Luka Magnotta
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Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 09:57@jasmin00009
Was fasziniert dich an Luka? Findest du den auch super geil und würdest gerne mit ihm schlafen?
Was fasziniert dich an Luka? Findest du den auch super geil und würdest gerne mit ihm schlafen?
Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:01Würde mich nur mal interessieren, was ihr oder du an dem geil findet
Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:02@KirkTrammel
Hab ich jemals gesagt dass ich gerne mit ihm schlafen würde?? woraus schliesst du das bitte?
wegen der badgeschichte oder wie..... -.-
Hab ich jemals gesagt dass ich gerne mit ihm schlafen würde?? woraus schliesst du das bitte?
wegen der badgeschichte oder wie..... -.-
Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:03Ich habe nicht gesagt das du mit ihm schlafen würdest, sondern gefragt ob du gerne würdest.
Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:04Es scheint ja eine gewisse faszination für ihn zu geben....
Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:05Ich habe bei FB gesehn, das viele gerne was mit ihm hätten. Aber ich kann als Junge das nicht so beurteilen, daher frage ich einfach.
Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:07Luka Magnotta
14.09.2012 um 10:09Ok, mich interessiert auch der Fall. Ich wollte dir oder sonst jemand nicht's unterstellen. Aber es gibt echt viele Mädchen/Frauen die gerne mit ihm mehr wollen, genauso hat ABB Briefe von 16 Jährigen bekommen die gerne ein Kind mit ihm hätten und ihn heiraten wollen.
Luka Magnotta
15.09.2012 um 19:49Luka Magnotta
18.09.2012 um 14:38http://www.thespec.com/news/canada/article/800529--cost-of-extraditing-luka-magnotta-on-military-plane-375-000 (Archiv-Version vom 18.09.2012)
Luka Magnotta
21.09.2012 um 19:15Luka Rocco Magnotta’s snuff film funded by Mr. 'Deep pockets'?
Luka Rocco Magnotta’s snuff film “1 Lunatic, 1 Icepick” appears to have been his ticket out of poverty, according to a couple of key details coming to light in the last two days. And a backer with “deep pockets” seems to be key to his whereabouts.
In the first place, the alleged Canadian killer was living in a $490 a month apartment, and yet he’s the same man who police suspected jetted off to France and then booked a return flight to Montreal in his name for Friday at 1 pm. The Calgary Herald reported that Montreal police boarded that airplane once it arrived from Paris, checking every passport but finding no body parts killer amongst the flight’s travelers.
Poor boys can’t afford to buy international flight tickets. They usually can’t even afford to fly domestic. And they definitely can’t buy a ticket and pay for it when they don’t plan to use it. Instead, police often find poor criminals hiding in fields, asleep under overpasses, and in any park or alley that they can find, or hiding out with a friend. Magnotta didn’t appear to have any of those.
Another detail that supports the alleged killer’s recent newfound financial status due to a deep pockets personality is that no one thus far in this high-tech Internet age has been able to locate the missing man definitively.
And what person can really disappear off the face of the earth unless he has the resources he needs to reinvent himself or to hire other people to run his errands for food and other necessities? And that takes money, of course, or some well-connected friends with deep pockets.
If Luka had been a man of wealth and means before May 15, when he first loaded that “1 Lunatic, 1 Icepick” video up on YouTube, trumpeting the murder of Jun Lin, then he wouldn’t have been living in the apartment where he did in Montreal.
Men who can fly to Paris at the drop of a hat, and elude 150 law enforcement agencies around the world, are men of independent means or one who is being financially provided for by someone else. Who is Luka Rocco Magnotta’s “deep pockets”? If police find him, they will find their body parts killer.
http://www.examiner.com/article/luka-rocco-magnotta-s-snuff-film-funded-by-mr-deep-pockets
Luka Rocco Magnotta’s snuff film “1 Lunatic, 1 Icepick” appears to have been his ticket out of poverty, according to a couple of key details coming to light in the last two days. And a backer with “deep pockets” seems to be key to his whereabouts.
