Jordan O’Brien-Tobin, the man who stabbed a 16-year-old to death at a TTC subway station in 2023, has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.
The victim, Gabriel Magalhaes, was on his way home with a friend on March 25 of that year when he was attacked at Keele StationĀ in the city’s west end. The stabbing was unprovoked, according to an agreed statement of factsĀ ā though text messages from the killer’s phone suggest he was planning to kill someone that night.
O’Brien-Tobin, a 22-year-old from Newfoundland, was originally charged with first-degree murder in the case, but pleaded guilty to the lesser charge Wednesday.
According to the agreed statement of facts,Ā MagalhaesĀ and his friend were sitting on a bench on the ground floor of the subway station around 8:53 p.m. whenĀ O’Brien-TobinĀ walked down a nearby set of stairs.
Security camera footage showed the accused turning and staring at the pair, while they sat unaware of him, according to court documents.Ā O’Brien-TobinĀ then briefly exited the station, but continued to watch the victim and his friend through a set of automatic doors.
He then reached into his backpack, according to the agreed statement of facts, before coming back inside the station and heading right forĀ Magalhaes.
Teen’s lung, heart punctured
“Unprovoked and with no exchange of words, the accused stabbed Gabriel in the chest with the knife,” the statement reads. “He then walked away, exiting the subway station.”
Magalhaes, meanwhile, collapsed on the floor. His friend and two bystanders attempted first aid until emergency crews arrived, the court documents say. He was rushed to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 9:46 p.m.Ā ā less than an hour afterĀ O’Brien-TobinĀ originally spotted him.
An autopsy later revealedĀ the knifeĀ punctured Magalhaes’s left lung and heart.
Less than an hour after the stabbing,Ā O’Brien-Tobin, who was unhoused at the time, went to a church on RoncesvallesĀ Avenue in the city’s west end where he spoke with a priest and a member of the parish, according to the agreed statement of facts.
He was “acting strange” and told them he “felt like killing someone,” the documents read. Members of the church “became concerned” and “escorted him out.”
O’Brien-TobinĀ thenĀ went to the emergency room at St. Joseph’s Hospital about 20 minutes later, according to the statement of facts, where police found and arrested him.
Killer admitted to stabbing in text messages
His backpack was seized and forensic examination revealedĀ Magalhaes’s blood inside one of the inner compartments. The knife was never found.
Police also examined the killer’s cellphone, court heard, which revealed chilling messages he had sent to his girlfriends, friends and mother both before and after the murder.
They included “someones dying TN,” as well as “I just stabbed someone random” and “I stabbed someone and got away with it.”
Second-degree murder comes with an automatic life sentence in CanadaĀ ā now it is up to the trial’s judge to decide on the timeframe beforeĀ O’Brien-TobinĀ can apply for parole.
The Crown is asking for 16 to 18 years, while the defence is seeking 10 to 14 years.
A sentencing hearing is set for February 2025.