A year after deadly Old Montreal fire, families remain heartbroken, angry - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 02:08 AM | Calgary | -14.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

A year after deadly Old Montreal fire, families remain heartbroken, angry

A year after a deadly fire killed seven people in an Old Montreal building, families of the victims and survivors are raising concerns about the ongoing criminal investigation and what they feel is negligence by several parties.

No charges have been laid, lawsuits are ongoing

In the dark, firefighters workto put out a three-storey building that's on fire in Old Montreal. Plumes of dark grey smoke are coming out of some windows.
On March 16, 2023, at 5:45 a.m., a fire that police believe was intentionally set began to rage through a three-storey heritage building in Old Montreal. Seven people were trapped inside and died. (Simon-Marc Charron/Radio-Canada)

"A year later, we still feel shock and disbelief that this has happened and our son has been taken from us," said Randy Sears.

Sitting next to his wife Beth in their New Brunswick home, Sears can't help but get worked up. He says he continues to feel a myriad of emotions.

"Confusion. Anger. Anxiety."

In the early hours of March 16, 2023, a fire broke out at a heritage building in Old Montreal.

Flames quickly spread, exploding windows and engulfing the building in smoke. Of the 22 people in the building at the time, seven died :Charlie Lacroix, An Wu, Nathan Sears, Dania Zafar, Camille Maheux, Saniya Khan and Walid Belkalha.

Six of them were staying in illegal Airbnbs at the time, including Nathan.

"Our life has been left with a gaping hole and a hole that will never really be filled," said Randy Sears.

Now though, he says, there's even more to be angry and frustrated about.

"It's a comedy of errors," Randy says, of the ongoing criminal investigation into the fire, and what he feels is the lack of accountability of various parties, including Airbnb, the building owner and the City of Montreal.

He's not alone. Other families and survivors feel answers are lacking as they continue to deal with the repercussions of that morning.

The seven people who died when a fire broke out at a heritage building in Old Montreal on March 16, 2023.
Seven people died when a fire broke out at a heritage building in Old Montreal on March 16, 2023. (CBC News)

Criminal investigation ongoing, no charges laid

Montreal police won't comment on the specifics of the case, citing the ongoing investigation.

"We send all our sympathies to the families,"Insp. David Shane told Radio-Canada.

"We are following all possible leads in this case. We understand that it's long. We know that for the families it's an eternity but we are working our hardest."

In August though, the case was transferred to the major crimes unit, with the police saying they believe the fire was intentionally set.

"We are now talking about a criminal investigation," Shane, said at the time.

Although no suspect has been formally identified, Radio-Canada learned convicted murderer Denis Bginis considered the primary one by police.

Bgin is currently serving a life sentence for a murder on Halloween night in 1993.

But in February 2019, he escaped from a minimum-security federal prison and was on the lam for four years.

He was arrested after a vehicle tied to him was spotted on surveillance camera on the night of the deadly fire near the building.

man
Denis Bgin is a convicted murderer who escaped a minimum security facility in Laval, Que., in 2019 and was caught four years later in Montreal. (Submitted by the Sret du Qubec)

"I mean, how can that happen?" Randy asks.

For Beth Sears, it's how families are getting updates that upsets her most.

"It's upsetting when we receive emails or calls from people that we know, friends that live in other places, and they have seen an article in a newspaper that we haven't seen," she says.

"They have information that we don't know because no one calls us to tell us and that's where we get our information. It blindsides us when that happens."

Zafar Mahmood is equally incredulous. He lost his 31-year-old daughter,Dania Zafar, in the fire.

"A year has passed. Nothing has happened so far," he says from his home in Lahore, Pakistan.

He says his life has changed immeasurably since the fire. Ordinary things that used to bring him joy, like listening to Indian 80s music, or watching cricket, no longer do. Every other day, he visits his daughter's grave.

"I just sit there and just close my eyes and think Dania's with me," he says.

"When the cool breeze blows, I think it's Dania's touch."

Dania Zafar's final resting spot in Lahore, Pakistan which her father has surrounded with flowers.
Dania Zafar's final resting spot in Lahore, Pakistan, which her father has surrounded with flowers. (Submitted by Zafar Mahmood)

Several lawsuits are proceeding

Two weeks after the fire, the Sears family applied to file a class-action lawsuit targeting the building's owner, Emile Benamor;the tenant who was running the short-term rental units, Tariq Hasan;and Airbnb. The lawsuit claimed all three were negligent.

CBC reached out to Hasan and to Benamor's lawyer for comment. Neither responded.

In October, the class action was switched to a civil action under joinder, which brings all similar claims together into one proceeding. The City of Montreal was added to the suit.

Airbnb expressed a desire to settle, and was therefore dropped from the suit. Negotiations continue in the hopes of coming to a settlement agreement.

The company refused to comment, citing the ongoing litigation.

For the families of the victims and survivors involved in the suit, it's not just about finding a culprit.

Benjamin Magid had booked an Airbnb in the building with his then-girlfriend Marie Shaughnessyon a trip to Montreal.

When the fire broke out, Magid woke up to smoke billowing through the unit's door. Three of the four windows were glued shut, but they managed to make it out through the fourth window, jumping to a fire escape and then to the ground.

"Probably the most lasting scar I think I have from that day is the survivor's guilt," Magid says from his home in New York City.

WATCH | Families speak of their lasting confusion and anger ayear later:

Families of Montreal Airbnb fire victims still searching for justice

6 months ago
Duration 2:16
One year after a deadly fire in a Montreal heritage building where most of the victims were staying in illegal Airbnbs, the victims' families, as well as survivors, are still searching for justice.

Shaughnessy agrees and says she avoids any news about the fire unless her family or friends read it first and relay the main points. She says hearing news aboutthose who died really hurts.

She is still recovering from that morning.

"In the weeks and months afterwards I had this kind of constant state of fear and of just uncertainty," she says.

"Everything was scary to me, like, everything could be a dangerous situation."

The two have joined the lawsuit alongside the Sears and Mahmood, along with others.

"I think it's the best way that I can stand up for what is, or stand against, an obvious wrongdoing from a number of actors, and stand alongside those family members who have experienced loss," Magid says.

Another lawsuit is also proceeding, by the family of Charlie Lacroix, against the City of Montreal and building owner Benamor.

WATCH| Drone footage of fire scene:

Aerial video shows aftermath of deadly fire in Old Montreal

2 years ago
Duration 0:47
Drone footage shows an aerial view of the fire that ravaged a historic building in Old Montreal.

Answers needed,Montreal mayor says

Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante understands the frustrations of the families.

"There has to be answers for the families, but also for Montrealers," she says.

"It's been a yearand I can understand they're like, 'What's happening? Is there going to be arrests? What are the conclusions?'"

Plante says she's spoken with Montreal's police chief, who has assured her the case is a priority.

For Randy Sears, concrete answers and changes, from all he thinks are involved, including the city,are necessary.

"It probably won't alleviate our emotions until there's some type of culmination to this," he says.

In the Sears' home is a framed Canadian flag. It was flown at half-mastin Nathan's honour at the Canadian Armed Force station in Erbil in NorthernIraq in April last year.

On top of being an academic focused on existential risk,he was also an intelligence analyst for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, a fact the Sears only learned after his death.

"He learned through his intelligence that there was an imminent attack by terrorist groups," Randy says.

"He saved Canadian lives and Iraqi lives,and we have that [flag] at our home.We learned so much about our sonfollowing his death."

With files from Lauren McCallum