Shots:
The young man, who would later be identified as a 25-year old
sernirecluse named Marc Lepine, lifted a light, semiautomatic
rifle and fired two quick shots into the ceiling. "You're all
a bunch of feminists, and I hate feminists," Lepine shouted
at the suddenly terrified occupants of Room 303. He told the
men to leave-they did so without protest-and, as one of the
young women attempted to reason with him, the gun-toting man
opened fire in earnest. Six of the women were shot dead. Over
the course of the next 20 minutes, the young man methodically
stalked the cafeteria, the classrooms and the corridors of the
school, leaving a trail of death and injury in his wake. In
four separate locations scattered around three floors of the
six-storey structure, be gunned down a total of 27 people, leaving
14 of them dead. Finally, he turned his weapon against himself,
blowing off the top of his skull. Most of the injured and all
of the dead-except for the gunman himself-were women.
This week, the city and the nation will mourn again for the
victims as a funeral service is held for 11 of the victims at
Montreal's Notre Dame Roman Catholic church. It was the worst
single-day massacre in Canadian history. And the very senselessness
of the act prompted an outpouring of grief, indignation and
outright rage. The City of Montreal and the Province of Quebec
declared three days of mourning. Vigils were mounted in cities
and towns from coast to coast. Churches held memorial services.
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and his wife, Mila, travelled
to the school to offer their condolences on behalf of the rest
of Canada. "It is indeed a national tragedy "he said. Earlier,
with the flag atop Parliament fluttering at half-staff, the
Prime Minister had asked a hushed House of Commons: "Why such
violence in a society that considers itself civilised and compassionate?"
Rampage:
The question was not the only one that Marc Lepine's rampage
raised. His actions and a three-page suicide note in which,
police said, he blamed feminists for spoiling his life, threw
into sharp relief a number of equally unsettling issues. They
included: the extent to which the act reflected a society in
which many women suffer violence at the hands of men (page 18);
how he had reached the conclusion that simply to be female was
sufficient cause to justify his victims' deaths; how a clearly
disturbed man was able to obtain a lethal weapon with apparent
ease; and how it was possible for a man with a gun to terrorize
single-handedly so many people for so long without anyone lifting
a hand to stop him. The tragedy also brought to light details
of the killer's own troubled childhood, during which his violent
father beat him, his mother and his younger sister, according
to testimony in a divorce hearing (page 22).
But no matter how pressing the unanswered questions were, it
was simply a time for mourning last week for those close to
the 14 women whose lives were snuffed out on the brink of what,
for most, had promised to be a bright future. They were intelligent,
talented, skilled young people. By definition, they were out
of the ordinary. They were women training to be engineers, a
profession that is dominated by men. And they were enrolled
in a school that is ranked as among the best in Quebec.
Interview:
One of them, Anne-Marie Edward, was 21 years old, studying
to become a chemical engineer. "She was the kind of kid that
a father never doubted would do well," her father, James Edward,
told Maclean's last week during an interview in the family's
comfortable home in suburban Pierrefonds. "She was proudest
of the fact that she had just been named to the university's
alpine ski team. She did everything and still found time for
her studies." Edward was wracked with anxiety when, driving
home from work last Wednesday, his wife called him on his car
phone to tell him that a gunman had gone berserk at the engineering
school. When he eventually learned that his daughter had been
found dead, slumped in a chair in the school's cafeteria, he
was devastated. Struggling to control his emotions, he said,
"Ann-Marie was a super kid."
Rifle:
It was around 5:10p.m. on Wednesday when Marc Lepine walked
through one of the seven lightly controlled entrances into the
engineering school. He was dressed in blue jeans, work boots,
a dark jacket and peaked cap. He carried a green, polyethylene
garbage bag holding two 30-clip magazines and a rifle. It was
a .223 calibre Sturm- Ruger semiautomatic. He headed directiy
for the second floor, where he encountered his first victim
in the corridor 15 m from the office of the school's finance
director. Lepine shot and killed Maryse Laganiere, 25, a recenfly
married finance department employee. From that point, Lepine
made his way along the second floor to Room 303, where he sent
the male students out and opened fire, killing six of the 10
women who remained. Then, Lepine went down to the first floor.
Firing at diving, ducking students as he went, he entered the
cafeteria, where he killed Edward and two of her classmates.
Still on the hunt, Lepine climbed back up to the third floor,
where he strode into Room 311. Students, unaware of the unfolding
tragedy, were delivering end-of-semester oral presentations.
"At first, nobody did anything," recalled Eric Forget, 21. Then,
the gunman opened fire, sending two professors and 26 students
scrambling for cover beneath their desks. "We were trapped like
rats," said Forget. "He was shooting all over the place." Other
eyewitnesses said that Lepine leaped onto several desks and
shot at women cowering beneath them. Four more women were killed.
