Regina Leader-Post

Chretien’s son, Homolka’s sister testify at trial

- CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD

MONTREAL — Two Canadians with nothing in common but that they have famous or infamous relatives testified Friday at the Luka Magnotta murder trial.

Hubert Chrétien, son of former prime minister Jean Chrétien, and Logan Valentini (née Lori Homolka), sister of the convicted killer Karla Homolka, appeared via video link from courthouse­s near where they live respective­ly in Gatineau, Que., and St. Catharines, Ont.

It was their real names and addresses Magnotta wrote in the “sender” box on two packages he mailed in May of 2012 to two Vancouver schools.

In each package, and in two others he sent to Conservati­ve and Liberal party headquarte­rs in Ottawa, were the severed hands and feet of 33-year-old Lin Jun, the Chinese student Magnotta has admitted killing and dismemberi­ng on May 25, 2012.

Magnotta made these admissions through his lawyer Luc Leclair at the start of the trial, but is pleading not guilty. Leclair says he will prove his client suffers from a severe mental illness that rendered him unable to appreciate what he was doing or that it was wrong.

Neither Chrétien, who is 49, nor Valentini, now 43, had ever met Magnotta, they told Quebec Superior Court Justice Guy Cournoyer and jurors. Their combined testimony — merely to confirm they didn’t know Magnotta and hadn’t mailed the packages but that the addresses on them were theirs — lasted about 20 minutes.

The only revelation came from Valentini, who told Leclair in cross-examinatio­n she had seen her sister “recently” and she was now living in Quebec.

The last time Karla Homolka, who was convicted with her first husband Paul Bernardo in the deaths of teenagers Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French and her own baby sister Tammy, was much in the news was about two years ago.

At that time, journalist Paula Todd had tracked her and family — she is married to Thierry Bordelais, brother of her former Montreal lawyer Sylvie Bordelais — down to the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe. Todd wrote an e-book, Finding Karla, about her search.

Both Chrétien and Valentini (that’s her married name, but she also changed her first name about the time of Bernardo’s trial, at which her sister was the key witness) said they were unsettled by finding themselves foisted into the limelight.

Chrétien, who runs a notfor-profit company offering scuba lessons for the disabled, said he was surprised to learn his name (the first misspelled as “Hurbert”) and address had been used by Magnotta.

“It was not agreeable that my name would be used like this,” he said.

“I was kind of stunned,” Valentini said about her reaction to the call she received from Montreal police two years ago. “I didn’t know why I would be dragged into something — again — that had nothing to do with me.”

She said originally, she had changed her name because “I just didn’t want to be associated with something I didn’t do and had no knowledge of,” adding she had “just wanted to live my life, quietly, and free.”

But in the enormous publicity surroundin­g the Bernardo case, she said, it was in the media “that I changed my name and what I changed it to … everybody knows,” she said wearily.

Karla Homolka was sentenced to 12 years in prison for her role in the deaths of the three girls; she completed the sentence and was released from a Quebec prison.

The Magnotta trial resumes Monday.

 ??  ?? Karla Homolka and her sister Lori, left, leave the provincial courthouse in St. Catharines, Ont., in a van with family members after the first day
of Karla’s manslaught­er trial in 1993. Lori, now Logan Valentini, appeared via video link Friday during...
Karla Homolka and her sister Lori, left, leave the provincial courthouse in St. Catharines, Ont., in a van with family members after the first day of Karla’s manslaught­er trial in 1993. Lori, now Logan Valentini, appeared via video link Friday during...

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