Quebec Woman Lethally Stabbed in Saint-Hyacinthe Jewelry Store Dies
Quebec.Saint-Hyacinthe Stabbing Case!~Montérégie-District~[Montreal-Police]!~ Saint-Hyacinthe ShoppingMall. A 54-year-elderly woman died after being stabbed Wednesday morning in an adornments store in Quebec’s Monteregie disrict.
A 54-year-elderly woman dies because of being stabbed Wednesday morning in a jewelry store in Quebec’s Montérégie district. (Monteregie disrict)
At around 10:15 a.m., the lady was assaulted at the store in the Galeries Saint-Hyacinthe retail outlet, around 50 km southeast of Montreal.
She was moved to clinic in basic condition. Her demise was affirmed Wednesday evening.
Quebec commonplace police say a male presume left the scene in a vehicle. Neighborhood police were engaged with a “short pursuit”, a vehicle coordinating with its portrayal was subsequently halted and its driver was addressed, said Sûreté du Québec (SQ) Sgt. Audrey-Anne-Bilodeau.
The SQ says the 43 year old suspect is from Montreal and known to police. SQ Sgt. Valérie Beauchamp said primer proof accumulated by examiners doesn’t seem to show any connection between the man and the person in question.
Beauchamp says the suspect is relied upon to show up in court today in Saint-Hyacinthe.
Mental help is being offered to representatives who were working at the hour of the assault.
Quebec common police say a lady is dead after a fight today inside a retail plaza in St-Hyacinthe, Que., around 60 kilometers east of Montreal.
Police say a male presume escaped in a vehicle and was captured after a concise vehicle pursue including adjoining police powers.
The 43-year-elderly person, a Montreal inhabitant, is known to police.
The person in question, a 54-year-elderly person from St-Pie, Que., was shipped to emergency clinic where she passed on of her wounds.
Sgt. Marythé Bolduc says police were called around 10:15 a.m. to the retail outlet, which was shut for the police examination.
The suspect is relied upon to be questioned by specialists sometime in the afternoon.
This report by The Canadian Press was first distributed Aug. 11, 2021.