He grew up in Coteau-du-Lac, Quebec, with a deep passion for flying. As a teenager, he flew his first plane at 16 and worked relentlessly to build his career, studying, training, and earning certifications. By 2022, he achieved his goal, becoming a first officer with Jazz Aviation, operating under Air Canada Express.
That lifelong dream ended in tragedy on Sunday night at LaGuardia. During what should have been a routine landing, a fire truck was allowed onto the same runway as the incoming aircraft. In a matter of seconds, disaster struck.
The collision killed two young pilots who were just beginning their careers. Meanwhile, most of the approximately 70 passengers survived with minor injuries, making the loss even more striking and difficult to process.
Authorities described the incident as a “profound tragedy,” highlighting the severity of the failure. The crash points to a breakdown in coordination, where timing and trust between ground crews and flight operations went fatally wrong.
For the pilot’s family, the loss feels even more personal and devastating. What officials call an accident is, to them, “a bright, careful life cut short by a fatal, avoidable intersection of trust and timing.”
His story is a reminder of how years of dedication and hard work can be undone in a single moment—and how critical precision and communication are in aviation, where even small errors can have irreversible consequences.