Showing posts with label The Shadow of the Big O. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Shadow of the Big O. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Jacques Guillaume: The Shadow of the Big O

 


Jacques Guillaume: The Shadow of the Big O

Montreal, Autumn 1978

Jacques Guillaume was thirty-one years old and already considered one of the best independent private detectives in Montreal. He had no partner, no large agency, and no interest in working for the police. His office was a small, cluttered room above a bakery on Rue Saint-Denis. The walls were lined with dog-eared copies of Hardy Boys books, Sherlock Holmes collections, and yellowing newspaper clippings about famous cases.

He had wanted to be a detective since he was ten years old. While other boys played hockey, Jacques read about crimes, studied maps of the city, and practiced tailing strangers on the streets. He studied law at night, learned photography, lock-picking, and how to disappear in a crowd. To him, detection was not just a job — it was a calling.

The case that would define his early career began with a quiet knock on his door one rainy October afternoon.

A nervous accountant named Pierre Leclerc sat across from him, twisting his hat in his hands.

“Mr. Guillaume, I need your help. I work for the Olympic organizing committee. Or what’s left of it. There are millions missing. Contracts were inflated, materials were stolen, and some city councillors built themselves beautiful new houses while the stadium still doesn’t have a roof. I have documents… but I’m scared. People who ask too many questions have accidents.”

Jacques leaned forward, eyes sharp. “Tell me everything.”


The Investigation

For the next six weeks, Jacques worked alone.

He started by going through every document Pierre could safely copy. He found clear evidence of massive kickbacks. Construction companies owned by friends of city councillors had charged triple the normal rate for concrete and steel. The famous Olympic Stadium — nicknamed the “Big O” — had become a black hole of corruption. The retractable roof, promised to be ready for the 1976 Games, was still just a dream. Millions had vanished into private accounts.

Jacques began tailing key players.

He followed Councillor Marcel Dubois for days. He watched Dubois meet with shady construction bosses in dimly lit restaurants. He photographed secret cash handovers in underground parking garages. He broke into a small office one night and found ledgers showing how Dubois and two other councillors had funneled money into shell companies that then bought them luxury homes in the suburbs.

But the deeper he dug, the more dangerous it became.

One night, as he was leaving a stakeout near the Olympic site, two men jumped him. They beat him badly and warned him to stop asking questions. Jacques woke up in an alley with a broken rib and a split lip. Instead of going to the hospital, he went home, bandaged himself, and kept working.

He knew he was close.


The Final Piece

Jacques spent three cold nights hiding on a rooftop across from Dubois’s new mansion. On the third night, he saw it: Dubois meeting with a man Jacques recognized — a former city contractor who had been paid millions for work that was never completed.

He took photographs. He recorded their conversation through a hidden microphone. The evidence was overwhelming.

The next morning, Jacques walked into the offices of a respected newspaper and laid everything on the editor’s desk.

Two days later, the story broke across Montreal. Headlines screamed about corruption at the highest levels of the Olympic project. Councillor Dubois and two others were arrested. The scandal rocked the city and helped fuel public anger about how the 1976 Games had nearly bankrupted Montreal.

Jacques Guillaume did not seek credit. He refused interviews. He simply closed the file, poured himself a glass of whiskey, and looked at the old Hardy Boys book on his shelf.

He had done it alone — just like the detectives in the stories he loved as a boy.

But this was real life. And real life was much darker than any book.

Still, as he watched the snow fall outside his window, Jacques allowed himself a small, tired smile.

One more monster had been dragged into the light.

And Montreal, for a brief moment, felt a little cleaner.

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