Pierre Mailloux (born January 14, 1949), better known as Doc Mailloux or Docteur Mailloux, is a psychiatrist, who hosted a French-language talk show with Janine Ross on CKAC radio in Montreal from 1995 to 2007.
He was born in Normandin in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec. He studied medicine at Université Laval in Quebec City and psychiatry at McGill University in Montreal.
In 1975, after serving as psychiatrist for the Canadian Forces, he started working with assault offenders and participated in numerous trials as an expert witness on the psychiatric domain.
Mailloux was assigned to the Denis Lortie case. According to Mailloux, Lortie suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and had organized his crime during a psychotic episode, believed his was acting on instructions from God[3]. Nevertheless, in 1985, Lortie was convicted of first-degree murder, but a new trial was ordered due to legal errors. Lortie pleaded guilty to reduced charges of second-degree murder in 1987.[1]
In 1995, he started his radio career with CKAC, a Montreal radio station. Over the years, the title of his radio show on Radiomédia network has changed from Un psy à l'écoute to Deux psy à l'écoute to Doc Mailloux. However, in 2007, CKAC became a sports station and the program was cancelled. It's not clear yet if he will pursue his talk show career with another radio station or not.
He is the author of several books, including Pour la castration volontaire des pédophiles (2001, ISBN 2890057615), Au secours des femmes (2001, ISBN 2764005520), Pour l'amour des enfants : Non aux châtiments corporels! (2002, ISBN 2922572986), Pour élever ses enfants : Prière de ne pas les rabaisser... (2006, ISBN 2895621071).
He is notorious for his controversial on-air comments and in 2002 was officially reprimanded by the Collège des médecins for making a diagnosis on the air, comments considered "unworthy of a doctor" and inaccurate information he gave about a drug.[2]
Other topics he often speaks about include voluntary castration of pedophiles, violence toward children, incest, and he often criticizes feminists.
He served as an on-air psychiatrist for the Quebec version of the reality show Loft Story, where he made remarks that upset the parents of a participant while analyzing her behaviour.[3]
On February 10, 2005, the Quebec Regional Panel of the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, answering a listener's complaint, determined that Mailloux had made "specifically-focused abusive and unduly discriminatory remarks" toward ethnic groups when talking about immigration in a broadcast. He referred to Sikhs as a "gang of bozos" (translated). They ruled that, in doing so, Mailloux and the station broke the human rights clause of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Code of Ethics.[4]
On June 23, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission released a similar ruling on two other comments, including a statement that "Native Americans and Black people from the Americas are born less intelligent than white people" because of artificial selection from slavery and the Europeans who used to kill the smartest "Indians" to better control the population. He said that it accounts for their poverty and high unemployment rate.[5] He also stated that "Janet Jackson exhibits tribal behaviour".
On September 25, 2005 he appeared on the widely viewed Québec television talk show, Tout le monde en parle and cited unspecified studies allegedly used at the Université de Montréal in psycho-education classes, stating that Black people in the Americas and Native Americans have a lower IQ average then white and Asian Americans, a currently controversial topic of study about race and intelligence.
He was indefinitely barred from the Collège des médecins in January 2007 for prescribing abusive doses of neuroleptics to two of his patients and because of his earlier radio and TV claims and comments. The collège determined that Mailloux posed a threat to the medical profession. However, the CKRS radio station and a viewer circulated a petition for the College to reinstate Mailloux until his hearing in front of the discipline committee.[6] He has since been reinstated and has resumed his practice.
On March 20, 2007, a Journal de Montréal news article reported that in an interview with Télé-Québec's host Richard Martineau, Mailloux said that women manage stress more poorly than men, that they are also less able to make decisions under pressure. He also said he would never work for a woman. He made rude gestures and obscene language towards the host as well. Télé-Québec did not air the interview and never released any footage from that single 8 hour long session at Mailloux's farm.[7]
In September 2007, during an interview on a Rouyn-Noranda radio station, Mailloux made controversial comments about the mayor of Saguenay, Jean Tremblay, after he read a memoir at the Bouchard-Taylor Commission on the reasonable accommodation. In the memoir, Tremblay was in favor of maintaining Catholic traditions like the traditional prayer before each city council meeting and keeping the cross in Saguenay's city hall. Mailloux also criticized the people of the city, saying its citizens lacked judgement by voting for Tremblay, also explaining the high unemployment rate in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region.[8]