![]() By their own admission, they’d incinerated corpses in their yard in a bonfire. The interception division of the Sûreté du Québec had secretly taped Viau and Dion speaking about how they’d disposed of bodies for members of the Calabrian Mafia. Undercover recordings made by investigators told a different tale. “We’re normal people,” Viau swore to the arresting officers, through her tears, after she and her husband were each charged with two counts of first-degree murder. The pastries were still on the stove top when police arrived at 9:56 a.m. Viau, 44, didn’t have to go to her shift at the roadside poutine restaurant until later that day, so she tried baking something new: blueberry phyllo puffs. A hand-drawn Mother’s Day card hung on the fridge next to family photographs. ![]() ![]() ![]() On the morning they were arrested for allegedly burning bodies as part of a series of Mafia murders, Marie-Josée Viau and Guy Dion had already finished breakfast and packed their daughter off to elementary school. ![]()
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