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MONTREAL | CÔTE-DES-NEIGES – The body of Constable Mohamed Lamine Benredouane was lowered into the frozen ground of Laval Cemetery on Wednesday afternoon as an imam’s final prayer still hung in the air. Hundreds of mourners, uniformed officers from Boston to Saskatchewan, relatives who had crossed oceans, teammates from a local Muslim soccer league, and neighbours who had watched him grow up, stood motionless under an overcast sky. Benredouane, 34, was not just the first Montreal police officer killed in the line of duty in 24 years; he was an Algerian immigrant, a father of a three-year-old boy, the husband of a pregnant wife, and now, in the words of those who came to bury him, “a martyr of duty.”
His death, in a midday shootout Monday in the Côte-des-Neiges, a Jewish neighbourhood, where he was raised, has sent shockwaves through Quebec’s Algerian diaspora, shaken the Service de police de la Ville de Montréal (SPVM) to its core, and revived uncomfortable questions about gun violence, officer safety, and the opacity of police investigations. While politicians and police unions have rushed to canonise Benredouane, investigators have revealed scant details about the 25-year-old Alberta man who gunned him down, a silence that communities on the ground say is fuelling fear and speculation.

A Journey From Skikda To Côte-Des-Neiges:
Benredouane was born in Skikda, a port city on Algeria’s Mediterranean coast, into a sprawling family well known both back home and in Quebec’s tightly knit North African community. His distant cousin, Nadir Ahcene Djaballah, who once lived next door to him in Skikda, recalled a boy who was always smiling. “I consider him like a brother,” Djaballah told journalists this week. “A lot of people back home are very touched by his death.” That grief reverberated on Wednesday at the Islamic Centre of Quebec in the Saint-Laurent borough, where an estimated 1,000 mourners packed the mosque and spilt onto the grounds, laying sheets on the grass to perform funeral prayers. Benredouane’s immediate family had earlier performed the ghusl, the Islamic ritual washing and perfuming of the body, in private. The imams who led the service urged the faithful to cherish each day, reminding them that life is fleeting.
Benredouane immigrated to Canada, settled in Côte-des-Neiges, and attended La Voie High School, barely a kilometre from the intersection of Trans Island and De Courtrai avenues, where he would die. He later moved to suburban Laval, but his roots in the neighbourhood were deep. Côte-des-Neiges, Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough mayor Stéphanie Valenzuela, struggling to contain tears, said her social media feed filled up the morning after the shooting with flashback photos from high school: “He went to school in the neighbourhood, and many of my friends, many people in my network knew him personally. … It was an act of heroism that I can’t highlight further.”
That heroism, Valenzuela noted, was bound up in the officer’s choice to serve the very community that had shaped him. Benredouane joined the SPVM in 2021, one of a growing number of officers from immigrant backgrounds recruited in an effort to better reflect Montreal’s diversity. He was also a fixture of the Ligue amicale maghrébine de soccer Montréal, where he played goalkeeper. Friends there remembered a man of serene demeanour. “Mohamed was serene, very calm, very polite, very composed,” said Ahmed Taalbi, a teammate. “Honestly, I think God must have taken the gentlest one.” Another player, Nourredine Guezzane, added: “He was well-liked; no one could speak a mean word to him because, once you got to know him, you couldn’t help but like him.”
The Attack And The Unanswered Questions:
Monday’s timeline, according to police sources, began at 11:35 a.m. when 911 calls reported a rifle muzzle protruding from a window of the Hilton Hotel near the Trans Island–De Courtrai intersection. Benredouane, who was not scheduled to work that day but had picked up an overtime shift to earn extra money for his growing family, was among the first officers to respond. As they approached the street level, the gunman opened fire. Benredouane was fatally struck. A bystander, 68-year-old Michel Mizrahi, was also killed. The suspect, identified only as a 25-year-old man from Alberta, died in a subsequent exchange of gunfire with police. The city was plunged into an active-shooter alert and a shelter-in-place order that lasted hours, traumatising residents already on edge after a series of violent incidents in the metropolis.
Montreal police chief Fady Dagher has cautioned against describing the killings as an ambush, saying it is “too early” to determine the gunman’s intent. But the Fraternité des policiers et policières de Montréal, the police union, chose more visceral language. “Our colleague gave his life to protect the citizens of Montreal, loyal to the end of the oath of office he took,” President Yves Francoeur said in a statement, saluting Benredouane’s “courage and sense of duty.” The union’s message resonated across North America: tributes poured in from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, the Boston Police Department, and the Saskatchewan Federation of Police Officers, among others.
Yet for all the sorrow, the investigation has been marked by a tight-lipped posture that is generating unease in the affected communities. Quebec’s Bureau des enquêtes indépendantes (BEI), which probes all police-involved deaths, confirmed in a statement late Thursday that the assailant had no apparent criminal record, had checked into the hotel two days prior, and had legally acquired the firearm. But the BEI declined to discuss a possible motive, citing the ongoing investigation. The vacuum of official information has left room for rumour and anxiety, particularly among immigrant groups who fear being tarred by the actions of a lone attacker. Several local Muslim and Algerian community organisations have issued statements condemning violence and underscoring that Benredouane’s own faith and origins symbolise an indissoluble link to Montreal.

