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Today in Canada > News > Justin Bourque, who killed 3 N.B. RCMP officers in 2014, sentenced for prison stabbing
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Justin Bourque, who killed 3 N.B. RCMP officers in 2014, sentenced for prison stabbing

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Last updated: 2025/09/24 at 2:26 PM
Press Room Published September 24, 2025
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Justin Christen Bourque has been handed a five-year sentence for stabbing another inmate at a maximum-security prison near Miramichi three years ago.

A Miramichi provincial court judge found the 35-year-old guilty earlier this month of aggravated assault and possession of a weapon in connection with the offences on March 3, 2022, at the Atlantic Institution.

Bourque, who is serving life sentences at the federal maximum-security prison for the 2014 murders of three RCMP officers in Moncton, was scheduled to appear by video in Miramichi court Wednesday afternoon to be sentenced on the charges. 

However, reporters arriving at the courthouse were told the appearance had been moved to the morning and had already concluded. 

Court documents show Judge Johanne-Marguerite Landry had sentenced Bourque to five years in prison for both charges, to be served concurrently to his life sentences, meaning at the same time as opposed to consecutively. 

The sentencing hearing was scheduled to take place Wednesday afternoon in Miramichi provincial court, but instead took place in the morning. (Shane Magee/CBC)

The records show he is under orders to not possess weapons for the rest of his life and to submit a sample of his DNA to authorities. A victim fine surcharge was waived. 

Bourque was charged along with another inmate, Christian Enang Clyke, and both were convicted. Their two-day trial in May heard that they stabbed a third inmate, Chase Spence, who was moving into the same prison unit where they were being held back in the spring of 2022. 

Surveillance video that had captured most of the events was shown during the trial.

The footage showed Spence entering the same prison unit as Bourque and Clyke at around 1:30 p.m. on the day in question, carrying bags of belongings. While walking through a hall lined with cell doors, he and Bourque exchanged words. The video doesn’t include audio of the interaction. 

The judge said Spence made a gesture and then made contact with Bourque’s throat. Both men then appeared to pull out weapons. 

A sketch of a man on screen with a judge in robes
A sketch of Justin Bourque appearing in Miramichi provincial court by video from the Atlantic Institution on Dec. 14, 2023. (Andrew Robson)

Spence dropped his bags and moved up the hall, where Clyke was standing. Spence ran past Clyke, and Clyke and Bourque then followed him into another area. 

Footage then shows Spence falling to the floor, but the actual stabbing happens just outside the video frame. Clyke is shown walking away, bleeding. 

Earlier this month, the judge said medical records entered as evidence say Spence had one stab wound that penetrated his chest wall as well as various minor wounds. 

Spence didn’t testify at the trial. An RCMP officer testified that neither Spence nor the two accused men provided statements to police. 

Bourque offered no defence evidence and opted not to testify.

Clyke, who is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 23, is serving a life sentence for a murder in Nova Scotia. 

He is appealing that case and is awaiting sentencing after being found guilty of second-degree murder for killing Richard Alan King, another Atlantic Institution inmate, on Oct. 6, 2022.

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