Rape caught live on skype.

Boyfriend reveals how he watched powerlessly as his
girlfriend, 23, was raped and murdered ‘by neighbor’ in
Canada while he was chatting to her on SKYPE from
China
According to mailonline, Qian ‘Necole’ Liu, 23, was found
dead on the morning in her basement apartment in
Toronto covered in blood and semen.
The night of the murder, Liu was chatting with her
boyfriend Xian Meng using both a Skype webcam and an
instant messaging service
Meng, who was in Beijing, says that the killer allegedly
knocked on the door and tried to hug Liu who tried to
force him out, but he pushed her towards the bed
Meng says he then heard what sounded like two muffled
bangs and that a man ‘naked from the waist down’ shut
off the lights, locked the door and turned off the webcam
Brian Dickson, a resident in the building, has been
charged with Liu’s murder
The chances that the semen found on victim Qian Liu
weren’t from Dickson are calculated as one in 2.7
quintillion.
Prosecutors say Dickson was known to trawl online chat
rooms for Asian women.
An emotional Xian Chao Meng explained through an
interpreter on Friday how a man burst threw the door of
the basement studio while he remained on Skype to the
victim, 23-year-old Qian ‘Necole’ Liu, before the sound of
two ‘muffled bangs’ and then silence.
Moments later a stranger naked from the abdomen down
appeared in front of the computer and quickly turned it
off.
Brian Dickson, a one-time actor and resident of the
building, has been charged with Liu’s first-degree
murder, The Star reported.
While he has pleaded not guilty, he unsuccessfully tried
pleading guilty to the lesser offense of manslaughter last
week.
Brian Dickson fancied himself a model and friends claim
that he could ‘have any girl he wanted’. He has pleaded
not guilty to the murder of Qian Liu.
He also admitted to police he had met Liu for the first
time in the laundry room of their building earlier in the
night that she died.
Her naked body was found covered in blood and semen.
According to Meng, the night before he had been talking
to Liu for hours on both Skype and QQ, which is China’s
version of MSN.
He was on his laptop in Beijing, where it was about noon,
while Liu was doing homework in Toronto, where she
attended York University and it was about midnight.
The couple had broken up three months earlier but
remained friends, catching up every couple of weeks.
Meng told the court he could see Liu, wearing a headset,
sitting in front of the computer in her apartment just
south of the university campus.
Also visible in the frame was the door, to about knee
level.
‘She said to me that somebody was knocking on the
door. She would check,’ he said.
Liu rose to answer the light knock, saying something
through the door first in English, which Meng couldn’t
understand.
As Liu opened the door partway to her visitor, Meng
caught sight of a man standing in the door frame.
‘A foreigner, not a Chinese,’ he said.terrible act.