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{{Short description|Canadian politician (1921â1970)}} {{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}} {{Infobox officeholder | name = Pierre Laporte | honorific-suffix = | image = Pierre Laporte photo.jpg | imagesize = | caption = Laporte in 1968 | office = [[Deputy Premier of Quebec]] | premier = [[Robert Bourassa]] | term_start = May 12, 1970 | term_end = October 17, 1970 | predecessor = [[Jean-Guy Cardinal]] | successor = [[GĂ©rard D. Levesque]] {{small|(1972)}} | office1 = [[Ministry of Immigration, Francisation and Integration|Minister of Immigration]] | premier1 = [[Robert Bourassa]] | term_start1 = May 12, 1970 | term_end1 = October 17, 1970 | predecessor1 = Mario Beaulieu | successor1 = François Cloutier | office2 = [[Ministry of Culture and Communications (Quebec)|Minister of Cultural Affairs]] | premier2 = [[Jean Lesage]] | term_start2 = September 9, 1964 | term_end2 = June 16, 1966 | predecessor2 = [[Georges-Ămile Lapalme]] | successor2 = [[Jean-NoĂ«l Tremblay]] | office3 = [[Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing (Quebec)|Minister of Municipal Affairs]] | premier3 = [[Jean Lesage]] | term_start3 = December 5, 1962 | term_end3 = June 16, 1966 | predecessor3 = [[Lucien Cliche]] | successor3 = [[Paul Dozois]] {{Collapsed infobox section begin |last=yes |Parliamentary constituencies |titlestyle=border:1px dashed lightgrey;}}{{Infobox officeholder |embed=yes | office4 = [[Member of the National Assembly (Quebec)|Member]] of the<br />[[National Assembly of Quebec]] <br />for [[Chambly (provincial electoral district)|Chambly]] | term_start4 = [[List of Quebec by-elections#26th Legislative Assembly of Quebec 1960â1962|December 14, 1961]] | term_end4 = [[List of Quebec by-elections#29th National Assembly of Quebec 1970â1973|October 17, 1970]] | predecessor4 = Robert ThĂ©berge | successor4 = [[Jean Cournoyer]] {{small|(1971)}}{{Collapsed infobox section end}}}} | birth_date = {{birth date|1921|02|25|df=y}} | birth_place = [[Montreal]], [[Quebec]], Canada | death_date = {{death date and age|1970|10|17|1921|02|25|df=y}} | death_place = [[Longueuil]], [[Quebec]], Canada | restingplace = [[Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery]] | nationality = | spouse = Françoise Brouillet (30 Jan 1923 â 2 Nov 2021)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Stewart |first1=Monte |title=Françoise Laporte, dead at 98, pushed past the grief of the October Crisis to thrive as a citizenship judge |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-quebec-woman-became-a-citizenship-judge-after-flq-killed-her-husband/ |website=The Globe and Mail |access-date=28 June 2024 |date=19 Nov 2021}}</ref> | party = [[Quebec Liberal Party|Liberal]] | relations = | children = | residence = | alma_mater = | occupation = | profession = | religion = }} '''Pierre Laporte''' ({{IPA|fr|pjÉÊ lapÉÊt}}; 25 February 1921 – 17 October 1970) was a Canadian lawyer, journalist and politician. He was deputy premier of the province of [[Quebec]] when he was kidnapped and murdered by members of the [[Front de libĂ©ration du QuĂ©bec]] (FLQ) during the [[October Crisis]]. ==Life and career== [[File:LaPorte de Quebec (5802230245).jpg|thumb|right|[[Pierre Laporte Bridge]]]] Pierre Laporte, grandson of the Liberal politician [[Alfred Leduc]], was born in [[Montreal]], [[Quebec]], on 25 February 1921. He was a journalist with ''[[Le Devoir]]'' newspaper from 1945 to 1961, and was known for his crusading work against Quebec's then-Premier [[Maurice Duplessis]]. In 1950, he graduated from the Law School at the UniversitĂ© de Montreal, and was hired by ''Le Devoir'' shortly afterwards.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} During his years in journalism, he published a number of series targeting the management of the Duplessis government. At the same time that he criticized the ''Union Nationale'' government in public, he wrote campaign pamphlets for the ''Union Nationale'' during elections.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} In 1954, ''Le Devoir'' ran a six-part series on problems during the construction of the [[Bersimis-1 generating station]].