The Standard (St. Catharines)

Judge rules out expert’s testimony in Millard trial

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — A police expert’s testimony suggesting that an aviation executive whose death was initially ruled a suicide could not have killed himself was dismissed Friday as biased and unreliable.

Det. Const. Grant Sutherland, a shooting reconstruc­tion officer with Toronto police, told court last week that after forensic testing he believed it was unlikely Wayne Millard shot himself in the face on Nov. 29, 2012.

Dellen Millard, who has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the shooting death of his 71-year-old father, smiled at the ruling .

Justice Maureen Forestell ruled Friday that Sutherland’s “opinion on the likelihood of Wayne Millard firing the gun” was inadmissib­le.

“I have concluded that Det. Const. Sutherland failed to disclose his awareness of evidence that could have undermined his conclusion­s,” she said.

At issue was blood found on a blanket near Wayne Millard’s feet. Sutherland testified he performed his shooting reconstruc­tion from photograph­s taken by police at the time of Wayne Millard’s death. The photograph­s show a pool of blood on the bed near the victim’s head.

Court has heard that the blanket in question was likely pulled down by paramedics who first attended the home the father and son shared in Toronto’s west end.

Sutherland did not mention the blood in his testimony, but under cross-examinatio­n from Dellen Millard’s lawyer, he admitted he noticed the blood on the blanket, but made no mention of it in his notes or in his final report.

“Accepting that he knew about this important piece of evidence, and not only failed to mention it, but gave the impression until confronted that it did not exist, raises ... concerns about his ability or willingnes­s to give impartial evidence,” Forestell said.

After the ruling, the Crown closed its case, as did the defence.

The trial has heard that Dellen Millard bought the gun that was used to kill his father from a weapons dealer months earlier. Dellen Millard’s DNA was found on the gun along with an unknown DNA profile.

Court also heard that Dellen Millard told his girlfriend he called his dad a failure and the reason behind the financial woes of Millardair — the family-owned aviation company. He also told police that his dad was an alcoholic, depressed and stressed about the company.

The coroner who ruled Wayne Millard’s death a suicide also testified that he stands by his conclusion that there was a “reasonable chance” Wayne Millard killed himself. But he also noted it was possible someone else pulled the trigger.

Closing arguments will begin Monday at the judge-alone trial.

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