Luka Magnotta trial witness describes evidence found at apartment - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:52 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Luka Magnotta trial witness describes evidence found at apartment

An investigator who took pictures inside admitted killer Luka Magnotta's Montreal apartment said the unit was cleaned out and bare except for some suspicious "red substance" stains.

WARNING: This story contains graphic details

Luka Magnotta is charged with five offences including first-degree murder in the death of 33-year-old Concordia University student Jun Lin.

An investigator who took pictures inside admitted killerLuka Magnotta'sMontreal apartment said the unit was cleaned out and bare except for some suspicious "red substance" stains.

Montreal police officer Chantal Turmel, who photographed inside Magnottasapartment in May 2012 as part of a homicide investigation, walked the jury in his first-degree murder trial through a number of images taken inside the unit.

She was the second witness to testify since the trial began in a Montreal court Monday.

Magnottahas pleaded not guilty to five offences, but has agreed to the facts of the case, including that he killed 33-year-old Concordia University student Jun Lin.

This photograph of writing on a wall was taken by Montreal police inside the apartment where Luka Magnotta lived in May 2012. (Montreal police)

His lawyer has told the jury he intends to argue that his client should be found not criminally responsible for the death because he suffers from a mental illness.

He said Magnotta suffers from schizophrenia and he intends to present evidence of his client's psychiatric history.The Crown prosecutor in the case told the jury he intends to prove the killing was premeditated and will present evidence that shows Magnottahad been planning the murder for months.

Turmelpresented a series of photographs of the small bachelor apartment to the jury,pointing out numerous red substances" found by investigators throughout the unit. Sampleswere collected and sent to a lab for testing.

The stains were most notably present on a mattress left in the unitand in the refrigerator.

Also apparent in the photographs taken at the scene is amessage scrawled in red on a wall reading, If you dont like the reflection, dont look in the mirror. I dont care.

Turmel also told the court she went back to the apartment after a video depicting elements of the killing surfaced. She testified that the videohelped her identify more items recovered from the garbage in front of Magnotta's building, namely a Casablanca poster that is seen hanging on the wall in the video and a wine bottle used to assault the victim.

Richard Dionne, another member on the Montreal police forensic team, also testified today. He presentedsome of the most graphic images, taken in thepark where some of the victim's remains were found.

Typically stoic,Magnotta slumped forward in his seat in the courtroom as Dionne discussed some of the evidence.

Threats sent to PM andB.C. schools

Earlier this morning, Montreal police forensic investigator CarolineSimoneaupresented a series of photographs to the jury showing bloodstained packages. The packagescontainedPost-it notes and threats to the federal Liberal and Conservative party headquarters and two Vancouver schools.

This note, mailed inside a package to a Vancouver school, was presented as evidence by a Montreal police officer at Luka Magnotta's first-degree murder trial. (Montreal police)

Magnottasent the parcels in May 2012 using aliases.

One of the notes in the packages read: "Stephen Harper andLauren [sic]Teskey, you will know who this is. Theyf--kedme big time." (Teskey is the birth name of Harper's wife, Laureen).

"Roses are red, violets are blue, the police will need dental records to identify you, bitch," was scrawled on another sent to an elementary school.

More than 60 witnesses are expected to be called during thetrial, which continues Wednesday with the cross-examination of Simoneau by Magnotta's lawyer.