In the first place, the alleged Canadian killer was living in a $490 a month apartment, and yet he’s the same man who police suspected jetted off to France and then booked a return flight to Montreal in his name for Friday at 1 pm. The Calgary Herald reported that Montreal police boarded that airplane once it arrived from Paris, checking every passport but finding no body parts killer amongst the flight’s travelers.
Poor boys can’t afford to buy international flight tickets. They usually can’t even afford to fly domestic. And they definitely can’t buy a ticket and pay for it when they don’t plan to use it. Instead, police often find poor criminals hiding in fields, asleep under overpasses, and in any park or alley that they can find, or hiding out with a friend. Magnotta didn’t appear to have any of those.
Another detail that supports the alleged killer’s recent newfound financial status due to a deep pockets personality is that no one thus far in this high-tech Internet age has been able to locate the missing man definitively.
And what person can really disappear off the face of the earth unless he has the resources he needs to reinvent himself or to hire other people to run his errands for food and other necessities? And that takes money, of course, or some well-connected friends with deep pockets.
If Luka had been a man of wealth and means before May 15, when he first loaded that “1 Lunatic, 1 Icepick” video up on YouTube, trumpeting the murder of Jun Lin, then he wouldn’t have been living in the apartment where he did in Montreal.
Men who can fly to Paris at the drop of a hat, and elude 150 law enforcement agencies around the world, are men of independent means or one who is being financially provided for by someone else. Who is Luka Rocco Magnotta’s “deep pockets”? If police find him, they will find their body parts killer.
http://www.examiner.com/article/luka-rocco-magnotta-s-snuff-film-funded-by-mr-deep-pockets
Luka Magnotta
21.09.2012 um 20:51kann bitte mal wer grob übersetzen um was es geht?
Luka Magnotta
25.10.2012 um 19:36Luka Magnotta murder trial: Confidentiality rights of a research subject under discussion
MONTREAL — Evidence gathered in preparation for Luka Magnotta’s murder trial has resurrected the debate over whether the confidentiality rights of a research subject take precedence over the need to prosecute.
At the Montreal courthouse Thursday, lawyers for two criminologists — who may have interviewed Magnotta before he allegedly killed Lin Jun in May — pushed to have the interview kept confidential. One of those lawyers, Nadine Touma is asking that arguments on whether or not the evidence can be used be held before Magnotta’s trial begins. If it happens during the trial, it risks prolonging the proceedings for a lengthy period, Touma said Tuesday, especially if the judge’s decision is appealed.
Both Magnotta and University of Ottawa criminologists Christine Bruckert and Colette Parent filed motions in July to keep an interview conducted with a research subject named “Jimmy” confidential.
Bruckert and Parent’s work centres largely on sex trade workers and their working conditions. Magnotta is known to have used the alias Jimmy and claims to have worked as an escort for several years.
The transcripts of the interview were seized under a search warrant by Montreal homicide detectives at the law offices of Lex Canada in Toronto on June 22, three weeks after Magnotta was arrested.
The criminologists argue that the study, currently under seal along with the rest of Magnotta’s case file, should remain confidential to protect the subject. Touma said the basis of the case extends to all individuals who participate in research designed to benefit the common good, on the condition their identities remain secret.
“It is an obligation to have their confidentiality maintained,” Touma said Thursday. “This is common. All social research is fully covered by confidentiality agreements.”
Dozens of cases fought in the United States have upheld researchers’ rights to maintain confidentiality. In Canada there has only been one previous case of a researcher being asked by the courts to identify a subject, in 1994. Criminologist Russel Ogden, who was studying people who assisted suicide for AIDS victims, refused, and won his case in court.
Lawyers and prosecutor Louis Bouthillier agreed Thursday to meet on March 1, 2013, to set a date for whether the criminologists’ motion should be heard during the trial or before. If it’s held before, Touma said, the arguments would likely be made in June.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/Luka+Magnotta+murder+trial+Confidentiality+rights+research+subject+under+discussion/7412159/story.html (Archiv-Version vom 20.10.2012)
MONTREAL — Evidence gathered in preparation for Luka Magnotta’s murder trial has resurrected the debate over whether the confidentiality rights of a research subject take precedence over the need to prosecute.
