- published: 09 Oct 2014
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Joseph-Albert Guay (most commonly known as Albert Guay) (1917 – 12 January 1951) was a resident of Quebec City, Canada, who was responsible for the in-flight bombing of a passenger aeroplane on 9 September 1949, killing all aboard, including his wife Rita (née Morel), the intended victim.
The incident and subsequent trials of Guay and his accomplices received extensive newspaper coverage in Quebec.
The aeroplane was a Canadian Pacific Airlines Douglas DC-3 aircraft (registry CF-CUA S/N: 4518) flying from Montreal to Baie-Comeau with a stopover at L'Ancienne-Lorette, a suburb of Quebec City; it was at Quebec City that Rita Morel (Mme Guay) boarded the plane, unknowingly bringing along the bomb.
The bomb was made of dynamite attached to an alarm clock and secreted in the baggage of Rita Guay. It exploded over Cap Tourmente near a small locality named Sault-au-Cochon (sometimes incorrectly given as "Sault-aux-Cochons"), near Saint-Joachim in the Charlevoix region, causing the plane to crash and killing all four crew members and nineteen passengers. The flight was delayed five minutes at takeoff; this apparently thwarted Guay's desire to have the explosion take place over the Saint Lawrence River, which would have made forensic examination of the crash impossible with the technology then available to forensic scientists.