The jurors returned a guilty verdict yesterday afternoon in the Shannon Haynes murder trial after deliberating since Monday evening.

Haynes, 31, was convicted of kidnapping, raping and killing Kara Parrish, a 20-year-old Ohio State student. She died in the early morning hours of May 20 at Haynes’ 1608 Summit St. apartment.

Peggy Parrish, the victim’s mother, said she was glad about the guilty verdicts but disappointed that he was not found guilty on the three aggravated murder charges. Haynes bound her daughter’s hands and feet with an electrical extension cord before raping and strangling her.

Ms. Parrish said the only thing her daughter was guilty of was trusting Haynes, whom she thought of as her friend.

“Shannon Haynes showed no remorse,” Ms. Parrish said. “I hate Shannon Haynes with all my heart.”

Jeff Parrish, the victim’s father, said he never met Shannon Haynes but knew him as a friend of the victim’s from school who helped her with her computer.

Ms. Parrish said Haynes was over at her house three times to fix the victim’s computer.

“Nobody saw him for who he really was,” she said. “There is nothing that can replace the loss of a daughter.”

Peggy and Jeff Parrish are divorced.

Ron O’Brien, prosecuting attorney, said the jury felt the prosecution did not prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt to secure the aggravated murder convictions.

“I am extremely disappointed in the verdict,” Mr. Parrish said. “I can’t believe the jury couldn’t see through the defense.”

Among points raised by the defense were traces of the drug Ecstasy, a psychoactive and hallucinogenic drug, that was found in the victim’s system, and therefore may have increased her senses and impaired her judgments. In addition, a witness testified that she saw the victim in a sado-masochistic bar, supporting the defense’s argument that the victim consented to having sex with Haynes.

O’Brien said unfortunately with these types of cases, the victim is usually the one that gets painted as being guilty.

“The most difficult thing in this trial was to sit through the character assassination of my daughter,” Ms. Parrish said. “When I think of how the defense said she likes ‘kinky’ sex, it made me sick.”

Michael Bell, Haynes’ step-father, said he was not happy with the way the case was handled.

Bell said his son, Anthony Bell, Haynes’s half-brother and a witness in the case, was supposed to have a confidential testimony but did not.

“This has torn my family up,” Bell said.

Bell also said Haynes’s mother was not in court because she could not take it. “She’s crushed,” he said.

Bell said he has not spoken with Haynes since the trial started.

Haynes may face life in prison. He will be sentenced on March 5 at 9 a.m. in Judge Lisa L. Sadler’s courtroom in the Franklin County Courthouse.

Melissa Miller contributed to this story.