“He killed the child I was”: an abuser caught up in his past hopes for leniency from the judge

“He killed the child I was”: an abuser caught up in his past hopes for leniency from the judge
“He killed the child I was”: an abuser caught up in his past hopes for leniency from the judge

An octogenarian from Montreal caught up in his past as a child abuser hopes to obtain leniency from the court due to his health problems, while the victim for his part recalled to what extent he had ruined his life.

• Read also: Child sex crimes: Man fails to protect daughter’s attacker

“He killed the child that I was, everyone seemed to want to ignore what had happened, I felt broken for decades,” testified the victim of Rhéal Landry, this Thursday, at the courthouse from Montreal.

With a trembling voice, the woman whose identity is protected by the court, testified that her 87-year-old attacker had destroyed her in the 1970s, when she was only 7 years old.

“I never felt safe again,” she said. Then, the other attacks worsened my confusion, my guilt and my distress.

Her father against her

That’s because at the time, Landry was influential in the towing industry. Close to the victim’s father, he occasionally went to his home, where he abused the child. The abuse lasted four years, until the child’s mother caught him red-handed, and he moved away from the family.

But that didn’t stop the father from coming to the trial, taking the abuser’s side and essentially claiming that his daughter was a liar.

“I was deeply shaken, my own father testified in favor of my attacker,” said the victim. I knew then that I had lost my father, his dear friend.”

Judge Julie Riendeau, however, believed the victim, so Landry was found guilty of indecent assault.

Peaceful retirement

He now has to serve his sentence and, obviously, he intends to use his health problems to obtain leniency from the court for his sexual crimes.

“I have no mobility, that’s harsh,” he said, explaining that his accommodation had to be adapted to his physical condition.

Landry then proceeded to describe his peaceful daily life as a retiree, in total contrast to that of the victim, who is undergoing therapy to alleviate his injuries, even though five decades have passed since the abuse. The octogenarian recounted walks, his use of the internet to find cooking recipes and even how he prepares meals for his partner.

“I try to keep myself busy,” he testified, insisting that he “prepares everything” for his partner, insinuating that if he were sent to prison, his partner would find himself without it.

The hearing is scheduled for the entire day, during which both the Crown and the defense are expected to announce the sentence they each respectively recommend.

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