Accused killer said he shot victim 4 times, Crown's key witness tells jury - Action News
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New Brunswick

Accused killer said he shot victim 4 times, Crown's key witness tells jury

A man on trial for murder told others he had shot a Moncton teenager four times, the Crown prosecutor's key witness testified Wednesday.

Witness testifies he was with Riley Phillips on day Joedin Leger was killed

A sketch of a young man.
A witness testified Wednesday that Riley Phillips, shown here earlier in the trial, said he had shot Joedin Leger four times. (Andrew Robson)

A man on trial for murder told others he had shot a Moncton teenager four times, the Crown prosecutor's key witness testified Wednesday.

The witness said he wasamong a group of six peoplewho went to Joedin Leger's Moncton home two years ago planning to rob him and his girlfriend of money, drugs and vape products.

The witness testified on the 15th day of the jury trial of Riley Phillips, who ischarged with second-degree murder. It's alleged PhillipskilledLeger in Moncton on April 25, 2022.

The 20-year-old witness cannot be named because he was under 18 in April 2022.

The witness said he was standing outsideLeger's Logan Lane duplex with Phillips, Hayden Leblanc and Nicholas McAvoy. He said he heard a sound like a door being kicked in, followed within seconds by four to five gunshots inside the duplex.

A car parked outside a duplex with tarps and cones around the vehicle.
The witness said he was standing at the side of the Logan Lane duplex when he heard Phillips go in through the front door, followed quickly by four to five gunshots. (RCMP/Court of King's Bench exhibt)

The witness said he looked inside the door and saw Phillips jumping down the stairs. The group ran back to a waiting vehicle, where Phillips showed what the witness described as a gunshot wound.

"'The f--ker shot me.But it's OK, I put four in him,' something along those lines," the witness recalled Phillips saying.

The man was the 24th witness to testify during the trial, and the first to directly place Phillips at the scene of Leger's death.

The witness said his involvement began the night before, April 24, 2022, when he called Leblanc looking to buy cocaine. He testified Leblanc asked if he wanted to make some money by taking part in a robbery.

The witness said he met with Leblanc, McAvoyand brothers Hunter and Jerek England, and they formed a plan to rob Leger and his girlfriend, Chantal Boudreau. The witness said he had a vagueidea of where the pair lived because Boudreau's son had told him a few days earlier.

The witness said they borrowed a friend's Honda Civicfor the night to carry out the plan. They drove to the home of the England brothers' father in Irishtown, north of Moncton, to get a .38 calibre revolver. The witness testified the gun was loaded with six rounds when they left the Irishtown home.

A revolver zip-tied to a box with an orange tag attached.
A .38 calibre revolver entered as an exhibit in the trial. (Shane Magee/CBC)

Early on the morning of April 25, the witnesssaid he and Leblanc, McAvoyand the England brothersdrove around the north end neighbourhood where they believed Leger and Boudreau lived. They were looking forher Chevrolet Cobalt. When they spotted it,they approached the home and looked inside, concluding they had the right house, he said.

"Somebody came up with the idea of getting Riley, so we went to get Riley," the witness testified.

At Phillips's grandparent'shome on Ryan Street in Moncton, the witness said Leblanc spoke to Phillips around 5 a.m. but Phillipsdidn't want to go with them yet.

"'I'm on a curfew, wait until 6 a.m. when my curfew is up,'" the witness recalled Phillips saying.

The group returned later, and Phillips was handed the loaded gun in the car on the way to Logan Lane. The witness said Phillips was wearing a black motorcycle helmet.

WATCH | Video captures sound of apparent gunshots:

Surveillance video shown to Moncton jury captures apparent gunshots

11 days ago
Duration 0:37
Jurors in the second-degree murder trial of Riley Phillips were shown surveillance video from Logan Lane in Moncton recorded on April 25, 2022.

Hunter England was driving and parked the Honda Civicon a side street near Leger's home, the witness said.The witness, Phillips, Leblanc and McAvoyleft the car and went up to Leger's duplex, he said, while the England brothers remained in the car.

"Riley kicked the door in, shots went off, we left," the witness testified. He said he didn'tsee Phillips go inside, hear any conversation,or see anyone else inside after Phillips fled the home.

Under cross-examination, the witness said he believed the first shot he heard sounded like a .22 calibre round being fired. The jury has heard Leger had a homemade gun found by police in the kitchen with a spent .22 calibre casing in the chamber.

Once the four were back in the waiting Civic, he said they drove off and werefollowed by another vehicle, the witness said.

Earlier in the trial, a man named Linus Dunn testifiedthat hehad followed the Civic, after he watchedfour peoplerun across the street in front of him while he was driving to geta coffee. Dunn said he noted the licence plate and gave the information to police later that morning.

In the Civic, the witness testified Phillips showed the group "a bullet hole" in his right hand. He said someone in the car took off clothing and wrapped it around Phillips's hand.

Medical records entered as evidence last week show Phillips was treated at the Moncton Hospital on April 26, the day after Leger's death, for a gunshot wound to his right hand. He had follow-up visits at another hospital, where records indicate there was a bullet in his hand.

After leaving the Logan Lane area in the Civic, the witness said the group parked the car in a garage. The jury has already been shown photos of a Civic seized by police from that garage after Leger's death. The witness said he went into hiding for several months before police arrested him in Moncton.

A young boy with his chin in his hand wearing a baseball-style hat looks.
Joedin Leger was 18 when he was shot and killed in Moncton on April 25, 2022. (Albert County Funeral Home)

Last week, a pathologist testified that Leger was shot three to five times. A firearms expert testified earlier in the trial that abullet recovered from Leger's body during the autopsy was matched to a .38 calibre revolver.

The witness testified that at the time of the shooting, he had been using cocaine and had been drinking. Crown prosecutor Stephen Holt asked the witness about his level of intoxication, and he responded he was "fine."

At several points he told Holt he couldn't remember some details, such as specific words said by others, because two years hadpassed.

After the lunch break, Holt showed the witness a revolver entered as an exhibit in the trial and asked if he recognized it.

"I don't think that's the same gun," the witness said.

The witnesstold Holt he got involved in the robbery plan because he wanted money. The witness said he sold drugs between the age of 15 and 18.

Witness was selling drugs to students

Under cross-examination by Phillips's defence lawyer Wednesday afternoon, the witness said he was selling drugs to high school students at the time.

Brian Munro asked a series of questions challenging the motivation of the witness and hisstatements to police. Munro suggestedthe witness only began to co-operate with police after he was caught and charged with first-degree murder in connection with Leger's death.

"Maybe I just want to help the family that's been victimized," the witness responded. "I made a mistake."

The witness said he pleaded guilty to manslaughter last year.

The day ended with the witness refusing to answer a question about whether a friend had firearms. Cross-examination is expected to resume Thursday morning.