It was a toss-up in the
Longueuil courthouse yesterday as to who was happier about Melanie
Alix being locked up for life: her brother or her ex-boyfriend.
By The Gazette (Montreal)
December 23, 2005
It was a toss-up in the Longueuil
courthouse yesterday as to who was happier about Melanie Alix being
locked up for life: her brother or her ex-boyfriend.
Francois Alix, who is 18 months
older than his 31-year-old sister, said as far back as he can
remember, she has been manipulative and mean.
"She's very dangerous," he said
of the sister who murdered their mother. "There's no limit to what
she'll do."
Stephane Leblanc was beaming
after the woman who murdered the couple's one-year-old son, Matisse
Alix-Leblanc, was led out of the prisoner's box.
"I saw her face when she was
sentenced and she looked disappointed, and that made me happy," he
said.
Alix, a South Shore resident,
maintained her remorseless demeanour as Quebec Superior Court Justice
France Charbonneau sentenced her to the mandatory penalty of life in
prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.
She was also sentenced to eight
years in prison for the attempted murder of another person who cannot
be named.
Once time Alix has already served
is deducted, the sentence for attempted murder ends up being five
years and two months.
The sentences are to be served
concurrently.
Charbonneau stayed two arson
charges.
It took the jury of seven women
and five men six days to decide Alix is a killer who targeted
vulnerable members of her own family.
Her brother agreed.
"She's dangerous, I know that for
a fact," he said, adding he'd be having a nice Christmas and a
"vacation" for the next 25 years that his sister is behind bars.
"I felt threatened by her and I
knew she'd have no reaction because she doesn't feel responsible for
what happened."
Alix blamed her brother for the
death of their wheelchair-bound mother, Francine Levesque, in a 2001
house fire in l'Acadie, a town just west of St. Jean sur Richelieu.
She blamed Leblanc for their son's death in a 2003 fire in St. Blaise,
south of St. Jean.
Both Levesque and Matisse were
found to have been drugged with the sleep-inducing antidepressant
oxazepam, for which Alix had a prescription.
Investigators determined both
fires were deliberately set.
Throughout her testimony, Alix
portrayed herself as a perpetual victim: of childhood sexual abuse at
the hands of her grandfather, of adolescent sexual abuse by her
brother, of rape and continual physical abuse by her ex-lover, of car
accidents and of police torture.
Mother guilty in 2 murders
Hard as she tried, Melanie Alix
failed to persuade a jury she was the victim.
By The Gazette (Montreal)
December 12, 2005
Hard as she tried, Melanie Alix
failed to persuade a jury she was the victim.
On their sixth day of
deliberations, the seven women and five men - who listened for almost
two weeks as the 31-year-old South Shore resident recounted her
troubled life in painstaking detail - instead decided yesterday that
Alix is a cold-blooded killer who targeted vulnerable members of her
own family.
Alix barely flinched as the jury
found her guilty as charged of arson and first-degree murder in the
death of her wheelchair-bound mother, Francine Levesque, in a 2001
house fire.
They also declared her guilty of
arson and first-degree murder in the death of her one-year-old son,
Matisse Alix-Leblanc, in a separate fire two years later, as well as a
charge of attempted murder against another person who cannot be named.
The case hinged on evidence
showing that both Levesque and Matisse perished of smoke inhalation
long before firefighters and paramedics arrived, prosecutor Julie
Beauchesne said after the verdict.
"It wasn't just the cause of
death, it was the time of death that was important in this case,"
Beauchesne said.
There were also eerie and
inexplicable similarities between the two cases that went far beyond
coincidence, she said.
Both Levesque and Matisse were
found to have been drugged with the sleep-inducing antidepressant
oxazepam, for which Alix had a prescription.
Both fires were deliberately set,
investigators determined. But they pointed out the flames had
originated in multiple unconnected sites at different times.
For instance, one fire flared and
died at Levesque's L'Acadie home on Jan. 31, 2001, allowing the air to
cool enough for soot to settle on her prostrate body before a major
inferno attracted calls to 911.
At Alix's white clapboard home in
St. Blaise, fire scene analysts said there were six separate sites of
origin for the May 12, 2003, blaze.
Firefighters discovered two
charred chairs had been set alight in the living room but were already
cold by the time they responded to a larger fire started on the
stovetop.
During her trial in Longueuil,
which lasted more than two months, Alix's defence team ultimately
described her mother's death as a fatal accident.
But it also went to great lengths
to cast suspicion on others for the two deaths. Alix openly blames her
brother for her mother's murder and her ex-boyfriend Stephane Leblanc
for her son's.
Beauchesne said the jurors saw
through Alix's blame game.
"I find it unfair that the finger
was pointed at Stephane Leblanc, the father of this child, who was not
there that day, and at Francois Alix, who lost his mother in the
fire," Beauchesne said.
The jury's verdict also
undoubtedly turned on Alix's credibility.
Throughout her testimony Alix
portrayed herself as a perpetual victim: of childhood sexual abuse at
the hands of her grandfather, of adolescent sexual abuse by her
brother, of rape and continual physical abuse by her ex, of car
accidents and of police torture.
Under cross-examination, Alix
displayed not a hint of emotion in recounting her Sophie's Choice
moment.
She described fighting thick
smoke to reach Matisse's crib, but leaving the room without him
because she'd written him off as already dead.
During her long days on the
witness stand, Alix had an explanation for everything, but
contradicted herself many times when confronted with her videotaped
confession to police during an interrogation the day after Matisse's
funeral.
Alix admitted to investigators in
2003 that she had drugged her children before setting a fire on the
stovetop fed by oil from the fryer.
But in court she said the
detective put words in her mouth and that she gave her children
oxazepam only to calm them because they were concerned for her safety
after their father threatened her with death.
Alix wrote a will the night
before her son died.
On the witness stand, she said it
was to make sure her children got her money if her ex killed her.
But the prosecutor pointed out to
Alix the only mention of her children was that she wanted to be buried
with them in the family plot.
After the jury was sequestered,
Alix phoned the Journal de Montreal and declared herself the victim of
an unfair trial, a prosecutor who was too congenial with the media and
a judge she characterized as mean.
She also told the newspaper she
would appeal any guilty verdict, bring a complaint against Quebec
Superior Court Justice France Charbonneau and ask for an inquiry into
the Surete du Quebec's handling of her case.
The jury also didn't hear that
Alix set her clothes on fire while at Tanguay prison in a failed
attempt at self-immolation and that she once was suspected of setting
fire to Leblanc's Jeep.
Alix will automatically be
sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years for
the two murders.
But an arcane law prevents judges
from handing down sentences on Sundays.
So Alix will be back in court
today, when her sentence for the two arson counts and the attempted
murder charge will also be discussed.