A mother and her child: Police confirm identities of victims in Old Montreal fire


The victims are 43-year-old Léonor Geraudie and her 7-year-old daughter, Vérane Reynaud-Geraudie.

Article content

Montreal police have confirmed that the victims of a fire early Friday morning in Old Montreal are 43-year-old Léonor Geraudie and her 7-year-old daughter, Vérane Reynaud-Geraudie. They are both French nationals.

Police do not suspect any additional deaths.

This is a breaking news update. The original story follows. 

Quebec will ask the coroner’s office to combine Friday’s deadly fire with its continuing investigation into the 2023 fire at the building on Place d’Youville, Public Safety Minister François Bonnardel told reporters Saturday afternoon.

Advertisement 2

Story continues below

Article content

On Friday morning between 2 and 3 a.m., a fire broke out in a century-old building at Notre-Dame St. and Bonsecours St., which houses a 20-room hostel, killing at least two people. Though the cause of the fire is unknown, police are considering it to be suspicious. A criminal investigation has been launched.

Police confirmed Friday evening two bodies were discovered, but didn’t confirm the identities of the victims. But some media reports say the victims were two French nationals — a mother and her 7-year-old daughter. In addition, police confirmed that a man is critical condition as a result of injuries sustained in the blaze.

Both the building on Notre-Dame and the building on Place d’Youville are owned by the same man, Émile Benamor. The Place d’Youville fire claimed seven lives and left nine injured in March of 2023.

By combining both investigations, the process will “be more rapid to have conclusions concerning these two events,” Bonnardel said.

With details of the investigation into last year’s fire yet to be made public, the minister declined to provide a timeline for when information will become available. “They need time,” he said. 

Article content

Advertisement 3

Story continues below

Article content

“People died (in the last fire) and we took that very seriously, and everybody was affected,” Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante told reporters Friday afternoon. “We’re going to get all the answers once the SIM, the firefighters can evaluate every detail.”

Though he declined to confirm whether the SVPM suspected the fire to be the result of arson, City Councillor Alain Vaillancourt, who appeared alongside Bonnardel, said the investigation will aim to “find out those or the person who set fire to the building.” 

“Police will start their work in the next minutes, following the departure of the last firefighters,” he said. 

Security footage obtained by the CBC shows a person dressed all in black breaking into the building shortly after 2:30 a.m. Friday.

At its peak, more than 120 firefighters battled the blaze, while the smoke led Montreal public health to warn citizens about poor air quality in parts of the city. Firefighting operations continued well into the evening Friday.

Advertisement 4

Story continues below

Article content

Most firefighters had left the area by Saturday morning, though police remain and the surrounding the site remains closed. While curious onlookers had lined up outside the barricades well into the evening Friday, the area was calm just over a day after the blaze.

There is no access to Notre-Dame St. between Berri and Gosford Sts., or to Bonsecours St. between Champ-de-Mars and St-Paul Sts.

A police officer confirmed to The Gazette residents are being allowed back into the cordoned-off streets with a proof of identity. Most buildings surrounding the site of the fire are still inaccessible.

The building was the subject of numerous complaints to the fire department, with a 2020 inspection finding a number of code violations. The Montreal fire department says those violations had been corrected at the time of the most recent inspection, in 2023.

Advertisement 5

Story continues below

Article content

Fire inspection records obtained by The Gazette through access-to-information last year show the building was the result of a 2020 complaint to the fire department. The complaint noted the two floors of the building had been turned into a rooming house.

The complaint resulted in an inspection Sept. 23 of that year, the records show.

Inspectors noted 12 code violations, including:

  • Requirements to have functioning smoke alarms that were compliant with standards.
  • Having smoke detectors permanently connected to an electrical circuit “in each sleeping area that is not part of a dwelling unit.”
  • Installing “a fire alarm system in accordance with the requirements in effect at the time of the conversion.”
  • Installing a sprinkler system.
  • Installing portable fire extinguishers in the building.
  • Installing sealed fire separations to isolate living suites, common corridors, interior exits and other areas.
  • Installing emergency lighting and signs marked “exit.”

The notices were sent to the building’s owner, Benamor, the records state.

A followup inspection was carried out on March 29, 2023, less than two weeks after the fatal fire at Benamor’s Place D’Youville building. The file was closed following an evacuation exercise April 14, 2023.

Advertisement 6

Story continues below

Article content

Vaillancourt told reporters that as far he is aware, the building was up to safety standards at the time of the fire. 

“Work was done by the owner to correct the nonconformities,” that had been previously reported to the fire department, Vaillancourt said. But further investigations will give a clearer answer, he added. 

“We will shed light on everything.”

The Ville-Marie borough was aware the top two floors of the building were short-term rentals and had given its approval, according to the records that were obtained by The Gazette through an access-to-information request in 2023.

The Gazette has been unable to reach Benamor, with a receptionist at his law office directing a request for comment to his lawyer. The lawyer did not respond to a call from The Gazette on Friday afternoon. Government records list the owners of the company that operates the hostel as Neir Abissidan and Robert Sebbag.

La Presse Canadienne and The Gazette’s Jacob Serebrin, Leora Schertzer and Linda Gyulai contributed to this report

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Firefighters were battling a five-alarm blaze in Old Montreal Oct. 4, 2024.

    Police find two bodies after Old Montreal fire, but number of dead remains unclear

  2. This building in the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve district on the corner of Chambly and Ontario Sts., which has many units rented as Air BnB's, had paint sprayed on it by housing rights activists recently.

    A year after Airbnb crackdown, short-term rentals still a concern in Montreal

  3. The state of the building the deadly Old Montreal fire, nearly a year later.

    Grieving families stuck in limbo a year after deadly Old Montreal fire

  4. Montreal fire officials confirmed March 20, 2023, that the body they found in the rubble of an Old Montreal fire Sunday was that of a woman. There are six more people missing.

    Illegal short-term rentals in city’s sights after Old Montreal fire

Advertisement 7

Story continues below

Article content

Article content

Comments

Join the Conversation

Featured Local Savings

Source