

Reportedly he shouted, "Where are the assembly members? I want to kill them all." Then he locked himself inside the Chamber. The siege lasted four hours before the Assembly's sergeant-at-arms, René Jalbert, engaged Lortie in conversation and eventually managed to talk him into giving over his weapon and turning himself in.

His attorneys offered an insanity defense based on paranoid schizophrenia and put psychiatrists on the stand to affirm it. The judge, however, instructed the jury to consider this testimony as hearsay. Not surprisingly, Lortie was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison. Yet on appeal, he received a new trial, based on the error made when the judge deflected the jury from weighing expert testimony for what it was.
The second trial occurred in 1987. Lortie pleaded guilty to reduced charges of second-degree murder, along with nine counts of attempted murder. Yet the psychiatric evidence was compelling enough that the judge discounted the guilty pleas and ordered yet a third trial. But the next judge accepted the guilty pleas from the second trial, which still got Lortie life in prison, but with reduced time to await a parole hearing.
Lépine had honored this man, which indicates that he felt some empathy with what Lortie had done. But why was Lépine attracted to violence?



