May 20, 2024

The Queens County Citizen

Complete Canadian News World

A victim of a brutal attack says he meets his attacker “five times a day” at work.

A victim of a brutal attack says he meets his attacker "five times a day" at work.

A teenager who was brutally assaulted in Monteregi was forced to meet his attacker “at least five times a day” because they were both in the same business.

The alleged assailant is released and the employer tries to avoid scheduling them simultaneously. They still find themselves in the premises of the establishment at the same time, which is a source of concern.

When the investigating officer was questioned about this case, she replied that she could not do anything. However, this is not the opinion of a criminal lawyer in the Youth Offenders Act.

“The police can provide all the necessary conditions to protect the victim and the general interest, Tiago Murias informed me. I personally have many cases in which the defendant is forbidden to go because the victim is going to the school where he studied or to the place of work.

On August 24, the 19-year-old was at his father’s house with a recent win when a juvenile assailant broke into the property with a baseball bat.

“He beat me up and ransacked my room. He then forced her into his car. He grabbed her arm and pulled her down.

Police officers from the Sûreté du Québec quickly located the vehicle. The suspect was arrested and later released on various charges, including kidnapping and forcible confinement.

“We did not find it right for the owner to decide to keep the person who attacked me, despite what he did, the victim was concerned, TVA Novelles met on condition of anonymity. He is sometimes less than five meters away.

READ  Council of Ministers: Frustrated, Yuri Chassin came out of the silence

“He broke into my house at night to harm me. I don’t know what else he can do.”

The victim’s mother expressed concern that her son was afraid of retaliation.

“He was so anxious that when I met him I didn’t know what to do or how I would react, or how he would react.”

Ironically, the abuser is forbidden to contact his victims or visit their homes. However, nothing prevents him from going to his place of work.

The file is submitted to the Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions, who decides whether to lay charges. TVA Novelles’ interview requests for the business, which the two men work for, have not been returned at the time of writing.

About The Author