Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Detective to track Magnotta's movements in testimony as trial resumes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Oct, 2014 10:34 AM

    MONTREAL - Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial enters its second week today with a Montreal police homicide detective resuming her testimony about his activities after he killed Jun Lin.

    The 32-year-old Magnotta has pleaded not guilty to five charges but insists he is not criminally responsible in the Chinese student's death because of mental disorder.

    Lin's torso was found on May 29, 2012, stuffed into a suitcase behind a Montreal apartment building where Magnotta lived.

    Evidence presented Friday focused on security video footage of Magnotta at the building and at two Montreal-area postal counters.

    The 33-year-old Lin was seen on surveillance video wearing a yellow T-shirt, shorts and a baseball cap as he walked nonchalantly into the apartment building with Magnotta at 10:16 p.m. on May 24, 2012.

    Just a few hours later, Magnotta was caught on the same cameras, wearing Lin's T-shirt and methodically putting trash in the basement of the building as well as carrying it outside over the next day.

    That was just one of dozens of instances where Magnotta was spotted entering and leaving the building before he left for Europe on May 26.

    While Magnotta admits to causing the acts he's accused of in Lin's death, his lawyer has said his client suffers from schizophrenia and was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder shortly before the slaying.

    The Crown contends the killing was planned and deliberate and says it will prove that.

    The charges against Magnotta are first-degree murder; criminally harassing Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other members of Parliament; mailing obscene and indecent material; committing an indignity to a body; and publishing obscene material.

    The first week of the trial heard from eight witnesses — five police officers, two apartment employees and Lin's former lover, Feng Lin.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Six Slayings: Judge To Deliver Her Decision In Murder Trial

    Surrey Six Slayings: Judge To Deliver Her Decision In Murder Trial
    VANCOUVER - It was a shocking gangland crime that could rightfully be called a bloodbath: six men murdered, execution-style, two of them innocent bystanders who happened to be in the wrong place.

    Surrey Six Slayings: Judge To Deliver Her Decision In Murder Trial

    Former SNC executive pleads guilty in Switzerland on criminal charges

    Former SNC executive pleads guilty in Switzerland on criminal charges
    MONTREAL - A Swiss court has accepted a guilty plea from a former SNC-Lavalin senior executive, who was accused of fraud, corruption and money laundering, and labelled the Montreal-based engineering and construction company as a victim.

    Former SNC executive pleads guilty in Switzerland on criminal charges

    Chilean searchers find bodies of Cdn skier JP Auclair and Sweden's Andreas Fransson

    Chilean searchers find bodies of Cdn skier JP Auclair and Sweden's Andreas Fransson
    Chilean searchers on Tuesday found the bodies of two professional skiers, including a Canadian, who had been missing since an avalanche swept them away while they were hiking in the country's south.

    Chilean searchers find bodies of Cdn skier JP Auclair and Sweden's Andreas Fransson

    Pan Am Games torch relay will cross Canada, hit 130 Ontario communities

    Pan Am Games torch relay will cross Canada, hit 130 Ontario communities
    TORONTO - The torch relay for the Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games will be a national event, with stops in five Canadian cities as well as more than 100 Ontario communities.

    Pan Am Games torch relay will cross Canada, hit 130 Ontario communities

    14 people cast ballots in wrong ridings in New Brunswick election

    14 people cast ballots in wrong ridings in New Brunswick election
    FREDERICTON - Elections New Brunswick says 14 people voted in the wrong ridings in last week's provincial election, 11 of whom where allowed to later cast ballots in the correct ridings.

    14 people cast ballots in wrong ridings in New Brunswick election

    Canada has just 26 special forces 'advisers' in Iraq, not 69, says letter to NDP

    Canada has just 26 special forces 'advisers' in Iraq, not 69, says letter to NDP
    OTTAWA - The number of Canadian special forces soldiers advising Iraqi and Kurdish forces is much smaller than originally thought.

    Canada has just 26 special forces 'advisers' in Iraq, not 69, says letter to NDP