Close X
Monday, November 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jury watches Jun Lin on video entering Magnotta's apartment building

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Oct, 2014 10:48 AM

    MONTREAL - Video surveillance shown at Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial on Thursday showed Jun Lin entering the killer's apartment building on the day he was last seen alive.

    Lin, 33, was wearing a yellow T-shirt, shorts and a baseball cap as he walked in nonchalantly 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 that Magnotta was captured entering and leaving the building before he left for Europe on May 26.

    Magnotta, 32, is charged with first-degree murder in Lin's slaying and dismemberment. The Chinese student's torso was found on May 29, stuffed into a suitcase behind the apartment building.

    Confronted with the body part, garbage bags soaked in blood and identity papers bearing the name Luka Rocco Magnotta, a homicide detective initially thought the accused was the victim.

    But Claudette Hamelin testified Thursday that Magnotta quickly went from possible victim to person of interest and then to main suspect after the building manager identified a man caught on the surveillance video as Magnotta.

    The jury also heard from another witness Thursday that Magnotta was captured on video at two Montreal-area postal counters.

    The trash behind the apartment provided a wealth of evidence, Hamelin testified, referring to items the jurors saw for themselves after seeing them in photos.

    "We found Mr. Magnotta's identification, tools that were covered in blood or what looked like blood, a small dog and pieces of a human body," Hamelin said.

    Police also found a video camera, a laptop computer and a cellular phone, all looking "normal, usable, functional," Hamelin said. A few of the garbage bags contained limbs — arms and legs without hands or feet attached.

    Armed later with the knowledge of a so-called murder video, Hamelin said they returned for a few more items from the trash: a poster from the movie "Casablanca" and a wine bottle, bearing the label "Wish for Love," that had been used to sodomize the victim.

    The video sequences shown Thursday capture Magnotta returning to the apartment on the morning of May 25 with a big, grey suitcase. The torso was found in a grey suitcase with slash marks and drops of spray paint.

    A sequence later in the day shows Magnotta using the elevator to bring the suitcase downstairs, struggling to get it out the front door. Magnotta is seen taking garbage out the front door, even though garbage bins are in the basement.

    Magnotta is also spotted on video walking a small black puppy in the wee hours of May 25 — the same animal police found dead in the trash.

    In the videos, Magnotta is often seen wearing a dark wig. He shows no discernible emotion. On a number of occasions, he stops to check his appearance in a wall of mirrors in the lobby of the building as he goes about his day.

    Earlier on Thursday, the trial heard audio testimony from the preliminary hearing of a now-deceased witness who rented Magnotta the bachelor apartment for $490 a month.

    Eric Schorer testified in 2013 the building had four security cameras — three with various views of the ground floor and entrance and one in the basement. They were activated by motion detectors and Schorer testified he never told Magnotta specifically of their existence.

    Schorer said there was nothing remarkable about his first meeting with Magnotta, about two months before Lin's death. He testified Magnotta told him he was unemployed, was looking for work as a caregiver and that he had a child in the area.

    In his testimony, Schorer said the janitor of the building reported seeing a suitcase outside that was smelly and covered in maggots amid a mound of trash.

    The janitor, Michael Nadeau, testified Thursday he broke a small lock to get a closer look.

    "We saw a neck, shoulders and the top of a torso and that was enough for us," he said. "We called 911 right away."

    Magnotta has pleaded not guilty to five charges but will argue he is not criminally responsible because of mental disorder.

    While Magnotta admits to causing the acts he's accused of in Lin's death, his lawyer, Luc Leclair, 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 its case will show just 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.

    The trial resumes Monday with Hamelin's testimony.

    Notable moments from the first week included:

    — A bizarre note naming Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his wife Laureen sent to Conservative Party headquarters being submitted as evidence.

    — Jurors hearing that Lin had split from his gay partner less than two weeks before his slaying because he felt family pressure to marry a woman.

    — Crown prosecutor Louis Bouthillier telling jurors from the outset that the first 53 seconds of the so-called murder video actually shows a different man in footage recorded one week earlier.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Couillard to Harper: It’s time for Quebec to sign the Constitution

    Couillard to Harper: It’s time for Quebec to sign the Constitution
    QUEBEC - Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard took advantage of a public appearance with Prime Minister Stephen Harper to reiterate his wish for the province to sign the Constitution.

    Couillard to Harper: It’s time for Quebec to sign the Constitution

    Analysis: Baird's 'one voice' Iraq foray adds non-partisan moment to Tory policy

    Analysis: Baird's 'one voice' Iraq foray adds non-partisan moment to Tory policy
    IRBIL, Iraq - Moments after climbing into a bunker manned by Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird looked behind him and gestured, saying, "Paul and Marc, come on."

    Analysis: Baird's 'one voice' Iraq foray adds non-partisan moment to Tory policy

    Group decries possible use of executed Chinese prisoners in bodies display

    Group decries possible use of executed Chinese prisoners in bodies display
    TORONTO - The possible use of corpses from executed Chinese prisoners for a public display as part of an exhibition in Ontario merits a criminal and coroner's investigation, a human-rights group is asserting.

    Group decries possible use of executed Chinese prisoners in bodies display

    B.C. Teachers Rally In Vancouver, Repeat Call For Binding Arbitration

    B.C. Teachers Rally In Vancouver, Repeat Call For Binding Arbitration
    VANCOUVER - The head of British Columbia's teachers' union has turned the screws on the provincial government to agree to binding arbitration and settle a teachers strike that has kept half-a-million students out of class.

    B.C. Teachers Rally In Vancouver, Repeat Call For Binding Arbitration

    Punjab To Create Dedicated Fund For Art, Culture

    Punjab To Create Dedicated Fund For Art, Culture
    The Punjab government will set up a dedicated fund for the welfare of litterateurs, dramatists, folk singers, artistes and other personalities from the fields of language, art and culture, Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal announced here Friday.

    Punjab To Create Dedicated Fund For Art, Culture

    Plane That Wandered Over Caribbean With Unresponsive Pilot Crashes Off Jamaica

    Plane That Wandered Over Caribbean With Unresponsive Pilot Crashes Off Jamaica
    Shadowed much of the way by two U.S. fighter jets, a small plane with an unresponsive pilot flew a ghostly 1,700-mile journey down the East Coast and through Cuban airspace on Friday before finally crashing in the waters off Jamaica. The fate of the pilot and anyone else aboard was not immediately known.

    Plane That Wandered Over Caribbean With Unresponsive Pilot Crashes Off Jamaica