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They Took His Bloody Chainsaw, And Sent Him On His Way

by Open-Publishing - Thursday 9 June 2005
11 comments

Police - Repression USA

http://http://www.canada.com/compon...

They Took His Bloody Chainsaw, And Sent Him On His Way
Man On Run From Law, Spattered With Blood, Allowed To Enter US
Gary Dimmock and Chuck Brown, The Ottawa Citizen
June 08, 2005

Gregory Allan Despres was supposed to be going to jail the morning folks spotted him hitchhiking to the US border with a bloody chainsaw. His trousers were spattered with blood. Inside his backpack he had a homemade sword, a hatchet, a knife and brass knuckles. He was also packing pepper spray and wearing a bullet-proof vest.

The 22-year-old man with the Mohawk haircut and bugged-out eyes still got rides in friendly New Brunswick. And incredibly, in this dawn of intense border security, he still made it through customs. After customs officers fingerprinted him and seized his arsenal, including the chainsaw, they let him go.

According to police, Mr. Despres, a naturalized American citizen, told the border guards he was in the US military.

They didn’t know he was running from the law, let alone linked to the killings of his elderly next-door neighbours in Minto, an old coal mining town in central New Brunswick — killings that ended a years-long, violent feud.

The Mounties didn’t find the bodies of Frederick Fulton, 74, and his wife Veronica Decarie, 70, until the next day. They had been stabbed in their bedroom.

Police found the body of Mr. Fulton, a country singer, on the kitchen floor, just a few feet from his head, which had been stuffed in a pillow case and shoved under the breakfast table.

According to a U.S Attorney’s complaint, filed by the US Attorney’s office as part of the extradition case and obtained by the Citizen, after he was stopped at the border Canadian and American authorities consented to his release into the United States.

At the time he crossed the border he was free on bail. That morning — April 25 — he was to have been sentenced for threatening to kill his neighbour’s son-in-law. Mr. Fulton and Ms. Decarie had just been slain.

Mr. Despres changed his trousers, which were spattered in blood, behind a shop in St. Stephen, N.B, and then walked up to the US Customs booth on foot, with the bloodied chainsaw strapped to his backpack. He made it to the border crossing at 10 a.m., just hours after the double homicide.

Eddie Young, a 38-year-old fish-plant worker, sat next to Mr. Despres in the customs office at Calais, Maine, while the agents processed them. Mr. Young was on his way to catch a flight to Mexico with friends, but was detained when the officers noticed on his file a 20-year-old drug conviction in Ottawa.

"When he come in, they opened his bag up and they took out," Mr. Young said in an interview. "It looked like large bayonets to me, but they could have been a little bit longer for swords, and then two pairs of brass knuckles fastened to his bag, a chainsaw and what looked like a flak jacket."

Mr. Young said the US customs agents appeared to be joking around.

"I watched the customs guys fling the swords around in the back room," he said. "I mean, wouldn’t the evidence be ruined with their fingerprints?"

Mr. Young said Mr. Despres was treated better than he was.

"When I come back in (to the room) they were giving him a coffee," he said. "He got processed faster than I did."

Mr. Despres, who has a 10-inch swastika tattooed on his lower back, set off on foot into the United States. He was picked up by US police two days later, on April 27, the day police issued a North America-wide warrant. Mr. Despres, arrested in Massachusetts, is now facing an extradition hearing, to be held next month.

So how did a Canadian, at large for skipping a sentencing hearing, simply walk through US customs — with a bloody chainsaw, no less?

"Nobody asked us to detain him," said Bill Anthony, a spokesman for US Customs and Border Protection.

"Being bizarre is not a reason to keep somebody out of this country or lock them up. We’re governed by laws and regulations, and he did not violate any regulations," Mr. Anthony told the Associated Press.

None of Mr. Despres’ weapons are prohibited by law in the United States. The customs spokesman conceded it "sounds stupid" that a man carrying a bloody chainsaw couldn’t be detained. "Our people don’t have a crime lab up there. They can’t look at a chainsaw and decide if it’s blood or rust or red paint," he said.

In a New Brunswick court hearing earlier this year, Mr. Despres’ father was sentenced for beating his live-in girlfriend. High on cocaine, court heard, his father used to rev up his own chainsaw and use it on appliances and the ceiling. Another time, his live-in girlfriend woke up with him standing over her bed with a chainsaw.

The killings of the elderly couple in the small New Brunswick town has left many devastated. Days after the killings, councillors called a town meeting to help the citizens cope.

According to the police complaint, the RCMP believe Mr. Despres, bent on settling accounts with his neighbours, broke down their door some time in the morning of April 25, then started stabbing them in their bedroom. The Mounties believe Mr. Fulton ran into the bathroom and used its door as a shield. He was then stabbed to death and decapitated. They found his car in a gravel pit on a highway leading to the U.S. border, on the other side of the St. Croix River, which runs along the southwest corner of New Brunswick.

Forum posts

  • Surprised the yanks let him in -he sounds a bit conservative for them, perhaps they thought they could enlist him for Iraq, -sounds like a marine candidate to me.

    • No that would be good for the Army Marines are not that crazy

    • Yeah, lately my country is a haven for psychotic murders. I’m not surprised they let him in. U.S. officials just love fascist nuts.

    • Why didn’t he just get his butt to England and tell everyone there that he was just a mild mannered soccer hooligan — no one would have suspected a thing.

  • i have also had a very difficult time re-entering the US and i am a US citizen ... it has taken hours ... i find this very hard to believe ... all the signs were there "weapons" ... blood stains ... but if they think you are the "drug" culture you are treated like "foul word" and usually turned away or detained for hours ... something is very wrong with the new terrorist laws, they keep out people who may not think the way you want them to, but let in men with bloody weapons .... something very wrong with the picture

  • Ok, did anyone take a look at this guy’s picture??? Couple his appearance with, um, a freakin arsenal of weapons....I’m sorry, but the Canadian Customs officials responsible should be clubbed, at least verbally thrashed. There are laws and regulations, but there is also this little thing called common sense. The fact that this man was treated to coffee (again, LOOK at the picture..does he look like he needs coffee??) is mind blowing...did they throw is some Hostess Donettes too?

    • If you read the article, its the US custom agents who let him in, let them be the ones to get clubbed!

  • Police in America:

     lousy trained
     obese men in black or other weird clothes
     gun crazy
     corrupt
     committing crime

    More and more it becomes obvious safety doesn’t exist in the U.S. Well the same country asks other countries to deliver flight data at least two hours before all passengers have boarded. What for?
    We know the American Governments computer infrastructure is so lousy and can not even process data!

  • Of course they let him in. Psychotic looking or being or acting or in possession of dubious items is no excuse for not letting someone into America — As long as he is White there is great latitude.

    Let an olive skinned, educated well speaking U.S. citizen with all the proof in hand attempt re-entry and see how quickly the aperture narrows.

    Morbidly funny. But not surprising.

    • US Custom agents are the ones that let people into their country. We meet the Canadians on our way back into Canada. :)

      I live close to where this happened. It makes me sick. The guy better get life in prison.

  • Like father, like son.