Serge Quesnel
   Serge Quesnel was born in the early 1970s and became a fearsome enforcer and hitman  for  the  Hells Angels Trois-Rivieres Chapter. He first became  involved in crime  as  a teenager, shoplifting  items from stores.

     He soon moved on to more  serious crimes, including theft, armed robbery, and  drug  dealing. He  also  collected  debts for  bikers, who allowed him to keep 50 per cent of the money recovered.

     Quesnel committed his first  murder  at  the  age of 23. In what he later said was  an  attempt to further their  underworld reputations, he and  a friend killed drug dealer  Richard Jobin. Quesnel said he bashed the 44-year-old over the  head with  an object and that his accomplice then stabbed Jobin in the back with a kitchen knife.

     The following month, Quesnel committed his second murder. He  and the  same friend killed  Martin Naud, who had worked for Quesnel as  a drug dealer  and knew details about the Jobin slaying. The duo ambushed Naud  at his home and Quesnel stabbed him in the eye with a pair of scissors and then slit his throat.

     While Quesnel was not  arrested for the murders, he served time in prison for other crimes. In 1994, shortly after completing a prison stint, he was approached by a lawyer, who offered to introduce him to Louis "Mélou" Roy, the head of  the formidable Hells Angels Trois-Rivieres Chapter and one of the most influential bikers in Canada.

     Quesnel was invited to the gang’s highly-fortified clubhouse, where he was greeted by Roy. Quesnel later said that  after  some small talk, Roy  asked  him to become  a  killer for the Hells Angels. The Hells Angels leader  allegedly explained that Quesnel would be paid $500 per week and $10,000 to $25,000 for each murder he  committed. Quesnel was  ecstatic about the  opportunity  and hurriedly  accepted. As a show of good faith, Roy allegedly gave him $2,000 and bought him $800-worth of clothing.

     Shortly thereafter, the club gave Quesnel his first contract. He was ordered to kill Jacques Ferland, a PCP manufacturer who worked with the  rival Rock Machine gang. Quesnel was to be paid $10,000 for the hit. He offered half to a friend, Michel "Pit" Caron, to help him.

     The duo struck in  January 1995. As Caron waited in the  getaway car, Quesnel snuck into Ferland’s Gordines home  and shot him in the head. André Bédard, an  alleged  Ferland  underling, was shot twice, but survived. The Hells Angels were pleased with their new hired gun.

     Claude "Le Pic" Rivard, an  underworld  figure  linked  to  Montreal’s Pelletier Clan, was next on the hitman’s list. The gang offered Quesnel and an associate $15,000 for the  murder. The duo caught up to Rivard in  February 1995 and Quesnel shot him in the  face  as  he sat in his car waiting  at a red light. A police  cruiser  happened  to  pass  by  at  that  exact  moment and a high-speed car chase was sparked. Quesnel eventually managed to avoid arrest after fleeing on foot.

     Quesnel was  then  offered $10,000 to  kill  rival  drug  dealer  Richard Delcourt. The  hitman used a different  approach this time, convincing his  victim in  March 1995 to  drive  with  him to  Quebec City under the illusion people wanted to meet with him. Along the way, Quesnel pulled over to the side of the road and fired three bullets into Delcourt. He dragged the body to the side of the road and sped away.

     Life was great Quesnel. He was in the good graces of  his  Hells Angels bosses  and dreamed of one-day becoming a member of the gang. He was also making a lot of money, at times carrying  as much as $6,000 in pocket money.

     But  Quesnel’s  came  crashing  down  after  his  accomplice  Michel "Pit" Caron spilled the beans to police  about the  Ferland and Delcourt murders. Quesnel was  arrested  by  the  Surete du Quebec after they stopped his car in Quebec City on April 1, 1995.

     The  contract  killer was  charged with  the  murders of  Ferland  and  Delcourt. He cooperated with police as well, detailing to police all he knew  about the  Hells Angels. More  than  a  dozen  Hells Angels members  and  associates, including chieftain  Louis “Mélou” Roy, were  arrested  on  an  assortment of charges two days later.

     Quesnel  confessed  to  five  murders  and  plotting to murder 13 others. He received a life sentence, with  parole  after 12 years  in  prison. He  was  also  to  be  paid $390,000 for his testimony against his former comrades in crime.

     Quesnel  testified  at  several  trials, including  that  of  Louis  Roy  and  fellow  Hells  Angel  Sylvain "Baptiste" Thiffault, charged with the murders of Jacques Ferland and Richard Delcourt. But juries were reluctant to take the word of an admitted murderer and acquitted the two bikers were acquitted.

     In  January 2002, a  judge ordered Quesnel to pay $36,300 to an inmate he tried to kill in Donnacona prison back in 1993, before the hitman cooperated with police. After prisoner Michel Landry complained of a backache, Quesnel offered to crack his back and stabbed him three times.

     Quesnel has since  released a book about his underworld experiences. Written with Pierre Martineau, "I Was  a Killer for the Hells Angels" pulls  no  punches  about the  sinister deeds  performed by Quesnel during his time as a contract killer.
Hells Angels Trois-Rivieres Chapter