DNA tests link Dellen Millard to alleged murder weapon in father's death - Action News
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Toronto

DNA tests link Dellen Millard to alleged murder weapon in father's death

Documents submitted at Dellen Millard's first-degree murder trial show there is a one in five quadrillion chance that the DNA found on the handle of the gun that killed Millard's father, Wayne, belongs to anyone else but Dellen Millard himself.

Dellen Millard faces a 1st-degree murder charge in the death of his father, Wayne

Dellen Millard, 32, is acting as his own lawyer at the Laura Babcock murder trial. Co-accused Mark Smich has a lawyer.
Dellen Millard, 32, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of his father, Wayne. (Toronto Police Service)

Documents submitted at Dellen Millard's first-degree murder trial show there is a one in five quadrillion chance that the DNA found on the handle of the gun that killed Millard'sfather, Wayne, belongs to anyone else but Dellen Millard himself.

While it isn't scientifically possible for tests to show with absolutecertainty that the DNA is a match, the chance that it isn't is astronomical it even exceeds the number of people that the Population Reference Bureau estimates has ever lived on Earth.

The death of 71-year-old Wayne Millardwas originally ruled a suicide. He was found at his home at 5 Maple Gate Court in the Toronto suburb of Etobicoke with a single gunshot wound through his eye on Nov. 29, 2012.

Dellen, his32-year-old son, was charged in his father's death afterpolice started investigating the murders of TimBosma, a father and husband from Hamilton, and LauraBabcock, a Toronto woman he had been involved with.

Millard is currently serving consecutive life sentences for those slayings. Hehas pleaded not guilty to killing his father at the judge-alone trial being held in Superior Court in Toronto.

This is a dangerous witness, who has twisted and turned at every opportunity for the Crown's position.- Ravin Pillay, Millard's lawyer

Reports from the Centre of Forensic Sciences on the gun found atWayne Millard's bedside didn't come back until July 2013, which was monthsafter his death was ruled a suicide.

Dellen Millard's DNA wasn't tested against the DNA on the gun until June 2015.

The documents also show that a second DNA profile was found on the gun, but it was of such a low amount that it wasn't suitable for any sort of testing.

A legal battle

The first of two legal battlesthat havebeen brewing throughout the trial also played out inside the courtroomMonday.

These arguments are the last anticipated steps before the Crown closes its case. Then, it will be up to Millard's lawyer, RavinPillay, to divulge whether or not he will call defence witnesses.

The first legal argumentcentres around the Crown's key witness, Det.Const. Grant Sutherland, a crime scene reconstructionist whotold the court last week that hedoesn't think Wayne Millard shot himself.

Millard shooting scene reconstruction

6 years ago
Duration 0:21
Det. Const. Grant Sutherland conducts reconstruction testing using the firearm that killed Wayne Millard.

Pillayspent hours Monday morning fightingto have that evidence excluded from the judge's decision. He said Sutherland was "encumbered by tunnel vision," and used"unsound science" that "fails on many different fronts."

"This is a dangerous witness, who has twisted and turned at every opportunity for the Crown's position," Pillay said.

Pillay said the Toronto police officer was working off of crime scene photos that he believed to be "pristine" when really, court has heard that key evidence, like the alleged murder weapon, had been moved.

Throughout the course of the trial, it was revealed that other standard investigative techniques, like seizing the bloody pillow Millard was lying on and placing rulers in crime scene photos for scale, were not followed.

"This is pretend science. It is devoid of legitimate methodology," Pillay said.

Crown fights back

Assistant Crown attorney Jill Cameron pushed back against that argument Monday morning.

"There is nothing in this record that would disqualify Det. Const. Sutherland on the basis of bias, or on his record," Cameron said.

"There is no danger that you won't be able to critically assess the evidence," Cameron said to the judge. "This is clear, empirical, scientific testing."

There's also a second legal argument scheduled for Tuesday that centres around whether or not Dellen Millard was free to leave when he was interviewed by police on the night in 2012 when he says he found his father's body.

Pillaywill argue Millard was under "investigative detention" when he gave that video statement, and should have had alawyer present which means, he contends, that the statement should be ruledinadmissible.

Dellen Millard's police interview

6 years ago
Duration 3:54
In this clip from his interview with Toronto police, Dellen Millard describes the scene the night he says he found his father's body.

The Crown will argue that Millardwas only a witness at the time, and not under suspicion of any wrongdoing.

It's an argument the Crownhas been preparing for throughout the trial.

Every time one of the Crown prosecutors questioned a police witness over the last 2 weeks, they asked if Millard was forced to talk on the night he says he found his father's body. They also asked if Millardwas intimidated, physically or otherwise,in any way, by any officer.

Every police witness said no, he wasn't.

  • Follow along with a recap ofCBC'slive blog from inside the courtroom. On mobile and can't see it?View the live blog here.

adam.carter@cbc.ca