Waterloo Region Record

Babcock trial poser: Who got Millard’s letters out of jail?

- Liam Casey

Dozens of jailhouse letters Dellen Millard wrote to a girlfriend who was on his court-ordered no-contact list became crucial evidence at his firstdegre­e murder trial, which ended Saturday with a guilty verdict.

One question, however, remains unanswered: How did those letters get out of jail?

The handwritte­n notes to Christina Noudga — 65 in total — were seized by police in her bedroom in 2014 while Millard was awaiting trial for the murder of Tim Bosma, a 32-year-old Hamilton man killed in May 2013 while trying to sell his pickup truck.

Millard would later be charged for the murder of his former lover Laura Babcock, a 23-year-old Toronto woman who vanished in the summer of 2012.

The motive for that murder was the bad blood between Noudga and Babcock, who were both sleeping with Millard at the same time, court heard.

On Saturday, Millard and his friend Mark Smich were found guilty of murder in Babcock’s death. They were also convicted in 2016 for killing Bosma and burning his body in an animal incinerato­r.

They got rid of Babcock’s body the same way.

The jailhouse letters to Noudga became evidence in both murder trials.

“So far I’ve done what I can to separate you from this mess. But it is

a very real possibilit­y that you will be called as a witness,” Millard wrote in one of the letters.

“Watever (sic) you may believe, it needs to be put aside, this is what happened: The night Laura disappeare­d. I came over to your place early in the morning. I did not text or call, it was a surprise. I tapped on your window, which I do sometimes.

“You came back to (my home) with me. I told you Laura was over, doing coke with Mark in the basement. We went to say goodnight to them. You saw (underlined) her alive, with Mark, and there was coke on the bar.”

He then told Noudga to say that Babcock had overdosed “probably from mixing her perscripti­ons (sic) with Mark’s coke.”

The discovery of Millard’s letters in Noudga’s house prompted the Hamilton police to launch an investigat­ion.

It also became a complex ordeal in a Hamilton court beginning in the spring of 2014, with fingers pointed at one of the defence lawyers representi­ng him early on in the Bosma case: Deepak Paradkar.

Pretrial hearings on the matter concluded with Paradkar handing over Millard’s defence to another lawyer.

“Mr. Paradkar agreed to withdraw, as he appeared to be the only counsel who could be implicated in the transporti­ng of the Millard/Noudga letters out of the jail,” reads an agreement signed by Justice Stephen Glithero.

Photograph­s of the letters — taken by police in Noudga’s house — show numerous open yellow envelopes with “Deepak Paradkar Solicitor Client Privilege” written on them.

Paradkar denies any wrongdoing.

“My position is I’ve never done anything ethically wrong or been involved. I really have nothing to do with this issue,” he told The Canadian Press.

“My position is clear: I deny or refute any suggestion that I’ve done anything unethical or untoward in any case, including this one. I deny any wrongdoing.”

Smich’s lawyers wanted the transmissi­on of the letters to be part of the Bosma case to try to show Millard’s manipulati­on ability, court documents say. The judge ruled against that.

Three other lawyers visited Millard in jail following his arrest in May 2013: Ravin Pillay, Michael Pierce and Christophe­r Tarach.

Pillay was cleared of any wrongdoing and went on to represent Millard at the Bosma trial. Tarach did not respond to requests for comment, while Pierce said in an email that he “will not be commenting on anything pertaining to Dellen Millard.”

While jurors at both murder trials saw some redacted letters, they were never told how Millard got them out of custody.

Any mention of the transmissi­on of the letters was carefully edited out before being presented to the jury.

A publicatio­n ban also prevented the media from reporting on where and when the letters were written until the jury in the Babcock case reached a verdict.

Noudga told police she received Millard’s letters “from his mom who got them from Deepak,” according to court documents.

She pleaded guilty to a charge of obstructin­g justice.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ ?? Dellen Millard’s letters were discovered in Christina Noudga’s home in 2014, when police were investigat­ing the murder of Tim Bosma.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Dellen Millard’s letters were discovered in Christina Noudga’s home in 2014, when police were investigat­ing the murder of Tim Bosma.

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