The mayor of a small town near Montreal is under investigation for mischief and harassment after he admitted to dumping a 20-ton boulder on the driveway of his ex-wife.
Dany Larivière, the mayor of Saint-Théodore-d’Acton and the owner of an excavation company, says he placed the giant rock in his ex-wife’s driveway to try to get her to stop harassing him.
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A not-so-happy birthday gift
Mr. Larivière, who festooned the rock with a giant bow and sprayed it with fluorescent orange birthday greetings, played coy in a number of interviews, saying the boulder was simply a gift for his ex.
“She never had a rock big enough for her tastes, now she has one,” Mr. Larivière said. He became something of a celebrity Monday as many media outlets treated the act as a gag.
Later, Mr. Larivière said his three-year split with former wife Isabelle Prévost has been filled with acrimony. She’s threatened to report him to tax authorities unless he gave her cash payments and real estate, he said. Ms. Prévost has dedicated her life to giving him grief and he’s gone to police twice to complain about harassment, he added.
“I was at the end of my rope, and I want her to leave me alone,” he said.
Ms. Prévost, in turn, told a local newspaper her relationship with Mr. Larivière was filled with physical and verbal abuse. “I fear for my life and for those of my children,” said Ms. Prévost, who added that the stone gesture illustrated Mr. Larivière’s own campaign of harassment. She declined to comment further on Monday.
Neither account of the acrimonious relationship could be independently confirmed.
Mr. Larivière said he obtained joint custody of the children, a 12-year-old boy and a nine-year-old girl, after a lengthy and expensive court battle. He told the local newspaper that Ms. Prévost is lucky he won in court.
“If I hadn’t won custody, I can tell you Fathers 4 Justice [a fathers’ rights group that stages protests] on the Jacques Cartier Bridge, that would have been me. And rocks like the one in her driveway, there wouldn’t have been just one,” he told La Voix de l’Est newspaper. Mr. Larivière declined to elaborate on the comment later in the day, saying only that he didn’t intend to take part in any fathers’ rights campaign.
The matter is strictly personal, he said.
Mr. Larivière delivered the load with a front-end loader at about 3 a.m. on Monday. He said he was stopped twice by police who were suspicious of the movement of heavy construction equipment in the middle of the night. After checking his driver’s licence and the insurance and registration on the loader, they let him carry on, he said.
The Sûreté du Québec confirmed an investigation is underway after Ms. Prévost, who rents the home, filed a complaint and Mr. Larivière refused to remove the boulder. In addition to potential criminal charges of harassment or mischief, he could also be charged under the highway code.
Mr. Larivière, who met police Monday afternoon and was heading to a municipal council meeting in the evening, said he doesn’t expect any political fallout from his act. “It’s a small town. Everyone knows each other,” he said.
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