Tim Bosma trial: Witnesses questioned about surveillance video - Action News
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Hamilton

Tim Bosma trial: Witnesses questioned about surveillance video

Jurors at the trial in Hamilton of the two men accused of murdering Tim Bosma in 2013 are hearing evidence from private surveillance cameras police used to search for Bosma's missing truck.

Read the CBC's live blog coverage here starting at 10 a.m. ET

Tim Bosma vanished after taking two men on a test drive of a truck he was trying to sell in May 2013. The jury trial of two men accused of killing him continues Wednesday. (Facebook)

Jurors at the Hamilton trial of the two men accused of murdering Tim Bosmain 2013are hearing from witnesses about surveillance video police gathered during their search for Bosma.

Various video feeds from local businesses showed a black pickup truck moving along nearby streets in the time after Bosma left his home in the Hamilton suburb ofAncaster to take two men on a test drive of a truck he was trying to sell.

But the time the videos were recorded is a topic of contention with the defence, which is questioning the accuracy of police testimony and that of abusiness owner whose camera recorded footage of a black truck.

Both Dellen Millard, 30, of Toronto, and MarkSmich, 28, of Oakville, Ont., pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder at the start of the SuperiorCourt trial, which is now inits fourth week.

Bosma, 32, was last seen on May 6,2013, and was missing for more than a week before remains were found on May 14 on an Ayr, Ont., farm owned by Millard. Earlier in the trial, the Crown told jurors the remains belonged to Bosma.

Millard was charged with murder on May 15, 2013, and Smich was charged a week later, on May 22.

On Tuesday,Hamilton's top pathologist, Dr. John Fernandes, said the remains found in a livestock incinerator were so badly burned that they could not be identified.

CBC reporter Adam Carteris in the courtroom each day reporting live. You can read his bloghere, starting at 10 a.m. ET.

On mobile? Follow the live blog here

adam.carter@cbc.ca