Close X
Friday, December 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta trial into fourth day of deliberations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2014 11:02 AM

    MONTREAL — Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial are into their fourth day of deliberations.

    If no verdict is reached today, the jurors will continue to deliberate on the weekend.

    Magnotta is charged with first-degree murder and four other charges in the slaying and dismemberment of Chinese engineering student Jun Lin in May 2012.

    The eight women and four men began deliberating on Tuesday and have emerged just once over the three days.

    That was on Wednesday when they asked the judge whether a personality disorder is a disease of the mind from a legal standpoint. Quebec Superior Court Justice Guy Cournoyer told them it is.

    Magnotta has pleaded not guilty by way of mental disorder and is seeking to be found not criminally responsible. His lawyer says he is schizophrenic and couldn't tell right from wrong at the time of the slaying.

    Prosecutor Louis Bouthillier has argued the schizophrenia was a misdiagnosis and that his medical problems and behaviour are likely the result of personality disorders.

    On the murder charge, the jury has four options: find Magnotta guilty of first-degree murder, second-degree murder or manslaughter, or find him not criminally responsible because of mental disorder.

    The judge told the jurors Monday that if they find the accused not criminally responsible, that verdict must be the same for all five charges.

    Magnotta is also charged with 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 materials

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police make arrest in decades-old B.C. murders

    Police make arrest in decades-old B.C. murders
    RCMP have arrested a 67-year-old Ontario man for the separate murders of two young girls who vanished in southern British Columbia almost 40 years ago

    Police make arrest in decades-old B.C. murders

    Canadians' future 'hangs in the balance' in pipeline debate: Alberta premier

    Canadians' future 'hangs in the balance' in pipeline debate: Alberta premier
    Prentice says Canadians will suffer without pipelines

    Canadians' future 'hangs in the balance' in pipeline debate: Alberta premier

    Global cooling likely caused mastodon death: study

    Global cooling likely caused mastodon death: study
    Scientists who re-examined the fossils of mastodons that once roamed what is now the Yukon and Alaska have revised their likely cause of death

    Global cooling likely caused mastodon death: study

    Canadians struggling to pay debt: Manulife

    Canadians struggling to pay debt: Manulife
     Canadians may dream of retiring debt-free, but research done for Manulife suggests nearly 20 per cent of homeowners expect to lean on the value of their homes to finance life after work.

    Canadians struggling to pay debt: Manulife

    B.C. First Nation sets out tougher rules for mining in its territory

    B.C. First Nation sets out tougher rules for mining in its territory
    First Nation sets up mining rules for territory

    B.C. First Nation sets out tougher rules for mining in its territory

    Crown alleges woman used phoney home invasion to mask plot to murder parents

    Crown alleges woman used phoney home invasion to mask plot to murder parents
    NEWMARKET, Ont. — Prosecutors say an attack that left a Toronto-area woman dead and her husband severely injured was orchestrated by their daughter and made to look like a home invasion so she wouldn't be suspected.

    Crown alleges woman used phoney home invasion to mask plot to murder parents