Then, roughly 20 minutes after embarking on his rampage, Lepine
took his own life.
Spree:
The toll of Lepine's rampage placed last week's tragedy near
the top of the list of the worst such mass murders. The most
lethal killing spree on recent record in North America occurred
when Vietnam veteran James Huberty killed 21 people, including
several children, at a McDonald's restaurant in San Ysidro,
Calif., in July, 1984. Sniper Charles Whitman, who opened fire
from the top of a tower at the University of Texas in Austin
in August, 1966, and Ronald Gene Simmons-a retired air force
sergeant who went on a December hilling spree in Arkansas in
1987-each took 16 lives. The worst mass killing in Canada before
last week was in January, 1975, when 13 people died after being
herded into a storage room in Montreal's Garganttia nightclub-one
from gunshot wounds, the others from asphyxiation when the building
was set on fire-in what was believed to be an underworld contract
murder.
The number of Montrealers touched directly by the massacre
swiftly amplified the sadness of the latest tragedy. Minutes
after Lepine fired the final bullet, police officer Pierre Leclair,
who had been briefing reporters outside the building, wandered
in and found the body of his 23-year-old daughter, Maryse, a
top student. Montreal city councillor Therese Daviau rushed
home when she received reports of the shooting during a council
meeting. But she had to wait until midnight to learn that her
daughter, Genevieve Bergeron, had died. The following day, Mayor
Jean Dore wiped tears from his eyes as he told reporters that
Bergeron often babysat his three-year-old daughter. Said Dore
of the massacre: "You raise a kid and do everything to make
the kid a responsible adult. Then, through a sheer act of madness,
all this disappears."
Losses:
As the victims' families took stock of their losses, the full
brunt of the slaughter began to hit home. Schoolteacher Noella
Fecteau told Maclean's that her niece Helene Colgan, a 23-year-old
mechanical engineering student, was "the pride of our entire
family." Colgan was only one semester away from graduation.
Said a tearful Fecteau, who travelled from Quebec City to console
Colgan's parents at their home in Laval: "Helene brought a lot
of joy to the family. There are no words to describe the grief."
Fernand Croteau beat his fists against the wall of his home
in suburban Brossard when he learned that one of his two daughters-23-year-old
Nathalie-was a victim. She and her 20-year-old sister, a biochemistry
student, were her father's greatest source of pride. Said Croteau,
who works as a laboratory technician: "I had two wonderful daughters.
Now I only have one. The whole thing is incomprehensible. I
am devastated."
Family:
At the engineering school, the student body itself seemed to
be a tightly knit family. Croteau and Colgan were among a group
of classmates who had booked a New Year's holiday to Cancun,
Mexico. But Lepine's brief reign of terror clearly reduced students
to near helplessness. The four dozen men in Room 303 all left
quickly, despite the clear threat to the women. And although
there were more than 2,500 students and adininistrators in the
building, no one made any attempt to stop Lepine.
A central figure in another shooting drama in Quebec more than
five years ago concluded that someone should have intervened.
Lepine's suicide note, which police described but did not release,
referred to the assault on Quebec's national assembly by Canadian
Armed Forces Cpl. Denis Lortie in 1984. Lortie, who burst into
the provincial legislature dressed in army fatigues, killed
three people before war veteran Rene Jalbert-then employed as
the assembly's sergeant-at-arms-approached him unarmed and talked
him into surrendering. From his home in Quebec City last week,
Jalbert told Maclean's that it might also have been possible
to cut short Lepine's mindless rampage. Declared Jalbert, who
has received training in dealing with terrorists: "I would have
tried to do something. Somebody should have distracted the little
bastard."
At the same time, Jalbert said ordinary citizens cannot be
expected to react heroically in the midst of terror. "When something
like that happens, it is like a bomb going off," he added. "People
in those situations panic; they either freeze or go wild."
Guards:
For his part, the University of Montreal's chief of security
guards, Laurent Lemaire, told Maclean's that Lepine's massacre
was unstoppable. Added Lemaire: "if you can get away from a
man who is killing people with a gun, that is what you do. The
people around you no longer matter." Lemaire added that the
university's expansive campus is difficult to secure. Said Lemaire:
"You cannot screen the 45,000 people who come and go here every
day. It is a city in itself."
Weapons:
Restricting the availability of weapons like the gun that Marc
Lepine utilized to such lethal effect is another matter, however.
The federal government is currently reviewing existing gun-control
legislation, passed in 1978, and is expected to present new
legislation soon. Justice Minister Douglas Lewis promised in
the House of Commons last week that tougher laws were in the
making. He said the main change will seek to thwart the import
of semiautomatic weapons that can readily be converted to full,
automatic firing. At the same time, while lamenting the massacre
at the University of Montreal, he added , We can't legislate
against insanity."