<ref>{{cite book|first=Richard |last=Landry |title=Le projet d'amĂ©nagement de la riviĂšre Bersimis, 1952-1956 |language=fr|publisher=UniversitĂ© du QuĂ©bec Ă MontrĂ©al |date=February 2009 |pages=87â90 |url=http://www.archipel.uqam.ca/1957/1/M10824.pdf}}</ref> Laporte alleged that the government had taken kickbacks from construction companies building the dam.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} In a speech, Duplessis called Laporte "a man without a heart, a pig, a snake and a slothy individual" whose journalism "pandered to the vilest instincts of yellow journalism and the most ignoble sentiments".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} Duplessis referred to Laporte as a writer for a "Bolshevik journal".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} In 1954, Laporte published a column in the left-wing newspaper ''Vrai'' where he wrote: "The ''Union Nationale'' is rotten. Those who donât have eyes to see clearly...at least have a nose to smell. Itâs a rotten fruit, whose stink wafts all the way to the provincial borders."<ref name="Scott">{{cite news |last1=Scott |first1=Marian |title=October Crisis: Who was Pierre Laporte, really? |url=https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/pierre-laporte-quebecers-still-divided-over-tragic-victim-of-the-october-crisis |access-date=2 March 2023 |publisher=The Montreal Gazette |date=13 October 2020}}</ref> In 1958, he was part of a team of ''Le Devoir'' reporters exposing the natural gas scandal, leading to the formation of the Salvas Commission, soon after the [[1960 Quebec general election|election of 1960]].<ref name="Gingras">{{cite book |publisher=Libre-Expression |title=Le Devoir |url=https://archive.org/details/ledevoir0000ging |url-access=registration |first=Pierre-Philippe |last=Gingras|place=MontrĂ©al |year=1985 |isbn=2-89111-204-0 |page=[https://archive.org/details/ledevoir0000ging/page/165 165]}}</ref> Laporte's biographer, Jean-Charles Panneton, stated:<blockquote>Pierre Laporte was very courageous. He was a pioneer of investigative journalism in an era when investigative journalism was not practiced, when the media were very docile toward the government of Maurice Duplessis.<ref name="Scott" /></blockquote>Laporte was very close to his wife, Françoise, whom he adored.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} One who knew him stated:<blockquote>Pierre was the type of guy who went fishing with his wife. When he went travelling, he would always think how he could take his wife. He wouldn't go to a stag party. And he would introduce his wife with eyes that {{nowrap|big{{tsp}}{{mdash}}{{tsp}}}}the way [a] young fellow would introduce his girl to relatives.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}}</blockquote>Peter Edwards, the crime correspondent of ''[[The Toronto Star]]'', wrote in 1990 that Laporte was a "devoted family man".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} After Duplessis's death, Laporte successfully ran for the ''Parti libĂ©ral du QuĂ©bec'' for a seat in [[Chambly (provincial electoral district)|Chambly]] in the [[Quebec National Assembly]] and served in the government of Premier [[Jean Lesage]]. Laporte was a member of the [[Quebec Liberal Party]], and considered to be a leading member of the party's [[left wing]]. Laporte was elected in a by-election in 1961.<ref name="Cooper">{{cite web |last1=Cooper |first1=Celine |title=Pierre Laporte |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/pierre-laporte |website=The Canadian Encyclopedia |access-date=1 March 2023}}</ref> Laporte served as minister of municipal affairs from 1962 to 1966.<ref name="Cooper"/> In 1962, he was involved in a scandal which it emerged that he lobbied successfully for the Quebec government to rent construction equipment from a firm he owned, leading to charges of conflict of interest violations.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} Several QuĂ©bĂ©cois newspapers printed cartoons that mockingly showed Laporte leading hundreds of bulldozers and tractors into Quebec City for the government to rent.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} In 1962, Laporte was the leading force behind a bill passed in the National Assembly that disqualified from holding office, J. AldĂ©o LĂ©o RĂ©millard, the ''Union Nationale'' mayor of [[Ville Jacques-Cartier]], on the account of his criminal record.