“We need to know why,” said Lyes Chekal, a resident of Saint-Basile-le-Grand who drove 40 kilometres to attend the funeral despite never having met Benredouane. “He’s a martyr of duty. He risked his life for citizens. If we don’t understand why this happened, how can we stop the next one?” Nubaid Oubeid Allah, who came from Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, echoed that urgency: “I’m here so he isn’t just a statistic.”
A Family Left Behind, A Community Mobilised:
Behind the uniform, Benredouane leaves a young family now facing an unthinkable void. A GoFundMe campaign launched for his wife and children surpassed $400,000 within two days, with donations flooding in from citizens, businesses, and police associations. “Behind the uniform was an exceptional man: a dedicated police officer, a loyal friend, a loving husband and an extraordinary father,” the organisers wrote. The campaign page painted a portrait of a man who took overtime not out of ambition but necessity, to provide for a household that was about to welcome a second child.
That detail has struck a chord far beyond Quebec. In Algeria, where Benredouane’s twin brother and extended family reside, news of his death was met with an outpouring of grief. “A lot of people back home are very touched,” Djaballah said. The family, well-known in the Skikda region and among the Algerian diaspora in Quebec, requested that Wednesday’s funeral prayer be strictly private. The SPVM complied, announcing that a civic ceremony would be organised in about two weeks to celebrate Benredouane’s life in full public view.

On the streets of Côte-des-Neiges, a makeshift shrine has taken shape near the intersection where he fell, with flowers and a photograph of the officer in his SPVM cap. It is a testament to a life that had come full circle, from a smiling boy on the streets of Skikda to a young man navigating high school hallways in a multicultural Montreal neighbourhood, to a uniformed officer willing to put his body between danger and the people he grew up alongside.
Investigative Critique: The Transparency Deficit.
If the civic ritual of mourning has been swift, the institutional response has been comparatively opaque. The BEI’s preliminary note that the shooter had legally obtained his weapon raises familiar questions about Canada’s firearm regulations, particularly when a man with no known criminal history can travel from Alberta to Quebec and unleash lethal violence within days of arriving. Police have not disclosed whether the attacker had any history of mental illness, whether he left a manifesto, or whether he had any connection, however tenuous, to extremist ideologies. Experts in terrorism and policing said the absence of information, while procedurally cautious, risks leaving an anxious public to fill in the blanks.
“There’s a danger when authorities don’t communicate promptly in a high-profile shooting,” said Dr. Leila Benkirane, a criminologist at the Université de Montréal who studies police-community relations. “Immigrant communities, in particular, can feel they are being collectively judged or that their safety concerns are secondary. The fact that the fallen officer was himself a Muslim Algerian complicates the narrative, but also presents an opportunity for transparency to build bridges rather than sow mistrust.”
Montreal Mayor Soraya Martinez Ferrada, speaking to reporters, urged the city to focus on the sacrifice rather than the shooter. “I hope they feel that they can be proud,” she said of the officers on the scene. “Somebody who was there didn’t think twice about protecting Montrealers, and we can say thank you.” But for many in Côte-des-Neiges, gratitude is not enough. They want to know what turned a hotel window into a sniper’s nest on a Monday morning, and whether systemic failures in mental health care, in interprovincial information sharing, in the policing of legally held firearms, contributed to the deaths of two innocent men.
A Legacy In The Making:
As the SPVM prepares its formal civic farewell, Benredouane’s memory is already being etched into the institutional consciousness of a force that has not buried one of its own since 2002. The outpouring of solidarity from international police bodies suggests that his story has become a rallying cry. Yet for the Algerian community, the soccer league that mourns its goalkeeper, and the neighbours who saw him mature from a high-school student into a guardian of their streets, his death is more personal.
“He was one of us,” said a man who gave only his first name, Rachid, standing near the shrine on a humid afternoon. “He proved that you can come from far away, keep your faith, and give everything back to your new home. I hope his children will one day understand how much their father was loved, not just as a police officer, but as a human being.”
Behind the heroic narrative lies a more uncomfortable truth: a young father, working an overtime shift he wasn’t supposed to work, lost his life in a burst of violence that no one has yet explained. Until that explanation comes, Mohamed Lamine Benredouane will remain both a symbol of Montreal’s complex identity and a haunting reminder of the fractures that can rend even its most vibrant neighbourhoods. The civic ceremony will eventually end, the flowers will wilt, but the questions his death provokes will linger, demanding answers that a city in mourning cannot afford to ignore.
Source: Veritas Press C.I.C. | Multi News Agencies
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