At the Montreal courthouse Thursday, lawyers for two criminologists — who may have interviewed Magnotta before he allegedly killed Lin Jun in May — pushed to have the interview kept confidential. One of those lawyers, Nadine Touma is asking that arguments on whether or not the evidence can be used be held before Magnotta’s trial begins. If it happens during the trial, it risks prolonging the proceedings for a lengthy period, Touma said Tuesday, especially if the judge’s decision is appealed.
Both Magnotta and University of Ottawa criminologists Christine Bruckert and Colette Parent filed motions in July to keep an interview conducted with a research subject named “Jimmy” confidential.
Bruckert and Parent’s work centres largely on sex trade workers and their working conditions. Magnotta is known to have used the alias Jimmy and claims to have worked as an escort for several years.
The transcripts of the interview were seized under a search warrant by Montreal homicide detectives at the law offices of Lex Canada in Toronto on June 22, three weeks after Magnotta was arrested.
The criminologists argue that the study, currently under seal along with the rest of Magnotta’s case file, should remain confidential to protect the subject. Touma said the basis of the case extends to all individuals who participate in research designed to benefit the common good, on the condition their identities remain secret.
“It is an obligation to have their confidentiality maintained,” Touma said Thursday. “This is common. All social research is fully covered by confidentiality agreements.”
Dozens of cases fought in the United States have upheld researchers’ rights to maintain confidentiality. In Canada there has only been one previous case of a researcher being asked by the courts to identify a subject, in 1994. Criminologist Russel Ogden, who was studying people who assisted suicide for AIDS victims, refused, and won his case in court.
Lawyers and prosecutor Louis Bouthillier agreed Thursday to meet on March 1, 2013, to set a date for whether the criminologists’ motion should be heard during the trial or before. If it’s held before, Touma said, the arguments would likely be made in June.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/Luka+Magnotta+murder+trial+Confidentiality+rights+research+subject+under+discussion/7412159/story.html (Archiv-Version vom 20.10.2012)
Luka Magnotta
25.10.2012 um 19:38Run up to Luka Magnotta trial: Update
Posted on October 22, 2012
The following article by Rene Bruemmer recently appeared in the Montreal Gazette regarding the trial of Luka Magnotta.
Attorneys for two criminologists are fighting to keep information confidential, hoping that it will not be used in the trial of Magnotta; the criminologists may have interviewed Magnotta before he became the primary suspect in the murder of Jun Lin. The interviews might include information about Magnotta’s work as an escort, and one of the attorney’s main focus is on the sex trade.
A meeting to decide on a date to discuss keeping the information confidential has been set for March 1st, 2013.
If a meeting to decide a date to discuss confidentiality isn’t going to happen for another five months, then one can only wonder when the actual trial will take place.
Luka Magnotta is currently in custody awaiting trial for the murder of Jun Lin. Lin was murdered between May 24-25, 2012, and Magnotta subsequently fled Canada. He was arrested in Berlin on June 4th, and arrived back in Canada on June 19th after extradition.
https://blametheamygdala.wordpress.com/2012/10/22/run-up-to-luka-magnotta-trial-update/
Posted on October 22, 2012
The following article by Rene Bruemmer recently appeared in the Montreal Gazette regarding the trial of Luka Magnotta.
Attorneys for two criminologists are fighting to keep information confidential, hoping that it will not be used in the trial of Magnotta; the criminologists may have interviewed Magnotta before he became the primary suspect in the murder of Jun Lin. The interviews might include information about Magnotta’s work as an escort, and one of the attorney’s main focus is on the sex trade.
A meeting to decide on a date to discuss keeping the information confidential has been set for March 1st, 2013.
If a meeting to decide a date to discuss confidentiality isn’t going to happen for another five months, then one can only wonder when the actual trial will take place.
Luka Magnotta is currently in custody awaiting trial for the murder of Jun Lin. Lin was murdered between May 24-25, 2012, and Magnotta subsequently fled Canada. He was arrested in Berlin on June 4th, and arrived back in Canada on June 19th after extradition.
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