<ref name="Scott"/> Laporte also served as minister of cultural affairs from 1964 to 1966.<ref name="Cooper"/> In 1965, Laporte introduced the bill that led to the merger of several municipalities that created the city of [[Laval, Quebec|Laval]].<ref name="Scott"/> Laporte took a populist line, presenting himself as the defender of the "little guy".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63-64}} In a speech, Laporte warned that the Liberals must look after the interests of the "average men" as he stated: "Otherwise, the masses, like those of France in 1789 or Germany in 1933, will be swept away in an undoubtedly unacceptable excess, one that has been sown by our faults and our omissions".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=64}} He was frequently accused of accepting kickbacks during his time in office with his nickname being {{em|"Monsieur Dix Pour Cent"}} ("Mister Ten Percent").{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=64}} In the [[1966 Quebec general election]], the ''Parti libĂ©ral du QuĂ©bec'' government of Lesage was defeated by the ''Union Nationale'', and Laporte sat on the opposition benches for the next four years. The ''Union Nationale'' premier Daniel Johnson Sr. called Laporte {{em|"le roi des patroneux"}} ("king of the porkbarrel").{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} After Lesage announced in 1969 that he would step down as party leader, Laporte ran to succeed him, but lost the [[Quebec Liberal Party leadership elections#1970 leadership convention|1970 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election]] to fellow cabinet member [[Robert Bourassa]]. Laporte was a frequent customer at the Victoria Club (which served as an illegal gambling house) owned by the gangster Frank D'Asti, a ''capo'' of the [[Cotroni crime family|Cotroni family]], and he was known as a good friend of D'Asti.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=61}} Starting in the autumn of 1969, D'Asti was Laporte's principal campaign contributor in his leadership bid.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=61}} Likewise, D'Asti contributed heavily to Laporte's campaign in the 1970 election.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=61}} Laporte's two principal aides, RenĂ© Gagnon and Jacques CĂŽtĂ©, met with D'Asti and another Cotroni family ''capo'', Nicolo Di{{nbs}}Iorio, to pick up briefcases full of cash during both Laporte's 1969 leadership bid and again in the 1970 provincial election, which was won by the Liberals.{{sfn|Schneider|2009|p=257-258}} On 16 April 1970, a [[Royal Canadian Mounted Police]] (RCMP) surveillance team observed Laporte, Gagnon, and CĂŽtĂ© meeting with D'Asti and Di{{nbs}}Iorio in an apartment in Montreal.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=62-63}} The RCMP surveillance team's report stated that Di{{nbs}}Iorio, D'Asti, and CĂŽtĂ© together entered Gagnon's apartment and were subsequently joined by Laporte at about "1740 hours"; Laporte later left at about "1850 hours".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=62}} Gagnon and CĂŽtĂ© later stated the meeting was called by D'Asti and Di{{nbs}}Iorio who wanted to warn Laporte about allegations of electoral fraud in the Montreal area.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} According to Gagnon, the meeting ended with Laporte asking the two Mafiosi to "please keep Monsieur CĂŽtĂ© informed of the developments in this affair".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=63}} On 3 May 1970, in a room that was wiretapped by the police, D'Asti talked with Di{{nbs}}Iorio, Angelo Lanzo and Romeo Bucci about their hopes that Laporte would be appointed Attorney-General of Quebec.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=61}} A Royal Canadian Mounted Police summary dated 17 September 1970 stated:<blockquote>They [D'Asti and Di{{nbs}}Iorio] foresaw that they would be able to get favors from Laporte{{nbs}}[...] They were very hopeful that Laporte would be appointed justice minister. At that time, RenĂ© Gagnon and Jacques CĂŽtĂ© were working hard to assure them that prospects were good and this would come about. Their aim was to obtain financial contributions for the campaign{{nbs}}[...] They were very disappointed when Laporte was named minister of labour and immigration instead of minister of justice. However, they have been assured since then, mainly by CĂŽtĂ©, that they would have no problems with Justice Minister JerĂŽme Choquette.