One year after deaths of 2 Quebec girls, some question whether Amber Alert was sent too late - Action News
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One year after deaths of 2 Quebec girls, some question whether Amber Alert was sent too late

Quebec provincial police said that it would have made no difference triggering the Amber Alert earlier, because they determined the girls had already been killed within the first 12 hours of their abduction.

The two girls, aged 6 and 11, were the subject of the longest Amber Alert in Quebec history

Romy, 6, (left) and Norah Carpentier, 11, (right) were found dead last July along with their father, Martin Carpentier. (Submitted by Amber Alerte Qubec)

Sources close to the investigation into the deaths of Romy and Norah Carpentier have told Radio-Canada they think the girls might have had a chance ifpolice had triggered an Amber Alert earlier.

The girls, aged 6 and 11, were killed by their father,Martin Carpentier, in July 2020. He then took his own life.

Originally, Quebec provincial police (SQ) had said that it would have made no difference triggering the Amber Alert earlier, because they determined the girls had already been killed within the first 12 hours of their abduction.

Carpentier and his daughters were last seen aliveon July 8, and their car was found wrecked later that eveningnearSaint-Apollinaire, Que.

At the time, the Sret du Qubecsaid that they had no reason to suspect Carpentier would harm his children. The police force said this led to a delay in sending out an Amber Alert.

The Amber Alert was eventually sent out at 3 p.m. on July 9, about 24 hours after the last sighting of them.

The bodies of the girls were found in the woods two days later. Carpentier's body was found on July 20, the same day as his daughters' funerals.

Quebec provincial police had to search 10 days to find the body of Carpentier, after finding the bodies of his two daughters. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

"By sunrise, last July 9, the damage was done," said Guy Lapointe, during a news conference on July 22, 2020. "It all happened in the first 12 hours."

At the time, Lapointe was the head of communications for the SQ. He has since gone on to work for the Independent Bureau of Investigations.

"Everything that could have been done was done," said Lapointe at the time. "Especially now that we know the speed at which things played out."

Questioning the timeline

Over the last few months, several sources and family members have contacted Radio-Canada to expresstheir surprise at this assertion bypolice.

Half a dozen sources who participated in the operation on the ground or in the investigation have suggested the girls may have been killed18 hours after the car crash.

This would mean they possibly died in the afternoon on July 9, practically the exact time the alert was sent out.

Confidential sources said some evidence at the crime scene suggested Carpentier was preparing to spend a second night in the woods with his children before their death.

Amlie Lemieux, hugged by friends and family, breaks down in tears at a memorial set up for her two daughters in Lvis, Que. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Even though the SQ asserted that sending out the Amber Alert warning earlier would not have made a difference, the girls' mother,AmlieLemieux, feels otherwise.

In an interview with Radio-Canada in November,Lemieuxwondered why more wasn't done the first night of their disappearance.

"Why didn't they send the Amber Alert sooner? What would it have cost them to do it before?"

Coroner preparing report

On the day following the SQ press conference, the Quebec coroner's office sent out a statement clarifying that it was the job of the coroner to determine a timeline of events and establish a time of death for the three people.

A full report from the coroner is expected to be made public in the fall.

The SQ refused to comment on the information reported by Radio-Canada while the coroner's investigation is ongoing.

Lapointe also refused a request for an interview, saying only that everything he said as a spokesman during the news conference wasapproved in advance by the senior management of the SQ.

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Marie-Pier Bouchard