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Canadian Couple Raphaël Huppé and Fannie Lorrain found with throats slashed at Playa del Carmen

Canadian Couple Raphaël Huppé and Fannie Lorrain found with throats slashed at Playa del Carmen

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One of the two Canadians who were found dead at a beach resort in Playa del Carmen, on the Caribbean coast of Mexico, was a wanted man with several criminal cases pending at the Montreal courthouse.

On Monday, the bodies of Canadians Raphael Huppé, 44, and Fannie Lorrain, 38, were discovered in a hotel or condominium in Playa del Carmen. Huppé was from Quebec, while Lorrain was from Quebec.

According to the reports, it appeared that they had died as a result of stab wounds to the neck.

As reported by Diario de Yucatan, Attorney General scar Montes de Oca of Quintana Roo stated that law enforcement discovered high-end electronics inside the condo.

Huppé was allegedly placed on an Interpol wanted list for fraud-related allegations, according to the official media.

According to the documents filed in the case, an arrest warrant was issued for him after he failed to appear in court in Montreal in 2016 addressing a case that occurred in 2014.

The Canadian police have filed a total of 15 criminal accusations, with five of them being for fraud.

A judge came to the conclusion that he was responsible for acting as a broker despite not being authorized to do so by the AMF. The inquiry conducted by the AMF found that between June 2008 and June 2010, Huppé illegally urged investors to purchase a total of $740,000 worth of shares of Effective Control Transport Inc.

In 2015, Huppé was accused of committing fraud again for the second time.

Huppé is described as a man who pretended to be a successful investor in a number of judicial decisions; however, serious questions concerning whether or not he was legitimate emerged as early as 2008, when a real-estate agent who gave him $100,000 for investing filed a complaint with the AMF. Huppé is described as a man who pretended to be a successful investor in a number of judicial decisions.

This decision details the process that was followed when the individual was selected to fill the position of vice president of marketing for the corporation in January of 2014. It was communicated to him that he would receive a salary of $125,000 per year in addition to an allowance of $750 per month to cover the costs of operating a vehicle. His employment agreement was never completed, and after only a few months on the job, he was forced to take orders from Huppé to perform tasks such as replenishing the company’s supply of toilet paper and obtaining coffee for the staff.

According to the prosecution’s allegations, Huppé utilized at least three distinct forms of identification simultaneously.

According to Diario de Yucatan, the local police stated that the man’s immigration status was “irregular.”

On the internet, condolences and tributes have been left for Lorrain.

It was disclosed by the Attorney General’s Office of Quintana Roo that a security guard was hurt.


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