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=61}}</blockquote>The situation with Laporte was considered highly sensitive by the authorities in Ottawa who made it clear that they did not want the Mounties investigating Laporte.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=61}} After the [[1970 Quebec general election|Quebec general election in 1970]], Premier Bourassa advised the [[Lieutenant Governor of Quebec|Lieutenant Governor]] to appoint Laporte as Deputy Premier, Parliamentary Leader, Minister of Immigration, and Minister of Labour and Manpower.<ref>[http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/deputes/laporte-pierre-3983/biographie.html "Pierre LAPORTE (1921-1970)"]</ref> ==Kidnapping and murder== On 5 October 1970, [[James Cross]], the British trade commissioner in Montreal, was kidnapped by the FLQ.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=64}} Laporte called the Cross kidnapping "a wind of madness temporarily blowing across Canada".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=64}} On 10 October 1970, Laporte was kidnapped from his home on Robitaille Street<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cyberpresse.ca/actualites/dossiers/crise-doctobre/201010/17/01-4333306-un-monument-a-la-memoire-de-pierre-laporte-inaugure-a-saint-lambert.php|title=Un monument Ă la mĂ©moire de Pierre Laporte inaugurĂ© Ă Saint-Lambert|date=17 October 2010|work=[[La Presse (Canadian newspaper)|La Presse]]|language=fr}}</ref> in [[Saint-Lambert, Quebec]], by the [[ChĂ©nier Cell]] of the [[FLQ]].<ref name="truTV">{{cite web|url=http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/terrorists_spies/terrorists/flq/index.html|title=The FLQ and the Quebec October Crisis|last=Krajicek|first=David |publisher=truTV|access-date=16 July 2013}}</ref> The kidnappers â [[Paul Rose (political figure)|Paul]] and [[Jacques Rose]], [[Francis Simard]], and [[Bernard Lortie]]<ref name=Bauch>{{cite news|last1=Bauch|first1=Hubert|title=From the Archives of 1996: When to Forgive? For the Most Part FLQ Terrorists have become Model Citizens|agency=Montreal Gazette|date=November 30, 1996}}</ref> â approached Laporte while he was playing football with his nephew Claude on his front lawn and forced him into their vehicle at gunpoint.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} Laporte was chosen partly because of his links to the Cotroni family (which would embarrass the Bourassa government) and partly because he had no bodyguards, which made him an easy man to kidnap.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} Laporte was heading towards the street to pick up the football when he was confronted with a masked man who had just gotten out of a car parked in front of his house who pointed a submachine gun at his face.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} The FLQ dubbed him the "Minister of Unemployment and Assimilation," and held him hostage, demanding the release of 23 "political prisoners" in exchange for his freedom.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/october/10/newsid_2531000/2531261.stm "On This Day â 1970: Canadian minister seized by gunmen"]. BBC. Retrieved 16 July 2013.</ref> It was the intention of the FLQ to have Laporte write out a "confession" detailing his links to the Cotroni family which the FLQ hoped would be the "[[Magna Carta]] of corruption" in Quebec.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} Laporte was defiant, telling his captors: "It will all work out. I know it. Don't worry. It will all work out perfectly".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} Laporte was held in a house at 5630 Armstrong (now Bachand) street in [[Longueuil]].