Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Text Show Talk Of Truck Theft, Incinerator More Than A Year Before Tim Bosma Died

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2016 11:06 AM
    HAMILTON — The Crown in the Tim Bosma trial says a series of text messages between the Hamilton man's accused killers shows the pair meticulously planned to steal a truck, kill its owner with a gun and incinerate the remains.
     
    Crown attorney Craig Fraser has shown court texts between Mark Smich and Dellen Millard that talk about stealing a Dodge truck, the same one Bosma was trying to sell online when he disappeared on May 6, 2013, after taking two strangers on a test drive.
     
    Police found Bosma's body more than a week later burned beyond recognition.
     
    Smich, 28, of Oakville, Ont., and Millard, 30, of Toronto, have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in Bosma's death.
     
    Millard has chosen not to take the stand in his own defence, but Smich has testified that killing Bosma was never part of their plan.
     
    Fraser, however, points to text messages between Smich and Millard dated to early 2012 in which they discuss guns and an incinerator.
     
    Smich has testified that Millard shot and killed Bosma inside his truck and burned his body in an incinerator — dubbed "The Eliminator" — that Millard had purchased for $15,000. 
     
    Smich has said he went along with the coverup because he was terrified of his friend.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Online Tool Educates Teachers To Help Kids Returning To School After Concussion

    Online Tool Educates Teachers To Help Kids Returning To School After Concussion
    Teachers across Canada can now get advice from a new program to help students returning to school after a concussion.

    Online Tool Educates Teachers To Help Kids Returning To School After Concussion

    B.C. Seniors-Care Facility Cuts Entire Staff Over Reports Of Chronic Underfunding

    B.C. Seniors-Care Facility Cuts Entire Staff Over Reports Of Chronic Underfunding
      More than 150 employees at Wexford Creek Care Home in Nanaimo, B.C., ranging from nurses to care aides, received pink slips on Friday.

    B.C. Seniors-Care Facility Cuts Entire Staff Over Reports Of Chronic Underfunding

    Transport Canada Report Raises Alarm Over Aging Coast Guard Fleet

    A report done for Transport Canada and quietly tabled in the House of Commons, paints a grim portrait of the country's coast guard fleet, saying it is understaffed, desperately in need of new ships 

    Transport Canada Report Raises Alarm Over Aging Coast Guard Fleet

    Manitoba Liberals Drop Candidate Kurt Berger Over 2002 Assault On Girlfriend

    Manitoba Liberals Drop Candidate Kurt Berger Over 2002 Assault On Girlfriend
    Rana Bokhari says Kurt Berger was upfront about his conviction when he applied to be a candidate.

    Manitoba Liberals Drop Candidate Kurt Berger Over 2002 Assault On Girlfriend

    Ontario Planning To Implement Legislation To Regulate Home Inspectors This Year

    Ontario Planning To Implement Legislation To Regulate Home Inspectors This Year
    Consumers rely on home inspectors to help them vet what is often the largest purchase and investment of their lives.

    Ontario Planning To Implement Legislation To Regulate Home Inspectors This Year

    Strapped Canadian Police Forces Are Moving Towards Costly Body Cameras

    Strapped Canadian Police Forces Are Moving Towards Costly Body Cameras
    Some Canadian cities and police forces already wrestling with cash-flow shortages are moving toward outfitting officers with body cameras despite privacy concerns and scant consensus on the technology's cost-effectiveness

    Strapped Canadian Police Forces Are Moving Towards Costly Body Cameras