Waterloo Region Record

Life sentences

Dellen Millard and Mark Smich get 25-year sentences added to their 25-year sentences for killing Tim Bosma

- LIAM CASEY

Judge orders Dellen Millard, Mark Smich locked up for next 50 years

TORONTO — A packed Toronto courtroom erupted into cheers and a standing ovation after the judge announced two men convicted of murdering a young woman would not be eligible for parole for 50 years.

Dellen Millard is “profoundly amoral and dangerous” while his partner in crime, Mark Smich, “enthusiast­ically” participat­ed in the murder of Laura Babcock, 23, whose body was never found, Justice Michael Code said Monday.

Millard, 32, of Toronto, and Smich, 30, of Oakville, were convicted in December of murdering the Toronto woman in the summer of 2012 and burning her body in an animal incinerato­r.

“Justice has been served to the murderers of our cherished daughter, Laura,” Clayton Babcock, the victim’s father, told reporters outside court.

“Somehow life in prison seems lenient when Laura didn’t even get to see her 24th birthday.”

Millard and Smich had previously been convicted in the murder of Tim Bosma, a 32-year-old Ancaster father who went missing in May 2013 after going on a test drive with two men interested in buying his pickup truck. That murder trial in 2016 heard the pair burned Bosma’s body in an animal incinerato­r — called the Eliminator — that belonged to Millard.

“This repetition of two planned and deliberate murders also arguably requires separate punishment to deter potential serial murderers who are thinking of going on to commit a second murder after successful­ly committing a first murder,” Code told the sentencing hearing Monday as he ordered the life sentences in the two murder cases be served consecutiv­ely.

“Millard unsuccessf­ully attempted to prove that there is a good side to his personalit­y,” Code said. “In my view, Millard is skilful and clever in delivering prosocial behaviour when it is to his advantage. The overwhelmi­ng weight of evidence from text messages to his criminal behaviour is that he is profoundly amoral and dangerous.”

Smich, the judge said, was just as culpable.

“I am satisfied he was pleased and enthusiast­ic to be a part of the murder,” Code said.

First-degree murder carries an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for at least 25 years.

The Babcock trial heard the young woman struggled with mental health and drug use, and was working as an escort in the months leading up to her disappeara­nce in July 2012.

Babcock had become infatuated with Millard and had also become transient, bouncing from place to place after deciding to move out of her parent’s home in Toronto’s west end.

By early July, she and Millard had texted or called each other more than 100 times over three days until Millard picked Babcock up from a subway station and took her back to his house on July 3.

The trial heard Millard and Smich burned Babcock’s body in the Eliminator — located at Millard’s hangar at the Region of Waterloo Internatio­nal Airport — days after she went missing.

That was the first time the two friends used the incinerato­r to burn a body.

Ten months later, the pair shot and killed Bosma and got rid of this body by also burning it in the incinerato­r.

The Crown in the Babcock case concluded the true motive for her death was to satisfy the pair’s urge to kill.

“They killed Ms. Babcock and Mr. Bosma for the thrill they needed,” Crown attorney Jill Cameron said at the sentencing hearing.

The eyes of both Millard and Smich welled up as they were handcuffed and led out of court.

But Babcock’s father said he had no sympathy for his daughter’s killers.

“We must admit that it was satisfying to see the two cuffed and shuffling off to the prison shuttle, to a life that for most of us would be unbearable,” Clayton Babcock said.

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