NEW WESTMINSTER, British Columbia—Robert "Willie" Pickton was convicted on Sunday of the serial killings of six women whose bodies were butchered like animals in his farm's slaughterhouse.
But the jury convicted Pickton of a lesser charge of second degree murder, not the first degree murder charge he originally faced. The verdict still carries a sentence of life in prison, but the lesser charge makes it easier to get parole.
The jury in New Westminster, British Columbia said it had no recommendations on sentencing, effectively leaving the decision up to the judge.
Pickton stood impassively in the court as the verdict was read. Relatives of the victims initially yelled "No! No!" when the jury said he was not guilty of first degree murder, but then hugged each other in joy outside the court room.
The verdict wraps up the first of two trials for Pickton, who is accused of killing a total of 26 Vancouver prostitutes. His second trial will deal with the remaining 20 murder charges.
Pickton, 58, lured the women to his farm in the Vancouver suburb of Port Coquitlam with money and drugs, killed them, and cut up the bodies and disposed of the remains using the pigs and a rendering plant.
Investigators found human remains on the farm, including severed skulls and feet. A woman who lived briefly in Pickton's trailer testified she saw him cutting up a body in the middle of the night.
Jurors also viewed a taped jailhouse conversation in which Pickton told an undercover officer after his February 2002 arrest that he had killed 49 women and planned to make it 50.
Pickton's legal defense team argued the human remains did not prove he was the killer and that police ignored other suspects.
The conviction on second degree murder rather than first degree meant that the jury did not agree with prosecutors that he planned the murders in advance.
Pickton did not testify and rarely showed emotion during the trial, at which he was protected by bulletproof glass. Reporters never saw him turn around in the prisoner's box to look at spectators.
Jurors began their deliberations November 30 after hearing some 10 months of testimony and legal arguments. Sunday marked the first anniversary of their being picked to hear the case.
Nearly 70 Women Went Missing
The victims were among nearly 70 women who disappeared from the poverty-stricken Downtown Eastside neighborhood of the Pacific coast city from the late 1980s until late 2001.
Activists complained in the 1990s that sex trade workers were disappearing, but Vancouver police said there was no evidence of a serial killer. A police task force was formed in April 2001 to investigate the cases of the missing women.
Police said Pickton was not the main suspect until his arrest in 2002. Officers raided his farm searching for an illegal gun but discovered items belonging to the missing women in his trailer.
Investigators spent 20 months digging up Pickton's farm where he kept a few pigs and salvaged vehicles. The land and collapsing buildings were what remained of a larger family property being sold off for housing development.
The trial painted a dark picture of life at the farm where Pickton—who did not drink or use drugs—befriended a stream of drug addicts, petty thieves and prostitutes.





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