Dash-Ate wrote:...
As a precaution let's place all jailed Quebec gang members in solitary confinement 24/7 for while. Collective punishment - no pun. Take away their exercise yard rights.
Better yet let's just put all Quebec'ers in jail.
Moderators: sky's the limit, sepia, Sulako, lilfssister, North Shore, I WAS Birddog
Dash-Ate wrote:...
As a precaution let's place all jailed Quebec gang members in solitary confinement 24/7 for while. Collective punishment - no pun. Take away their exercise yard rights.
Piece by piece in the same way they smuggle in drugs.Colonel Sanders wrote:How did they smuggle the R44 into the prison?
The guards performing the cavity searches will undergo more training.How did they smuggle the R44 into the prison?
Ironic, isn't it? The bad guys had guns, the good guys didn't and the pilot lives. Had the good guys had guns, the pilot probably dies.bizjets101 wrote:The escape was from a Quebec Jail - jails don't have guns - so they don't have any way to shoot at a helicopter.
Prisons have guns, America's favourite ARF-15's - that helicopter would have got shot up if it landed near a Quebec Prison.
If had the pilot's shoes on, it makes you wonder who are the good and bad guys, doesn't it?MrWings wrote:Ironic, isn't it? The bad guys had guns, the good guys didn't and the pilot lives. Had the good guys had guns, the pilot probably dies.bizjets101 wrote:The escape was from a Quebec Jail - jails don't have guns - so they don't have any way to shoot at a helicopter.
Prisons have guns, America's favourite ARF-15's - that helicopter would have got shot up if it landed near a Quebec Prison.
Heliian wrote:They had a death wish for sure, just getting into that 44.
I don't think the pilot is as innocent as claimed, his skills would go out the window under duress and would most likely not be able to control the a/c well enough to extract the cons that effeciently.
That's absolute rubbish.Heliian wrote:They had a death wish for sure, just getting into that 44.
I don't think the pilot is as innocent as claimed, his skills would go out the window under duress and would most likely not be able to control the a/c well enough to extract the cons that effeciently.
I'd like to agree... but it may have something to do with the number of thriller movies I watched lately.I don't think the pilot is as innocent as claimed,
That is the most unintelligent thing I've ever seen you post.Heliian wrote:.
I don't think the pilot is as innocent as claimed, his skills would go out the window under duress and would most likely not be able to control the a/c well enough to extract the cons that effeciently.
Video of helicopter escape from St-Jérôme jail made public
Brazen escape of 2 inmates from Saint-Jérôme, Que., detention centre in 2013 caught on video
CBC News Posted: Mar 15, 2016 7:47 PM ET Last Updated: Mar 15, 2016 7:47 PM ET
A video showing a helicopter escape of two inmates in 2013 from a detention centre in St-Jérôme, Que., was unveiled today during the trial of Hells Angels sympathizer Benjamin Hudon-Barbeau.
Hudon-Barbeau, 38, is accused of participating in a series of unrelated crimes in the province's Laurentians region in the fall of 2012 relating to a drug turf war. He pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder and three counts of attempted murder.
Hudon-Barbeau made headlines in March 2013 after he and Danny Provençal escaped from a Saint-Jérôme detention centre after two accomplices hijacked a helicopter and forced its pilot to fly to the jail.
Hudon-Barbeau and Provençal climbed up a rope into the waiting chopper.
The video shows the men climbing up the rope to get onto the roof, where a helicopter was waiting. Two accomplices, who were armed, were aboard the aircraft.
In the video, Hudon-Barbeau and Provençal appear to have difficulty climbing onto the roof. They both cling to the rope, which is attached to the helicopter. As the chopper takes off, it carries Hudon-Barbeau and Provençal with it.
A few hours later, police nabbed the two inmates.
Hudon-Barbeau was serving time at the provincial jail for gun possession at the time of his escape.
'It's only in the movies that you can shoot down a helicopter with a handgun.'
– Mathieu Lavoie, SASPQC union president
The union president of Peace Officers in Correctional Services of Quebec (SASPQC), Mathieu Lavoie, told Radio-Canada that guards were unable to interfere during the helicopter escape.
"We have to evaluate who's on board the helicopter — they were accomplices. Were they armed? We cannot intervene with inmates climbing a rope," he said. "It's only in the movies that you can shoot down a helicopter with a handgun."
Lavoie said that since the incident in March 2013, nothing has changed and no new security measures have been put in place.
In order to prevent a similar incident, the union is calling for heightened searches, specifically those that would detect cellphones.
Hudon-Barbeau and Provençal co-ordinated their escape from the St-Jérôme facility using a mobile device.
A similar incident happened in November 2014, when three inmates also escaped via helicopter from a detention centre near Quebec City.
With files from Radio-Canada reporter Karine Bastien
You have to ask these questions?jschnurr wrote:How did no one notice a running helicopter on the roof for like 5 minutes? Or how did no one notice two men thrashing around trying to climb up a rope? I thought the escape plan was better executed than that...
Not really.cncpc wrote:Ok, I've seen the video. Darwinism isn't a perfect theory.
I'm not an expert helicopter pilot by any means, but isn't that a bit of a risky proposition having 500 lbs. of escapee dangling so far outboard of the mast?