Yvon Belzil
Dubois Gang
   Yvon Belzil  was born in Trois-Pistoles  and  moved to Montreal  in his late teens or early twenties. He was known for carrying a loaded gun  at all times. He also wasn't afraid to use it.

     Belzil  met Claude Dubois in the 1960s and the two became fast friends. They soon set up  a  successful  fencing  operation  together, a  racket that made them  each $300-400 a week. The  Dubois brothers  and Belzil would rise to the top of Montreal's underworld during the next ten years.

     When  Adrien Dubois, Claude's brother, was having  a turf dispute with Bryce  Richardson, a gang leader in the west end, Belzil stepped in. He saw Richardson  at  the 
Harlem Paradise one  night, a saloon owned by Adrien Dubois and Boxer Di Francesco, and shot him three times. Richardson was hit in the back and paralyzed.

     In 1966, Belzil  and Claude Dubois opened  the 
Clé d'Or strip club together. During one of  many raids, police found  more than 50 tissues filled with sperm. When the  government shut down the bar four years later, Belzil and  Dubois lost  a major money maker. They were each making  about $800 a week from the club.

     The two, along with  Claude Jodoin, opened that 
La Grande, a gay night club on  Saint-Catherine street, in May, 1972. Belzil made about $500 a week from the club until it was closed in 1981.

     Around  this time, Richard  Désormiers, Frank Cotroni's brother-in-law, began  making  trouble in Dubois Gang controlled bars. After  a year of  this, Claude Dubois had enough  and  decided to  have Désormiers murdered. The contact was given to Belzil, Claude Dubeau, and Donald Lavoie.

     On July 22, 1973, Lavoie  and Dubeau walked  into the 
Mon Pays bar  and shot  Désormiers and Jacques-André Bourassa, the  manager, several times. As this went on inside, Belzil stole  Désormiers Cadillac from the parking lot.

     After Belzil  appeared  before  the  Commission d'Enquete sur  le Crime Organisé (CECO), he, his girlfriend, Claude Dubois  and  his wife, and Claude Jodoin took  a two week  vacation to Haiti. They liked  the island so much  that Belzil  and Dubois decided  to return  and buy a hotel there. But, before they could do that, they were deported on a request from Montreal police.

     According to Claude Jodoin, a gang member  who later turned  informant, Belzil  began plotting to eliminate Claude Dubois and replacing in the late 70s. After he unsuccessfully tried to turn Adrien and Jean-Paul  Dubois  against  their  brother, Belzil  opened  an escort  service  in close  proximity to  an agency controlled by Claude Dubois. He even hired Raymond Duclos, a criminal who testified against Dubois for the CECO, to work in the establishment. This was a veritable slap in the face to Dubois. 

     The Dubois brothers ordered Belzil to close his escort agency's doors. Belzil was furious and, one afternoon in  a gang hangout, he jumped  a gang member known  as "Petit Louis" and pummelled him helplessly. Claude and Jean-Paul Dubois quickly broke up the fight and Claude flinged  Belzil against a wall  and levelled him with  a powerful uppercut. Belzil got up  and left, threatening  get even with the brothers.

     A meeting  was  arranged for the  next day  to try to  iron things but, because of increased  police pressure, Belzil panicked  and left  Montreal that night for his home town, Trois-Pistoles. From there, he  and associate Raymond Duclos went to Abitibi, where they lived on  a farm while they waited for the heat to die down back in the city.   

     Belzil returned to  Montreal in October, 1980, and  asked  Claude Jodoin to set up  a meeting with Claude Dubois. The two met and agreed to put their differences aside.

     He began to run his rackets from  an  office  at 1851 Sherbrooke  street East. Business was  great and Belzil was selling more 30 pounds of hashish a week, which was being supplied to him by Adrien Dubois. Belzil's drug dealers, couriers, and enforcers would gather inside the building from 4 to 7pm, three times a week, for instructions. 

     One time, when  his  supply dried  up, Bezil went to Claude  Dubois for help. Dubois  approached Robert "Bob" Foley, an  influential  West End Gang  member  based out of  Laval, who sold  Belzil 50 pounds of hashish.

     When  Donald Lavoie  turned police  informant, Belzil came  up with several  plots to silence him. One  idea was to  blow him  and his  police escorts  up with  a bazooka  as they  arrived  at the court house. Belzil  also suggested  that his wife  and children be kidnapped  and, if despite this, Lavoie still agreed to take the stand against them, they would be tortured and murdered.

     Belzil was  a prime suspect  in the murder of Gérald Durocher, a Duboig Gang  member who was found dead  in the trunk of  his car on December 16, 1981. Jodoin told police that Belzil once boasted to him that he had organized the murder. 

     Lavoie's  incriminating  information  came back to  haunt  Belzil on  April 8, 1982. Police  officers raided his Saint-Leonard house and arrested him. Claude Dubois was also picked at his home in Écho Lake. They  were charged  with the  murders of  Richard Désormiers  and  Jacques-André Bourassa. Claude Dubeau, who was already behind bars, was also charged with the murders.

     Lavoie and Claude Jodoin testified against their former associates. The three were found guilty on November 12, 1983 and were sentenced to life imprisonment. The Quebec Court of Appeals reduced their sentences to  ten years 1989 because, they decided, Jacques-André Bourassa's  murder  had not been premeditated. Belzil was released from  prison in the early 1990s and  has since  kept a very low profile.