On July 30, 2008, Canada witnessed one of the most gruesome and shocking crimes in its modern history. Tim McLean, a 22‑year‑old carnival worker from Winnipeg, was stabbed, beheaded, and cannibalised while riding a Greyhound bus along the Trans‑Canada Highway, about 30 kilometres west of Portage la Prairie, Manitoba. The attacker was Vince Weiguang Li, a 40‑year‑old Chinese immigrant who had emigrated to Canada in 2001. The attack was unprovoked, witnessed by dozens of horrified passengers, and it set in motion a legal and ethical debate that continues to this day. A persistent question that surfaces in true‑crime discussions is whether Vince Li crime scene photos exist, and if they do, should they be publicly available?
Unlike some international cases where evidence leaks online, the photographic evidence of the Greyhound bus attack has never been leaked to the internet. What Exists Online Legally Vince Li Crime Scene Photos
The case took a pivotal turn on March 5, 2009, when a Manitoba court found Vince Li not criminally responsible (NCR) for the killing. The court heard extensive psychiatric evidence that Li was a schizophrenic suffering from a major psychotic episode at the time of the attack. He believed he was on a divine mission to kill an alien or a demon and that God had commanded him to eliminate McLean, whom he perceived as an evil threat. On July 30, 2008, Canada witnessed one of
: During his trial, Li pleaded not criminally responsible (NCR). Psychiatrists testified that he was suffering from untreated paranoid schizophrenia and believed McLean was a demon or "force of evil". Current Status Vince Li was found Not Criminally Responsible The attack was unprovoked, witnessed by dozens of