{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} Prime Minister [[Pierre Trudeau]] invoked Canada's ''[[War Measures Act]]'' which allowed mass raids and arrests to take place in order to find the group who had kidnapped Laporte and Cross. Trudeau said: {{blockquote|quote=Nothing that either the Government of Canada or the Government of Quebec has done or failed to do, now or in the future, could possibly excuse any injury to either of these two innocent men. The gun pointed at their heads have FLQ fingers on the trigger. Should any injury result, there is no explanation that could condone the act. Should there be harm done to these men, the Government promises unceasing pursuit of those responsible.<ref>[http://www.upi.com/Audio/Year_in_Review/Events-of-1970/Canadian-Kidnappings%2C-Vietnam-trials/12303235577467-10/ "1970 Year in Review: Canadian Kidnappings, Vietnam trials"]. UPI.com. Retrieved 16 July 2013.</ref>}} Laporte was handcuffed, chained to the floor and blindfolded.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} However, by feeling his way around his room and pressing his face across the wall, he was able to discover a window. On the afternoon of 16 October 1970, Laporte heard a police siren in the distance, and decided to escape by throwing himself through the window.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} He broke through the window, but his leg chains left him dangling in the air.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} The broken glass severed the arteries on his left wrist, right thumb and in his chest.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} As he dangled in the air, Laporte screamed "''Aider! Aider! Quelqu'un s'il vous plaĂźt aidez-moi!''" ("Help! Help! Somebody please help me!"), but nobody other than his captors heard his cries. His captors pulled him back in.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} The police siren that Laporte heard was due to a report of a fire at a house further down Armstrong street.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} Over the course of the night, Laporte was bleeding badly from his severed arteries and it was apparent that he would die soon if he did not receive prompt medical attention.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} Simard described him as being like a "zombie", saying:<blockquote>He didn't move. No reaction, We took off his blindfold. He didn't even look at us. It was like Laporte was already dead. He was like somebody stripped of all life. He looked totally empty. You could feel that he'd already received the death blow.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}}</blockquote>As he was laid out on the floor, Laporte seemed resigned to his death as he grew weaker and he refused to speak.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} On the morning of 17 October, his captors decided to strangle him to death rather than release him to a hospital.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=65}} Two men held him in place while a third wrapped the leg chain around his neck and after a few minutes, Laporte was dead.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} On 17 October, seven days after he went missing, Laporte's body was found in the trunk of a car at [[Montreal Saint-Hubert Longueuil Airport]]. On the same day, D'Asti and Di Iorio met with Gagnon with an offer of help as the duo stated that their boss, [[Vic Cotroni]], had given orders for the Cotroni family to find Laporte.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} Gagnon later stated he was told by D'Asti and Di Iorio: "RenĂ©, we can find him. We know where he is".{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=66}} Just minutes after accepting the offer of help from the Cotroni family, Gagnon heard the news on the radio of Laporte's murder.{{sfn|Edwards|1990|p=67}} Laporte was buried in the [[CimetiĂšre Notre-Dame-des-Neiges]] on 20 October 1970 in a funeral attended by the elites of both Ottawa and Quebec City in Montreal, Quebec.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=145}} The ChĂ©nier cell were all arrested by the ''[[SĂ»retĂ© du QuĂ©bec]]'' on 28 December 1970 at a farmhouse south of Montreal.{{sfn|Anastakis|2015|p=215}} The members of the ChĂ©nier Cell served terms ranging from 20 years to life, though they were all released on parole much earlier.