Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Montreal

Ex-mayor Michael Applebaum will not testify at his corruption trial

A Quebec court has learned the defence will not be presenting any evidence in the Michael Applebaum corruption trial, and the former Montreal mayor will not be testifying.

Former mayor on trial for corruption, breach of trust, maintains his innocence

Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum gets into a car outside police headquarters in Montreal, Monday, June 17, 2013. Applebaum was arrested earlier as part of a bribery case. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

A Quebec court has learned the defence will not be presenting any evidence in the Michael Applebaum corruption trial, and the former Montreal mayor will not be testifying.

Applebaumis accused ofbreach of trust, conspiracy and two forms of corruption: municipal corruption and fraud on the government.

All the charges date back to his time as borough mayor ofCte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grceand relate toan alleged strategy of asking for bribes in exchange for bureaucratic favours.

Applebaumhas always maintained his innocence.

On the seventh day of the trial, the prosecution rested its case after hearing testimony from its final witness.

Defence lawyer Pierre Teasdale informed the court he would not be calling any witnesses to testify. His final arguments will be based on the evidence already before the court.

Prosecutor Nathalie Kleber is expected to make her closing arguments on Friday, followed by Teasdale on Monday.

Final witness never saw Applebaum receive cash

The final witness called by the prosecution was retired mortgage consultant Anthony Keeler.

He told the court that in exchange for a promise of roughly $35,000 in kickbacks, former mayor Michael Applebaum ensureda zoning committee would approve his real estate projecton deTroieAvenue in Montreal.

"He sold it to the committee,"Keelersaid, referring to the borough's zoning committee.

But under cross-examination, he admitted that he never saw the cash actually being handed to Applebaum.

The court has heard how Keeler and his business partner Robert Stein agreed to pay between $30,000 and $35,000 to ensure their plans for a condominium development would be approved by the borough.

Keeler told the court that Applebaum's right-hand man, Hugo Tremblay, initially asked him for a much higher amount, between $100,000 and $50,000 in cash, in exchange for theirhelp.

He'd call and say, 'Can we have lunch tomorrow?' and if I had the money, I would say yes.- Anthony Keeler, retired mortgage consultant

"He said, 'Michael will have to work hard on it,'" Keeler testified.

After Keeler negotiated the total sum down to around $35,000, he said he andTremblayagreed to meet three or four times at the Brlerie St-Denis on Cte-des-Neiges Road for the cash transcations.

"We had a code, I guess you'd call it," Keeler told the court.

"He'd call and say, 'Can we have lunch tomorrow?' and if I had the money, I would say yes."

Crown witness Robert Stein said he felt like he had to pay thousands of dollars in kickbacks to bureaucrats if he wanted to succeed as a real estate manager in Montreal's Cte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grce borough. (Radio-Canada)

Keeler'sbusiness partner felt 'bullied, extorted'

Keeler's testimony followed that of his former business partner, real estate manager Robert Stein.

During his testimony, Stein calledhimself "a sucker" anda victim of extortion.

He portrayed himself as a naive, young entrepreneur in his 20s in 2006, when he tookover the family business in the wake of his father's death.

"I was bullied,extorted. I had no support from anyone around me," he testifiedon Monday.

"Every single person has their hand out, on one project, on this first project I've ever developed," he said, referring to his condominiumdevelopment on Montreal's de Troie Avenue,whichwas never completed.

But during cross-examination, defence lawyer Pierre Teasdale questioned Stein'snaivet.

Teasdale asked about Stein's fatherand his relationship with Tony Magi, a Montreal businessman withknown links to organized crime.

"My father, I think, for many years had a good reputation. That reputation, I believe, was tarnished by his business association with Mr. Magi," Stein said.

Former Montreal mayor Michael Applebaum arrives at the courthouse accompanied by his defence team on Monday, Nov. 14, 2016 in Montreal. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Stein explained that Magihad offices in the same building as his father.

He said that despite his efforts to re-establish the family name after his father's death, Stein felt he was sucked into the world of corruption.

He said when bureaucrats, including Applebaum's right-hand man, asked for tens of thousands of dollars to approve his project, he felt like he didn't have much of a choice if he wanted to succeed in the real estate business.

Stein turns police informant

This week's testimony focused on the proposedProjetTroiedevelopment,one of two key projects under scrutiny in the trial. The other is a municipal contract for the management and maintenance of the NDG Sports Centre.

Stein told the court that eventually, in 2012, he went to police and agreed to tell his whole story as an anonymous informant.

He said it was months later thatApplebaumwas arrestedand resigned as mayor of Montreal.

'The jig is up'

In court on Tuesday,Keelerrecalled the morning anti-corruption investigators knocked on his door at 6:30 a.m. in the spring of 2013.

"I was still in my boxers, sleeping wear," he testified.

Keeler said he'd been following the Charbonneau corruption inquiry and wasn't surprised to see police on his doorstep.

"They had the look and the attitude of 'the jig is up,'" he said.

He told the court that he later agreed to work with police, but only after he was assured that Steinwould be protected as well.

"The minute they left I called Robbie, I said, 'Putyour pants on, come over.'"