Alleged killer in Quebec cold case tracked down by Y chromosome project, Crown says - Action News
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Montreal

Alleged killer in Quebec cold case tracked down by Y chromosome project, Crown says

A Quebec prosecutor began presenting his case against Marc-Andr Grenon, who is charged with first-degree murder and aggravated sexual assault in the death of Guylaine Potvin.

Trial for Marc-AndrGrenon at Chicoutimi courthouse expected to last 5 weeks

An old picture of a young girl.
Guylaine Potvin was killed in Joncquire in April 2000. At the time, the DNA that was found at the scene could not be matched. (Submitted by Sret du Qubec)

A Quebec prosecutor says a man charged with the sexual assault and murder of a 19-year-old junior college student nearly 24 years ago was tracked down with the help of a project that matches DNA with male surnames.

Prosecutor Pierre-Alexandre Bernard began presenting his case today against Marc-AndrGrenon, who is charged with the first-degree murder and aggravated sexual assault of Guylaine Potvin.

Potvin was found dead in April 2000 in her apartment in Jonquire, Que., some 215 kilometres north of Quebec City.

Bernard told the 14-member jury that while male DNA was discovered at the crime scene, there was no match in the police database and no witness to the crime.

He says the suspect was arrested more than 20 years later, after a project tracking Y chromosomes which are passed down from father to son first suggested the DNA might be connected to the last name Grenon.

Bernard says police arrested Grenon in 2022 after DNA on two drinking straws he had discarded were found to be a match with the evidence from the crime scene.

Superior Court Justice Franois Huot is presiding over the trial at the Chicoutimi courthouse, which is expected to last five weeks.