to the conquest of a young girl who was disgusted with you led you to this incredible thing of not hesitating to bring death to 22 other persons to rid yourself of the mother of your child. Your punishment will be to be hanged by the neck,
Starting point is 01:09:41 June 23rd next, until death. It would later come out that the plane crash wasn't the first time Jaelbert Gay had tried to murder his wife. About five months beforehand, he reportedly approached a friend of the family and offered him $500 to murder Rita by poisoning her wine. The friend told Jaalbert he was crazy, and refused to do it.
Starting point is 01:10:12 After the guilty verdict, Jaalbert was moved to Bordeaux prison in Montreal to await his trip to the gallows. He tried to tell his story to magazines from his death sentence cell, apparently to teach readers a moral lesson and to get some money to put aside for his five-year-old daughter. While there, he also wrote a lengthy statement
Starting point is 01:10:34 to the Crown prosecutor, where he not only admitted his own guilt, but said that he had not acted alone. As it appeared, he was angry that he was to be hanged while his accomplices, Marguerite Peter and Jean-Eru-Rouet, got away Scott-Free. When investigators asked him to give more details, he said they had been in on it from the beginning.
Starting point is 01:11:01 The Crown felt there was enough evidence to charge Jean-A-Rue with being an accessory to murder, since he was the one that put the bomb together. and at his trial there were new witnesses. A few acquaintances knew he was building the device, but he gave them inconsistent excuses for why it was needed, from blasting farmland to blowing fish out of a lake. Another acquaintance testified that the night before the plane crash,
Starting point is 01:11:29 she overheard Jean-Aru tell Je Albert, it will be ready on time. And as the news broke that the plane had crashed into the forest, he was overheard saying, that was not the way it was supposed to happen. Jean-Aru-Ru-A was found guilty of being an accessory to murder and was sentenced to death. In the meantime, his sister had been arrested again.
Starting point is 01:11:57 After testifying at his trial, she was charged with intimidating witnesses and perjury, and finally accessory to murder. Even though Marguerite purchased that dynamite, she always maintained that she had no idea the package she carried to the airport contained a bomb until after the crash. Her case fell apart when another taxi driver friend testified that Marguerite had come to him with a strange proposal. This was just before Jaelle Bergue decided the bomb would be put on the plane. She asked him to take Rita for a drive in his taxi, along with a package that contained a time bomb,
Starting point is 01:12:38 and he would be told when the timer was going to go off so he would know when to jump out of the car. It was a wild plan that required a taxi driver to blow up his own vehicle to kill a stranger he had no motive to want dead. When he refused to have any part of it, Marguerite backtracked and claimed she was only joking. Just like her brother, Marguerite Peter was found guilty of being an accessory to murder and sentenced to hand. On January the 12th, 1951, 34-year-old Jaalbert Gay walked to the gallows at Bordeaux prison. His last words translated from French were, At least I die famous. 18 months after that, 52-year-old Jean-Aru-Rue was taken to the gallows in his wheelchair.
Starting point is 01:13:38 He was hanged while he was sitting down. 43-year-old Marguerite made her own trip to the gallows on January 9, 1953. She was the 13th and last woman to be hanged in Canada. It would come out later that well-known Quebec journalist and novelist, Roger Le Malé, actually lived next door to Jael Berge for a time and reported from his trial. He would go on to write a novel based on the story, But before that, he wrote a long-form article that was published in McLean's magazine in 1951.
Starting point is 01:14:17 In the piece titled My Friend Gay, The Murderer, the novelist wrote that he and others immediately suspected Jaalbert was responsible for the crash when they discovered his wife was on the plane. Of Jaalbert, he said, quote, He was interested in everything, talked of everything, yet knew nothing. He waved his thin hands as he. talked to illustrate his conversation. He was completely irresponsible, imaginative yet devoid of any practical sense. Flight 108, the Soto-Cachon tragedy is notorious as one of the first instances of in flight bombing and one of the worst mass murders in Canadian history, and Jé Albert Gay likely would
Starting point is 01:15:05 have gotten away with it if the flight had have left on schedule. It would have plunged into the depths of the Sutheron River, leaving an underwater crime scene that would be very difficult, if not impossible, to investigate. There would have been no identification of that package strapped to the left side of the plane, and no tracking it back to the mysterious woman in black, which blew the case open. Thanks for listening, and special thanks to Eileen McFarlane from Crime Lapse podcast for research, writing, and also editing in this episode. For the full list of resources, we release.
Starting point is 01:15:49 light on to write this episode and anything else you want to know about the podcast, including how to access ad-free episodes, visit canadian truecrime.ca. As always, thank you so much for your kind ratings, reviews, messages and support. I read every message and I really appreciate them. Thanks also to the host of True for voicing the disclaimer and We Talk of Dreams who compose the theme song. I am still working on my schedule for the summer, but I'll post an update soon about when you can expect the next episode. Thanks for your patience and see you then.

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