Close X
Thursday, December 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Magnotta wants new trial in Jun Lin killing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2015 02:11 PM

    MONTREAL — Luka Rocco Magnotta is appealing his conviction in the first-degree murder of Jun Lin and wants a new trial.

    Documents made public by the Quebec Court of Appeal on Monday outline several reasons for Magnotta's attempt to have the five convictions annulled, including the one for killing Lin.

    The appeal centres primarily on a number of instances in which the defence suggests the judge erred in the case.

    After a lengthy trial, jurors deliberated for eight days before finding Magnotta guilty on Dec. 23 of premeditated murder and four other charges in Lin's slaying in May 2012.

    The first-degree murder conviction carried a sentence of life imprisonment with no chance of parole for 25 years.

    Magnotta, 32, was also given the maximum sentences on the four other charges.

    The documents filed by Toronto-based lawyer Luc Leclair state Quebec Superior Court Justice Guy Cournoyer erred in a number of instances.

    "The verdicts are unreasonable and unsupported by the evidence and the instructions," one of two motions filed by Leclair read.

    One motion is a direct appeal of the convictions based on questions of law and could take many months to be heard.

    In it, the defence argues Cournoyer erred by:

    — including an instruction to the jury on motive that confused the issue of intent, planning and deliberation, all while failing to tell them motive had to refer specifically to Lin's murder.

    — failing to instruct jurors on a limited use of "bad character" evidence relating to Magnotta.

    — limiting the number of subjects to be covered in surrebuttal — rebuttal to the Crown's own expert rebuttal witness.

    — and allowing the jury to discuss the case from the onset instead of waiting until after closing submissions and final instructions were complete.

    Leclair also argues Cournoyer erred in instructions he provided on the Section 16 mental disorder defence Magnotta employed.

    In the second motion, Magnotta is seeking leave to appeal on questions of "mixed fact and law" which will require the authorization of the province's highest court to go forward.

    A spokesman for Quebec's director of criminal and penal prosecutions says the appeal doesn't come as a shock.

    "For the moment it's not a surprise for us because the accused was convicted of first-degree murder, so it's usual that the accused appeals that kind of infraction and that kind of conviction," Jean-Pascal Boucher said in an interview.

    The appeal is likely months away as transcripts need to be filed and the prosecution must also submit its reply to the appeal.

    "For the moment, we won't talk about the legal problem invoked by the appellant," Boucher said. "We will have to do that in our factum."

    A prosecutor specializing in appeals will likely take on the case, Boucher said.

    "They are specialists in that kind of case so we'll see in the next few weeks who will be the prosecutor in this fight in front of the Quebec Court of Appeal," he said.

    The appeal documents were dated last Thursday and include a notice that a hearing will take place in Montreal on Feb. 18.

    Leclair denied to comment further when reached by telephone.

    Magnotta admitted to killing and dismembering Lin but was seeking to be found not criminally responsible by way of mental disorder.

    Psychiatrists who testified for the defence said he was in a psychotic state the night of the killing and couldn't tell right from wrong.

    The Crown countered the crime was planned and deliberate and that Magnotta's behaviour and actions were incompatible with those of someone supposedly suffering from a disease of the mind.

    The jury heard testimony about the gruesome details of Lin's death and that many of Magnotta's actions were caught on surveillance video or in images taken by the accused himself.

    They also heard about Magnotta's upbringing and delved into medical files that showed he was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2001.

    In the roughly 48 hours following the slaying, Magnotta cut up Lin's body into 10 pieces, mailing the hands and feet to political offices in Ottawa and primary schools in Vancouver. He also bought a plane ticket for Paris online.

    When police put out a warrant for his arrest, Magnotta emptied his bank accounts and fled to Berlin on the same day.

    He was ultimately arrested in an Internet cafe in the German city on June 4, 2012, where a witness said Magnotta was reading up on himself.

    He was eventually transferred to a Berlin prison hospital, where a psychiatrist's initial diagnosis was that he was psychotic.

    The other charges Magnotta was convicted of were 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

    Key dates for imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy

    Key dates for imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy
    Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said in Egypt on Thursday that Canada hopes for a resolution "sooner rather than later" in the case of imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy, who has spent more than a year behind bars in Cairo after he and two colleagues were arrested while working for news broadcaster Al Jazeera English. 

    Key dates for imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy

    Report into troubled TDSB by provincial investigator to be released today

    Report into troubled TDSB by provincial investigator to be released today
    TORONTO — Education Minister Liz Sandals will release a report today into the troubled Toronto District School Board, where she said a "culture of fear" existed among staff.

    Report into troubled TDSB by provincial investigator to be released today

    Woman passenger dead after GO bus rollover crash northwest of Toronto

    Woman passenger dead after GO bus rollover crash northwest of Toronto
    TORONTO — A 56-year-old woman is dead following a rollover crash involving a GO Transit commuter bus northwest of Toronto.

    Woman passenger dead after GO bus rollover crash northwest of Toronto

    Supreme Court won't hear case involving lawsuit over Sydney tar ponds

    Supreme Court won't hear case involving lawsuit over Sydney tar ponds
    OTTAWA — Cape Breton residents who launched a class-action lawsuit claiming the Sydney tar ponds exposed them to contaminants will not have their case heard by the Supreme Court of Canada.

    Supreme Court won't hear case involving lawsuit over Sydney tar ponds

    Baloney Meter: does Canada's refugee policy discriminate against Syrian Muslims?

    Baloney Meter: does Canada's refugee policy discriminate against Syrian Muslims?
    OTTAWA — "(The government is) being very discriminatory when it comes to whom they are bringing in, and very reticent when it comes to allowing Muslim refugees to come to Canada, and that's an issue." — Paul Dewar, NDP foreign affairs critic.

    Baloney Meter: does Canada's refugee policy discriminate against Syrian Muslims?

    Supreme Court won't hear case of man who sued parents, Mormon church over rites

    Supreme Court won't hear case of man who sued parents, Mormon church over rites
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear the case of a Montreal man who sought damages from his parents and the Mormon church over religious rites which he said caused him serious mental problems.

    Supreme Court won't hear case of man who sued parents, Mormon church over rites