Montreal police reveal new details in Lin killing - Action News
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Montreal

Montreal police reveal new details in Lin killing

WARNING: GRAPHIC MATERIAL Montreal police have revealed disturbing details about their investigation into a murder and dismemberment case that has drawn international attention during a global manhunt for the suspect.

WARNING: GRAPHIC MATERIAL Canadian suspect Luka Rocco Magnotta won't fight extradition from Germany

Montreal policerevealeddisturbing forensic details Tuesday aboutthe murder and dismemberment case that netted a suspect in Germany after a global manhunt captured international attention.

Luka Rocco Magnotta is now in a Berlin jailawaiting extradition to Canada on first-degree murder and other charges, after aworldwide dragnet tracked him down in the German capital early this week.

Magnotta, 29,is suspected of killingJun Lin, a Chinese university student in Montreal,filmingandbroadcastingthe allegedact, andmailing body parts to Canadian political parties.

Zheng Xu, a spokesman at the Chinese consulate in Montreal, said four of Lin's family members, including his parents, arrived inthe cityTuesday night. He said they will meet with Montreal police. He also said they will meet with the media at an opportune time.

Montreal police have now revealed some of the evidence they say links Magnotta to the alleged crime including surveillance footagefrom his apartment building and a nearby Canada Post outlet, and a horrificvideo montagethatcirculated on internet gore siteslast week.

Grisly discovery in Vancouver

The Vancouver Police Department announced Tuesday that two schools in the cityreceived packages that afternooncontainingwhat appear to be a hand and a foot.TheVPDhas spoken withofficers in Montreal, but it's not clearwhether the packages are linked to alleged killer Luka Rocco Magnotta.

DNA test results now confirm what police have known "99.9 per cent" since last week, Montreal police Cmdr. Ian Lafrenire said that human remainssent to federal political partiesandfound in a Montreal trash pile are from the same body.

Montreal investigators say they also have evidence of cannibalism, "as gross and as graphic as it could be," Lafrenire said. "Yes, it was seen on the video."

Police still need to "absolutely prove" the authenticity of thevideo as a recording of the alleged crimes, although investigators "believe it is," he said. "Now we have to prove it."

Montreal police also confirmedthey are investigating the owner of the websitewhere the videowas posted.

Lafreniresaidsomebody parts are still missing from the remains, but they aren't believed to bein the Canadian postal system.

Jun Lin's family in Montreal to meet police

The parents and two other family members ofJun Lin, theChinese student who was slain inMontreal, have arrived in the city. They are expected to meet with Montreal police Wednesdayto discuss the investigation into Lin's slaying. The Canadian Press

CBC News has learned that among remains mailed from Montreal to Ottawa, a left foot sent to the Conservative Party headquarters was addressed directly to Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

As the investigation enters its next phase, detectives are nowcombing through open homicide cases in the Montreal area, and possibly in other regions, Lafrenire said.

Other police forces "have been in touch"about investigations of potential interest, he said, without specifying which agencies.

What is"particular, specific is the modus operandi, the way[this crime]happened," Lafreniresaid. "We'll look at possibilities, and now we're working on different cases."

Magnotta caught reading stories about himself

Magnottais wanted by Montreal authorities on first-degree murder and other charges, including threatening Canadian politicians, in a case that spawned one of the largest manhunts in the city's police history.

He was arrested at an internet caf in Berlin on Monday, when he was reportedly reading online media stories about himself. Magnotta had travelled to Germany by bus,after spending a week in France.

Magnotta faces 5 charges

  • First-degree murder.
  • Indignity to a human body.
  • Harassingpoliticians.
  • Posting obscene material to the web.
  • Mailing obscene material.

See the arrest warrant:Click here

Berlin prosecutors said Magnotta has no intention of fighting extradition, however, it was unclear how long it would taketoreturn himto Canada.

Public Safety Minister Vic Toews said Tuesdaythe "extradition can occur very, very quickly, or it can be a drawn-out affair," adding that it wasdependent on Magnotta's "willingness to cooperate,"

Kerry-Lynne Findlay, parliamentary secretary to the justice minister, ventured a summer extradition was possible.

"Our officials are working on it, and we feel he'll be back here quite expeditiously," Findlay said. "Probably a few weeks, but that's maybe optimistic."

AGerman judge visited Magnotta in a Berlin jailTuesday to speak about his detention and the procedure for extradition. Following that meeting, Magnotta was moved to a state prison, CBC's Nahlah Ayed reported.

German authorities won't question Magnotta about the crime itself, as it's a Canadian case.

Chief Supt. Stefan Redlich of the Berlin police told CBC Newsthat Magnotta chose to be placed in solitary confinement rather than be held in a cell with other prisoners.

The prisoner atedinner Monday night, slept well andhad breakfastTuesday morning without incident, he said.

Lin's torso was found inside a suitcase outside a Montreal apartment on May 29, the same day body partsaddressed to the offices of the Conservative and Liberal parties in Ottawa were discovered.

Magnotta was identified as a suspect the following day,

Montreal police believe Lin, a 33-year-old university student, was killed sometime around the evening of May 24 or early May 25.The video that apparently captured some of the act was posted to an online gore site on May 25 and circulated on the web for several days.

With files from The Associated Press