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A poster depicting 18-year-old Taylor Van Diest is taped to a railway crossing in Armstrong, B.C., on April 5, 2012.Jeff Bassett/The Globe and Mail

Jurors have started deliberating the fate of a B.C. man accused in the first-degree murder of 18-year-old Taylor Van Diest who died from severe head injuries.

Twenty-eight-year-old Matthew Foerster has admitted to attacking the woman in Armstrong, B.C., on Halloween night in 2011, but he pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Peter Rogers has told a jury in Kelowna that a conviction of first-degree murder means the killing has to be planned and deliberate.

However, he says someone can still be found guilty of first-degree murder if a death is caused during a sexual assault or an attempted sexual assault.

The defence is calling for a verdict of manslaughter, saying Foerster was seeking consensual sex but that when Van Diest fought back, he pushed her down and caused her to fall and hit her head on a steel pipe.

But the Crown has said Foerster hit the teen on the head six times with a flashlight and tied a shoelace around her neck.

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