![White flags, stuffed animals mark deadly bus crash site at Laval daycare, premier offers condolences](https://www.ctvnews.ca/content/dam/ctvnews/en/images/2023/2/9/laval-bus-crash-1-6266975-1675965887005.jpg)
White flags, stuffed animals mark deadly bus crash site at Laval daycare, premier offers condolences
CTV
Quebec Premier Francois Legault will visit the site of a bus crash at a Laval daycare that killed two children and injured several others on Wednesday. The day after the incident, stuffed animals make for a makeshift memorial nearby as the community mourns the young victims.
A day after a city bus crashed into a Laval, Que. daycare, families are mourning the young victims Thursday, as lawmakers rally their support for a community struck with tragedy.
Two children were killed and several others rushed to hospital following the horrific incident which occurred shortly after 8:30 a.m. Neighbours described tackling the bus driver and holding him until officers arrived and placed the man into custody.
Parents watched from the sidelines as information on the crash emerged throughout the day. Police arrested the alleged driver, 51-year-old Pierre Ny St-Amand, and charged with two counts of first-degree murder. He also faces seven other charges, including attempted murder, aggravated assault, and assault with a weapon causing bodily harm.
St-Amand, a Laval resident, appeared before a judge via video link from a hospital bed in Montreal's Sacré-Cœur Hospital under police supervision. He refused to speak during the hearing, and only nodded his head when spoken to by a judge. He was ordered to undergo a psychiatric assessment before his next court appearance on Feb. 17.
Witnesses said the driver "wasn’t in his right mind" and "was in a different world" during the incident. One man said that he was screaming unintelligibly.
Lionel Carmant, the minister responsible for social services, said Thursday Armand was not on a waiting list for mental health services with the local health authority, the CIUSSS de Laval.
A family friend told the Canadian Press that St-Amand had never shown any obvious signs of distress.