Car theft with baby on board: Accused has 70 crimes in 10 years

Car theft with baby on board: Accused has 70 crimes in 10 years
Car theft with baby on board: Accused has 70 crimes in 10 years

The man who allegedly stole a car with a baby on board before abandoning it on the sidewalk earlier this week is a repeat crack addict who suffers from severe mental illness and has committed 70 crimes in the last decade.

• Read also: [PHOTOS] Suspect wanted in Montreal: he steals a car with a baby on board before abandoning it on the sidewalk

“Only detention can really control the significant risk that the accused currently presents,” indicated last September the Commission for the Examination of Mental Disorders, after examining the case of Gregory Pierre Paul.

Except that at the same time, the organization gave carte blanche to the managers of the hospital where he was staying to offer him permission to go out, alone and without supervision, until the fall of 2024.

And obviously, Pierre Paul would have taken advantage of one of them to commit a new crime, which now means that he is subject to an arrest warrant.

It is that last Tuesday, early in the morning, the 43-year-old man allegedly stole the white Mazda 3 of a mother who was going to daycare with her two children. Except that when he got into the car, he did not notice that a seven-month-old baby was in the back seat.


Photo Agence QMI, MAXIME DELAND

Career criminal

During his escape, the suspect then abandoned the baby on the side of the sidewalk.

“He exposed a baby in such a way that his life was endangered,” the arrest warrant reads.


Photo Agence QMI, MAXIME DELAND

Pierre Paul then continued his escape, crashing into a concrete wall and causing a collision. He then fled on foot.

The police quickly launched an investigation and soon, eyes turned to Pierre Paul, who has been collecting criminal charges for 10 years. There are numerous thefts, but also a conspiracy, failure to comply with conditions and drug possession. He had already been caught stealing a Canada Post truck.

“The majority of events […] are thefts committed in the context of manic episodes with psychotic characteristics,” the Commission said.

Social reintegration not successful

His treating psychiatrist was also concerned about “multiple histories of violent acts” combined with his addiction to crack and his “limited self-criticism”. Despite everything, he recommended the release of the criminal for “therapeutic reasons” and to “promote social reintegration”.

Pierre Paul had for his part affirmed that he was “able to pull himself together by [ses] own means.” Which he does not seem to have done.

As soon as the police find him, Pierre Paul will have to appear in criminal court. The court will then have to examine whether, once again, the accused should be declared not criminally responsible for the crimes with which he is accused.

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