<ref>{{cite web |last=BĂ©langer |first=Claude |date=23 August 2000 |url=http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/quebechistory/chronos/october.htm |title=Chronology of the October Crisis, 1970, and its Aftermath |publisher=Quebec History â Marianopolis College}}</ref> On 4 January 1971, Simard while in police custody wrote up an unsigned statement that stated that he and the two Rose brothers were the three men who killed Laporte.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=143}} In 1977, a book, ''L'exĂ©cution de Pierre Laporte'' by the Quebec separatist journalist [[Pierre ValliĂšres]], was published.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}} In his book, ValliÄres advanced an elaborate conspiracy theory that the [[Canadian Army]], the [[Royal Canadian Mounted Police]] and the Cotroni family had conspired to have Laporte murdered and then blamed the killing on the FLQ as part of a plot to discredit Quebec separatism.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}} ValliĂšres's theory was decisively debunked in 1982 when a book co-written jointly by Simard, the two Rose brothers, and Lortie, ''Pour en finir avec octobre'', was published.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}} The four authors of ''Pour en finir avec octobre'' stated quite explicitly that they were all collectively responsible for Laporte's murder, though the authors refused to say who actually strangled Laporte to death with his leg chains.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}} The four co-authors stated in ''Pour en finir avec octobre'' that:<blockquote>Pierre Laporte was murdered. His death was not accidental. Without entering into the details, we have always taken responsibility for the death of Pierre Laporte. From our arrest and the trials that followed, we confirmed our complete responsibility, without limitation.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}}</blockquote>However, the four co-authors of ''Pour en finir avec octobre'' expressed no remorse for Laporte's murder and made no apologies to his family.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}} The members of the ChĂ©nier cell dismissed ValliĂšres's book as they wrote:<blockquote>For amateurs of mystery novels, there are idiocies, downright dishonest of the kind found in ''L'exĂ©cution de Pierre Laporte'' by Pierre ValliĂšres. It is the theory of infiltration, of the enemy coming from the inside.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144}}</blockquote>A report into Laporte's murder by Justice Duchaine in 1980 concluded that at very least Jacques Rose and Francis Simard were both present when Laporte was killed, though the report did not name the man who strangled Laporte.{{sfn|Tetley|2006|p=144-145}} In 2010, journalist Guy Gendron produced a documentary series for [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|Radio-Canada]], in which he asserted that the killing of Pierre Laporte was unintentional â "Il a Ă©tĂ© Ă©touffĂ© dans un moment de panique" ("He was choked in a moment of panic").<ref name=":0">Gendron, Guy. [http://www.radio-canada.ca/nouvelles/Politique/2010/09/23/006-flq-mort-laporte.shtml "RĂ©vĂ©lations sur la mort de Pierre Laporte"] {{in lang|fr}}. Radio-Canada.ca. Retrieved 16 July 2013.</ref><ref name="MacPherson">{{cite news |last=MacPherson |first=Don |url=https://montrealgazette.com/news/Extremist+makeover+edition/3588195/story.html |title=Extremist makeover â the FLQ edition |work=The Montreal Gazette |date=28 September 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101001203641/http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/Extremist+makeover+edition/3588195/story.html |archive-date=1 October 2010}}</ref> The journalist Dan MacPherson of the ''[[Montreal Gazette]]'' described Gendron's documentaryâwhich depicted Laporte's murder as more or less an accidentâas part of a tendency by Quebec separatists to whitewash the FLQ.<ref name="MacPherson"/> ==Monument to Laporte== On the 40th anniversary of his death, 17 October 2010, a monument to Laporte was unveiled by then-Premier of Quebec, [[Jean Charest]]. It stands at the St. Lawrence Seaway Park, near Laporte's home on Robitaille Street.