Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 108
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Canadian_Pacific_Air_Lines_Flight_108
Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 108, known as the Sault-au-Cochon Tragedy was a Douglas DC-3 operated by Canadian Pacific Air Lines (registry CF-CUA S/N: 4518), that was blown up by a dynamite time bomb on 9 September 1949. The plane was flying from Montreal to Baie-Comeau, with a stopover at Quebec City, when it was destroyed. All 19 passengers and 4 crew members were killed in the explosion and crash.
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Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 108
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Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 108
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31263275
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1113248331
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Quebec City, Quebec
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4
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1949-09-09
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23
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19
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Quebec, Canada
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near Sault-au-Cochon
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over Cap Tourmente
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In-flight bombing
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Baie-Comeau, Quebec
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Bombing
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0
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CF-CUA
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Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 108, known as the Sault-au-Cochon Tragedy was a Douglas DC-3 operated by Canadian Pacific Air Lines (registry CF-CUA S/N: 4518), that was blown up by a dynamite time bomb on 9 September 1949. The plane was flying from Montreal to Baie-Comeau, with a stopover at Quebec City, when it was destroyed. All 19 passengers and 4 crew members were killed in the explosion and crash. Investigators discovered that three people, Joseph-Albert Guay (23 September 1918 – 12 January 1951), Généreux Ruest (1898 – 25 July 1952), and Marguerite Pitre (5 September 1908 – 9 January 1953), had conspired to destroy the plane to obtain life insurance money. Guay had also wanted to kill his wife, who was a passenger, so he could marry his mistress. All three were tried for murder and executed.
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18531