Ex-porn actor guilty of murder in Canada

A jury in Canada has found "Canadian psycho" Luka Magnotta guilty of murdering and dismembering a Chinese student.

Luka Rocco Magnotta at Mirabel Airport in Montreal

A jury has found "Canadian psycho" Luka Magnotta guilty of murdering a Chinese student. (AAP)

A jury in Montreal has found a one-time porn actor guilty of the murder of a Chinese engineering student with a screwdriver before sexually abusing him and dismembering his corpse.

Luka Rocco Magnotta, 32, closed his eyes and showed no emotion as the verdict - which carries an automatic life sentence with no parole for 25 years - was read out in Quebec Superior Court on Tuesday.

Magnotta had admitted to killing 33-year-old Lin Jun in May 2012, but pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder, in one of the most sensational homicide cases in the annals of Canadian justice.

The jury of eight women and four men delivered its unanimous decision after eight days of deliberations. The trial started in September.

"We had faith that the proof presented during the trial would be successful in convincing the jury," prosecutor Louis Bouthillier said.

Justice Guy Cournoyer said last week that Magnotta's personality disorder qualified as a mental illness in Canadian law.

But Bouthillier argued the accused was able to discern right from wrong and had planned the brutal killing.

He said Magnotta - who appeared in gay adult videos a decade ago - prepared the murder at least six months in advance and had acted with premeditation before, during and after the crime.

Magnotta had acknowledged using a screwdriver to fatally stab Lin, a student at Montreal's Concordia University, before sexually abusing and dismembering his victim's corpse.

He then posted a video of the heinous act online to the soundtrack of the movie American Psycho.

Days after the killing, Montreal police discovered Lin's torso in a suitcase by the rubbish outside an apartment building on a busy highway.

His severed hands and feet were sent in the mail to federal political parties in Ottawa and to two primary schools in Vancouver.

Lin's head was found in a Montreal park months later, after police got a tip via a three-page fax that contained precise directions.

For his part, Magnotta cleaned out his Montreal apartment and fled to Paris and Berlin, where he was arrested in June 2012 as the case became an international sensation.

Present in the courtroom Tuesday for the verdict was Lin's father Lin Diran.

"I had come to see your trial system to see justice done and I leave satisfied that you have not let my son down," he said in a statement.

"I had come to learn what happened to my son that night and I leave without a true or a complete answer," he added.

"I had come to see remorse, to hear some form of apology, and I leave without anything."

Magnotta's lawyers, who contended their client was not criminally responsible due to mental illness, have 30 days in which to file an appeal.


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