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/pierre-laporte-s-death-during-october-crisis-marked-by-monument-1.564042 |title=Pierre Laporte's death during October Crisis marked by monument |publisher=CTV News |date=17 October 2010}}</ref> On the monument is inscribed: "Nul ne vit pour soi-mĂȘme. Nul ne meurt pour soi-mĂȘme" ("No one lives for oneself. No one dies for oneself").<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/dossiers/crise-doctobre/201010/17/01-4333306-un-monument-a-la-memoire-de-pierre-laporte-inaugure-a-saint-lambert.php |title=Un monument Ă la mĂ©moire de Pierre Laporte inaugurĂ© Ă Saint-Lambert |work=La Presse.ca |date=17 October 2010 |language=fr}}</ref> A middle school in [[Toronto]], [[Ontario]] is named after Laporte. <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.tdsb.on.ca/Find-your/Schools/schno/3213 | title=Pierre Laporte Middle School }}</ref> ==See also== *[[List of kidnappings]] *[[List of solved missing person cases: pre-2000|List of solved missing person cases]] ==Books== *{{cite book |last1=Anastakis |first1=Dimitry |title=Death in the Peaceable Kingdom Canadian History Since 1867 Through Murder, Execution, Assassination, and Suicide |date=2015 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto |isbn=9781442606364}} *{{cite book |last1=Edwards |first1=Peter |title=Blood Brothers: How Canada's Most Powerful Mafia Family Runs Its Business |date=1990 |publisher=Key Porter Books |location=Toronto |isbn=155013213X}} *{{cite book|last=Schneider|first=Stephen|title=Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada|location=Toronto|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|date=2009|isbn=978-0470835005}} *{{cite book |last1=Tetley |first1=William |title=The October Crisis, 1970: An Insider's View |date=2006 |publisher=McGill University Press |location=Montreal |isbn=9780773576605}} ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== *{{Quebec MNA biography|laporte-pierre-3983}} * {{Find a Grave|11757169}} {{s-start}} {{s-par|ca-qc}} {{succession box | title=[[Minister (government)|Minister]] of [[ublic administration|Municipal Affairs]]| before=[[Lucien Cliche|Lucien Cliche (Liberal)]]| after=[[Paul Dozois|Paul Dozois (Union Nationale)]] | years=[[1962 Quebec general election|1962]]–[[1966 Quebec general election|1966]]}} {{succession box | title=[[Minister of Labour]]| before=[[Jean Cournoyer|Jean Cournoyer (Union Nationale)]]| after=[[Jean Cournoyer|Jean Cournoyer (Liberal)]] | years=[[1970 Quebec general election|1970]]–1970}} {{succession box | title=[[Government House Leader (Quebec)|Government House Leader]]| before=n.a.| after=[[Maurice Bellemare|Maurice Bellemare (Union Nationale)]] | years=1965–[[1966 Quebec general election|1966]]}} {{succession box | title=[[Official Opposition]] [[House Leader]]| before=n.a.| after=[[RĂ©mi Paul|RĂ©mi Paul (Union Nationale)]] | years=[[1966 Quebec general election|1966]]–[[1970 Quebec general election|1970]]}} {{s-end}} {{October Crisis}} {{First Bourassa Ministry}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Laporte, Pierre}} [[Category:1921 births]] [[Category:1970 deaths]] [[Category:1970s missing person cases]] [[Category:People murdered in 1970]] [[Category:Assassinated Canadian politicians]] [[Category:20th-century members of the National Assembly of Quebec]] [[Category:Canadian newspaper journalists]] [[Category:Canadian male journalists]] [[Category:Canadian people taken hostage]] [[Category:Canadian political journalists]] [[Category:Canadian terrorism victims]] [[Category:Crime in Quebec]] [[Category:Deaths by strangulation]] [[Category:Deputy premiers of Quebec]] [[Category:Journalists from Montreal]] [[Category:Kidnapped Canadian people]] [[Category:Kidnapped politicians]] [[Category:Missing person cases in Canada]] [[Category:October Crisis]] [[Category:People from Saint-Lambert, Quebec]] [[Category:People murdered in Quebec]] [[Category:Politicians from Montreal]] [[Category:Quebec Liberal Party MNAs]] [[Category:Terrorism deaths in Canada]] [[Category:Le Devoir people]] [[Category:Burials at Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery]] [[Category:North American politicians assassinated in the 1970s]] [[Category:Assassinated government ministers in North America]] [[Category:Politicians assassinated in 1970]]
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