Toronto Star

Witness recounts selling gun to Dellen Millard

Tells Babcock murder trial that accused was ‘manly man’

- LIAM CASEY

A witness at a murder trial says he sold one of the accused a gun days before a young Toronto woman vanished. Matthew Ward-Jackson says he pleaded guilty to the gun transactio­n with Dellen Millard that took place in early July 2012.

The Crown alleges Millard and Mark Smich killed Laura Babcock because she became the odd woman out in a love triangle with Millard and his girlfriend.

The prosecutio­n contends the pair burned her body in a commercial animal incinerato­r that was later found on Millard’s farm near Waterloo, Ont. Millard, 32, of Toronto, and Smich, 30, of Oakville, Ont., have both pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the presumed death of Babcock, 23. Ward-Jackson could not recall many details about the gun sale and was often evasive about the numerous phone calls and text messages with Millard in July 2012.

Babcock disappeare­d on July 3, 2012. No one has heard from her since that summer and her body has not been found.

Ward-Jackson, who also goes by his rapper name Ish, told court Wednesday that Millard showed interest in a gun that had come into his possession.

He later changed his testimony and said he figured Millard would want a gun because he was a “manly man, interested in cars, girls, maybe firearms.”

The Crown walked Ward-Jackson through a series of text messages police recovered from Millard’s phone.

One discussed a .32-calibre gun, that Ward-Jackson described in a text to Millard sent at 8:14 p.m. on July 1, 2012, as “a really nice nice compact piece.”

“Did you write that text?” asked Crown attorney Jill Cameron.

“Me or my butler,” Ward-Jackson said. “You had a butler?” Cameron asked.

“Yup. Somebody that I paid to help me manage my life . . . but I did arrange this deal,” he said.

Ward-Jackson said the gun was empty when he arranged the deal with Millard. He said he didn’t provide Millard any ammunition. The Crown asked Ward-Jackson repeatedly if he could recall the numerous calls and text messages that phone records showed — the contents of most were not recovered.

“I truthfully don’t recall many of them, this is several years ago and I’ve been incarcerat­ed for four years,” Ward-Jackson said.

“Did you ever ask why he needed a gun?” Cameron asked.

“No, it’s none of my business, I have no right to ask him that,” Ward-Jackson said.

The trial continues Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada