Tim Bosma trial: Celebrating a 'mission' and testimony about who fired the fatal shot - Action News
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Hamilton

Tim Bosma trial: Celebrating a 'mission' and testimony about who fired the fatal shot

This week, the trial of the two men accused of the murder of Hamilton's Tim Bosma began with testimony describing text messages about a plan to steal a truck, and ended with the jury hearing a dramatic accusation about which of them actually shot Bosma.

Testimony this week: an ex-girlfriend and a forensic computer expert

Hamilton man Tim Bosma was murdered in 2016.
The trial of the two men accused of the murder of Hamilton's Tim Bosma continued this week with testimony from the girlfriend on one of the accused, her sister and a forensic computer expert. (Facebook)

Thisweek, the trial of the two men accused of the murder of Hamilton's Tim Bosmabegan with testimony describing text messages about a plan to steal a truck, and ended with the jury hearing a dramaticaccusation about which of them actually shot Bosma.

MarkSmich, 28, ofOakville, Ont., andDellenMillard, 30, of Toronto are charged with first-degree murder inBosma'sdeath. Both have pleaded not guilty.

Bosma, 32, who lived in the suburban Ancaster area of Hamilton, vanished on May 6, 2013, after taking two men on a test drive in a pickup truck he was trying to sell. Investigators later found charred human remains, believed to belong to Bosma, in a livestock incinerator on Millard's farm in Waterloo, Ont.

Marlena Meneses, Smich's girlfriend at the time of the Bosma killing,delivered some of the most dramatic testimony heard so far at the jury trial in Superior Court in Hamilton.

Meneses, 22,told a packed courtroom that Smich told herBosma was killed the night of May 6, 2013, when he took Millard and Smich on a test drive of a truck he was trying to sell.

"He said that Dell murdered him.That he shot him," Meneses testified, as members of the Bosma family became visibly emotional inside the courtroom. Bosma's wife Sharlenesat stone faced, while others cried.

"He told me he did nothing, that Dell did it all," she said."He told me that Mr. Bosma was gone, gone."

Earlier,Menesestestifiedshemet Smich for the first time at a Tim Hortonsand"We just hit eyes, and they were all big, and it was like he was in love with me."

She said they had an immediate connection. That all ended when Smich was arrested for Bosma's murder in 2013. She was arrested too, but never charged.

Meneses said she hasn't spoken to Smich since thearrest."The day I got arrested, I just figured why even bother still being with him," she said.

On Thursday, Meneseswas asked why she didn't go immediately to police. Through tears, just a few feet from where the Bosma family sat, she said"I should have. I regret it. I could have stopped so much if I had gone to the police. I should have."

The 'all-nighter' when Bosma vanished

On Tuesday, jurors heard thatMillard was texting his girlfriend, ChristinaNoudga, about an "all-nighter" mission on the night thatBosmadisappeared.

For the first time, the jury saw Millard's text records from around the time the Crown alleges Bosma was killed and they painted a chilling picture, one that weighed heavily on the Bosma family members in court.

One message sent fromMillard's phone at 7:40 p.m. on May 6, 2013, read: "I'm on my way to a mission now. If it's a flop I'll be done in 2 hrs. If it goes it'll be an all nighter."

Hamilton police Det.Const. Craig Harrison testified that amessage backfrom "Kinks" (which the jury has heard was anicknamefor Millard's girlfriend, ChristinaNoudga)at 10:47 p.m.: "So you finish?" The response: "Gonnabe an all-nighter."

The jury also saw amessage from Noudga at 8:26 a.m. on May 7 that read: "Still working?" The message back from Millard's phone read:"Stage 1 complete, taking a respite. Not sure yet." A later message from Millard's phone read: "I'mgonnatake a nap."

The plan to steal a truck

To begin the week jurors heard testimony from Harrison that texts on Millard's cellphone show he planned to steal a Dodge 3500 truck like Bosma's as far back as February 2012.

Harrison showed the courtstexts between Millard and a contact named "Say 10" which the Crown alleges was a nickname for Smich.

"Next on the list is: getting you a G1, sound equipment for recording, nab a dodge 3500, sell the green jeep, nab a Nacra18 sail boat," atext shown in court read.

For hours Monday, the jury was shown hundreds of messages between Millard, Smich and other friends that highlight the group's plans to steal different items, and Millard's quest to track down a Dodge 3500. Bosma's truck, the jury has heard, was a Dodge 3500 pickup truck with a diesel engine something several witnesses have said was what Millard was looking for.