Pubdate: Fri, 02 Sep 2005 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Richard Watts MAN PLEADS GUILTY TO KILLING DEALER After killing and robbing his drug dealer, Romain Bourque thought heaven was no longer an option and set his sights on a fiery suicide instead. In B.C. Supreme Court in Victoria Thursday, the 31-year-old pleaded guilty to manslaughter and arson. He admitted he caused the death of Scott Muir, 26, by suffocation when he bound and gagged him around Feb. 10 this year. Prosecutor Ruth Picha said Bourque took cocaine and $1,000-odd dollars from Muir and spent several days in hotel rooms in Victoria and Vancouver. Then he returned to his North Saanich home on Meldram Road - -- and to Muir's body. "I was going to go bury him and then I thought ... I'm already going to hell," said the native of Shediac, N.B. in a statement recorded by RCMP and read by Picha in court. "I might as well just ... burn the house down, burn my selves in it and that will be that," said Bourque. But the fire took too long to get going, so Bourque took his .22 rifle, tucked it under his chin, and fired. But the bullet went into his chin, through his tongue, up through the roof of his mouth and then exited between his eyebrows. With smoke making it impossible to find another rifle shell, Bourque decided to flee. He ran next door to a neighbour who called 911. Picha said an overall sentence for the arson and the manslaughter should range from 12 to 15 years. Bourque's lawyer, Mayland McKimm, said a sentence in the range of five to seven years is appropriate because his client had never intended to kill Muir. Desperate to return to his home town, Bourque had hatched a plan. He would rob his drug dealer, known only as "Buddy" and use the proceeds to go back to Shediac, where he grew up. "It wasn't a good plan, these cases never are," said McKimm. But after a two-week cocaine binge, Bourque wasn't thinking clearly. He called Muir and had him come to his house, where he was growing marijuana. Muir was expecting to exchange cocaine for pot. When Muir showed up, Bourque met him at the door with an unloaded shotgun and told him to hand over his drugs and money. Muir was then forced to lie down. Bourque bound his hands and legs. The plan was to leave him bound so Bourque could get out of town before any reprisals came his way. But Muir started to scream, so Bourque stuffed a sock into his mouth and taped it shut with hockey tape. The obstruction and the tape caused Muir to suffocate. McKimm said his client was a university graduate and a longtime member of the Canadian Armed Forces reserves. He had done a peacekeeping tour in Yugoslavia and had come under fire. Bourque is remorseful and has never tried to shirk the blame or responsibility for what has happened, said McKimm. At the end of McKimm's remarks, Bourque rose and expressed his regret for the pain he has caused his own family and Muir's, gathered in the courtroom. "No parent should have to bury a child," said Bourque adding he knows that having Muir killed in a crime must make the loss even tougher to bear. "Every night I pray and ask God to give Scott's parents the strength to carry on," he said. "I deeply am sorry for taking Scott from you." Justice Catherine Wedge reserved her decision on Bourque's sentence until today. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin