Alain Magloire's family and friends mourn man shot by police - Action News
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Montreal

Alain Magloire's family and friends mourn man shot by police

A funeral home in Longueuil was packed this afternoon for the funeral of Alain Magloire, the 41-year-old man who was shot dead by Montreal police on Monday.

Quebec coroner orders public inquiry into the death of 41-year-old man with mental illness

Alain Magloire, 41, was shot and killed by police on Feb. 3, 2014 after he used a hammer to smash a window near the downtown coach bus terminal. (Facebook)

A funeral home in Longueuil was packed this afternoon for the funeral of Alain Magloire, the 41-year-old man who was shot dead by Montreal police on Monday.

Magloire was killed near the coach bus terminal in downtown Montreal after wielding a hammer in what police officers said was a threatening fashion.

"I was shocked when I heard he was on the streets, you know," said old friend Nicolas Lepore, who attended the funeral. "So how come a guy like thatso brilliant,so intelligent,so everything was on the streets?"

Police were called to the scene onBerriStreet afterMagloireused the hammer to smasha nearby hotel's reception-area window.

The man, who was known at Montreal's Old Brewery, suffered from a mental illness his brother Pierre Magloire said was linked to having taken ecstasy at a party.

Magloire said his brother Alains life quickly spun out of control as a result, forcing him to leave his job as an educator and scientific researcher. He had voluntarily gone to live in the streets of Montreal in Nov. 2013, his brother told CBC News.

Magloire said his brother was carrying a hammerand other tools at the time of the shootingbecause he volunteered in construction work for a shelter in downtown Montreal.

Alain Magloires death has called attention to a number of social issues, including the way people with mental illnesses are handled by Montreal police.

On Friday, Quebec's chief coroner Denis Marsolais ordered a public inquiry into Magloires death. Coroner Catherine Rudel-Tessier will handle the case.

Given that some emergency interventions in public places involving people suffering from mental illness have caused some deaths in recent years, it seems now is a good opportunity to proceed with a public inquiry, reads the news release issued by the coroners office.

The release continued, mentioning that the coroners office wants to be able to make recommendations about reducing the risk of death in emergency situations involving people with mental health issues.

Magloire leaves behind two daughters, aged 8 and 12.