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'You were angry': Prosecutor grills Peter Khill about killing Jon Styres, accuses him of lying

For the past two weeks,Peter Khill has appeared calm and collected during his murder trial in Hamilton, but on Thursday he took deep breaths and looked exasperated as Crown prosecutors accused him of lying about the night he shot and killed Jon Styres.

Crown contends Khill shot Styres while victim was on his hands and knees

Two separate photos, one of a man walking and another of a man smiling
Peter Khill, left, of Hamilton is on trial for second-degree murder for fatally shooting Jon Styres, right, of Six Nations on Feb. 4, 2016. (Colin Perkel/The Canadian Press; Submitted by Lindsay Hill)

WARNING: This story contains distressing details

For the past two weeks, Peter Khill has appearedcalm and collected in court, but on Thursday he took deep breathsand looked exasperated as Crown prosecutors accused him of lying about the night he shot and killed JonStyres.

Khill is facing a second-degree murder charge after firing twolethalshots at Styres on a cold February night in Hamilton in2016. The Six Nations man was trying to steal Khill's truck when he died.

Khill, a former reservist, has pleaded not guilty, saying his military training kicked in and he only pulled the trigger because he thought Styres was pointing a pistol at him. He also said he attemptedCPR on Styres.

Assistant Crown attorney Sean Doherty, meanwhile, tried to convince the jury that Khillshot Styresout ofanger, not fear.

Doherty pressed Khill in court for hours, building up the pressure throughout the day.

Emotions were running high on Day 8 of the trial in the Superior Court of Justice, with Khill's wife looking distressed and the mother of Styres's two children at one point storming out of the courtroom.

Crown says Khill didn't use 'common sense'

Doherty argued that Khill could haveavoided conflictmany times.

Both Khill and his wife had phones in their bedroom when they woke up toa sound in the early hours of Feb. 4, but neither called 911 before shotsrang out.

The prosecutor said Khill could have opened his bedroom window and tried to shout at Styres, turned on lights outside his home or fired a warning shot.

When Khill, holding a shotgun, eventually left his home through a backdoor and entered a breezeway connecting his home and garage, Doherty said he could haveturned back after seeing Styres wasn't there.

A gun.
Hamilton police removed this gun from Khill's home the night Styres was shot. (Ministry of the Attorney General)

"Soldier or not, are these not common sense things? To call 911, make your presence known?" Doherty asked Khill.

Khill said he thought there was an imminent threat and wasn't sure if he and his wife would be killed in moments.

"I think I've already answered the question, but I needed to gain control of this situation before ... I have people in my home," Khill said.

'A disregard for anything tactical'

Khill previously saidhe didn't know if there were multiple peopleand if they were in the breezeway.

Doherty pushed back against those claims and also questioned the notion that Khill's reaction could beattributed to his training as a Canadian Armed Forces reservist.

"All the evidence shows a disregard for anything tactical," Doherty said.

Doherty saidKhillwas, in some ways, unprepared, walking barefoot withjust two shells inhis shotgun while wearing a T-shirt and boxer shorts.

Police took this photo of Khill in a black T-shirt and boxer shorts after he was arrested on the night of the fatal shooting in February 2016. (Ministry of the Attorney General)

Under questioning from Doherty, Khill acknowledged that he didn't lock the door behind him, nor did he search aroundhis housebefore entering the breezeway both of which left his wife vulnerableif more than one person was there.

Doherty said that's because Khill knew there weren't multiple peopleand because he wasn't using hismilitary training.

"That's very easy for you to say looking at this," Khill said, adding he was moving toward the sound and trying to be proactive.

'You know that's not the truth'

Doherty said Khill lied about numerous aspects of that night, but most of allabout the moment he encounteredStyres.

He said Khill had no intention of detaining Styres because he didn'tbringhandcuffs or other toolsto perform acitizen's arrest.

"What are you going to do? Put him in an armbar and drop the shotgun on the floor?" the prosecutorasked Khill.

Khill said he would havetriedto detain Styres if he surrendered.

He testified that Styreswas leaning into the truck when Khill asked him to put his hands up.

He said he shot Styres after seeing him put his hands together below his waist and raise them as he turned toward Khill.

After the two shots one to the victim's chest and the other to hisright shoulder Khill said Styres stumbledbefore collapsing onto Khill's muddy driveway and dying almost two metres away from the truck's open passenger-side door.

LISTEN | Peter Khill talks to dispatcher after shooting Jon Styres:

Peter Khill talks to 911 dispatcher after shooting and killing Jon Styres

2 years ago
Duration 1:30
The jury heard a 911 call made shortly after Peter Khill shot Jon Styres. Khill is on trial for second-degree murder.

"That's not the truth, you know that's not the truth," Doherty said.

"He's got a shot in his chest, a shot in his arm and he gets up and starts walking?"

Doherty noted how the two shotgun shells from Khill's gun didn't land close to each other.

He said after Khill shot Styres in the chest, Styres dropped to his hands and knees before he started crawling to get away from Khill.

"You followed him from the left to the right with the muzzle of your gun ... you shot him a second time," Doherty said.

"I completely disagree, that is a false statement," Khill said.

Doherty said Khill was acting on emotion and that emotion was anger, after his wife describedwhat sounded like two potential break-in attempts the week prior.

"You were angry about what your wife reported to you at the back door while you were out of town. You were angry you were woken up in the middle of the night and there was somebody in your truck," Doherty said.

"No, I was scared and I was worried," Khill said.

The trial before Justice Andrew Goodman is expected to end next week.