Politicians, advocates denounce Montreal Canadiens’ controversial Logan Mailloux draft pick
Mailloux #Mailloux
The Montreal Canadiens‘ polarizing decision to draft defenceman Logan Mailloux, who was charged with sexual misconduct, is being criticized by advocates and elected officials alike across Quebec.
“We consider that [this falls] in line with rape culture,” said advocate Roxanne Ocampo-Picard from the Regroupement québécois des centres d’aide et de lutte contre les agressions à caractère sexuel (RQCALACS).
The fact that public figures can “get out of the woods so easily” is, to her, a sign that “collectively, we do not take these [acts] seriously.”
Story continues below advertisement
The Belle River, Ont., native was playing for SK Lejon in Sweden at the time of the incident and was charged and fined under Swedish law last December.
Mailloux was 17 at the time and admitted to sharing the photo with his hockey teammates to impress them.
The now 18-year-old was sentenced to pay fines for sharing a “shocking photograph infringing on privacy” and defamation after he took a picture of himself and with an 18-year-old girl engaging in a sexual act without her consent and then shared it without her consent.
In Canada, the non-consensual publication of an intimate image is, in serious cases, an indictable offence punishable by imprisonment of up to five years.
News of the charges recently surfaced ahead of the draft and Mailloux put out a statement on Twitter last week asking NHL teams to not select him in this year’s draft because he had not shown “strong enough maturity or character to earn that privilege.”
READ MORE: Montreal Canadiens select Logan Mailloux in 1st round, after player asks not to be drafted
Still, this didn’t stop Habs’ general manager Marc Bergevin from using his first pick in the 2021 NHL entry draft to select him late Friday.
On Saturday, Mailloux told reporters in a virtual press conference that he “deeply regrets” taking the “intimate” photo and sharing it without her consent.
Story continues below advertisement
He said he has apologized to the young woman and her family and has been in therapy for months to better himself and to help him fully understand the impact his act had and will have on the victim.
After the Canadiens selected the six-foot-three, 213-pound defenceman 31st overall, the team immediately issued a statement defending the move.
It said it did not minimize “the severity of Logan’s actions” and is committed to “accompany Logan on his journey by providing him with the tools to mature and the necessary support to guide him in his development.”
Trending Stories
“I know he’s been remorseful,” Bergevin told reporters after the draft. “He’s a young man who made a serious mistake.”
Story continues below advertisement
Ocampo-Picard said there’s a disconnect between the team’s words and actions. It denounced the act as unacceptable, but then went ahead and accepted it within its organization.
READ MORE: NHL prospect convicted of sharing sex photo asks teams not to draft him
According to her, the team put its own interests before the well-being and safety of women, trivializing sexual violence against women.
Quebec’s Minister in charge of the Status of Women, Isabelle Charest, said in a tweet she was surprised and disappointed by the draft of Mailloux despite his conviction.
Story continues below advertisement
Charest said this “does not at all go the direction of positive culture change.”
Québec solidaire’s spokesperson Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois also took to Twitter in reaction on Saturday and said many young boys dream of playing professional hockey, and the team’s draft of someone charged with a sex crime sends the message that “you can degrade women and still merit a place in our organization.”
Director of the Federation of women’s shelters, Manon Monastesse, said the team should demand more than just words from the young player.
Monastesse said Mailloux should suffer direct consequences — such as hours of community service or paying a sum of his future salary to centres that support victims of sexual violence.
Story continues below advertisement
Monastesse added that she worries what message this story will send to young boys and girls.
–with files from the Canadiens Press
Previous Video Next Video
© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.