Joedin Leger's girlfriend questioned over cash, drugs as Moncton trial continues - Action News
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New Brunswick

Joedin Leger's girlfriend questioned over cash, drugs as Moncton trial continues

Joedin Leger's girlfriend facedcross-examination Tuesday overdrugs, cash and weapons found in the pair'shome after the 18-year-old's death in 2022.

Riley Phillips, 20, is accused of killing Leger in Moncton in 2022

A sketch of a woman with glasses and a ponytail.
Chantal Boudreau resumed her testimony Tuesday, facing cross-examination about drugs, weapons and cash found in her Logan Lane duplex after the death of her boyfriend, Joedin Leger. (Andrew Robson)

Joedin Leger's girlfriend facedcross-examination Tuesday overdrugs, cash and weapons found by police in their Moncton homeafter the 18-year-old's death in 2022.

Chantal Boudreauwas the 19th witness to testify atthe jury trial of Riley Phillips. The 20-year-old faces a charge of second-degree murder. It's alleged he killed 18-year-old Joedin Leger on April 25, 2022.

Boudreau testified Monday that she awoke around 6o'clock that morning to Leger saying he had been shot. Then she saw blood come from his mouth before he collapsed outside their Logan Laneduplex.

On Tuesday, Boudreau faced a series of questions from Phillips' lawyer, Brian Munro, over whether she was selling drugs and if that was the source of thousands of dollars in cash in theduplex.

She denied selling drugs, saying the cash came from her job with a telecommunications firm, as well as from thesale of a property in Bathurst, where she lived before moving to Moncton in 2021.

A young boy with his chin in his hand wearing a baseball-style hat looks.
Joedin Leger was 18 when he died on April 25, 2022. (Albert County Funeral Home)

She also denied selling or buying guns when Munro asked about messages that reference guns and ammunition sent through her Facebook account. She said Leger used her phone and could have sentmessages through her account.

Munro pointed to messages that refer to Leger in the third person, asking if they were instead her messages.

"I can't speak to something that's two years old," she responded after a question about a message about firearmsto a person from the Bathurst area. "After what happened, my memory unfortunately blocked a lot of things that I saw. So I don't know."

A sketch of several people in a courtroom.
Crown prosecutor Stephen Holt standing while questioning a witness Monday at Riley Phillips's trial. (Andrew Robson)

The questions also turned to how the relationship between Boudreau, now 42, and 18-year-old Leger began.

Boudreau testified Monday a mutual friend introduced her to Leger after her apartment on MacBeth Avenue in Moncton was broken into. She said Tuesday that he stayed with her from the first day they met.

Munro asked about the break-in and whether drugs werestolen. She first said no until Munro pressed further.

"Might've been Joedin's weed, but that's about it," Boudreau said.

Boudreau later said there were actually two break-ins at her apartment, one in March before she met Legerand another in April, when hismarijuana and her safe with about $2,000 in cash were stolen.

Several ziploc bags with various bills spread out on a printed sheet.
Bags filled with cash were seized from the Logan Lane duplex by police during the investigation into Joedin Leger's death. (RCMP/Court of King's Bench )

Munro probed the$7,935 in cash, some in Ziploc bags, in their duplex.Boudreau testified that she liked to stash money throughout the home, saying her "OCD" led to arranging it in certain ways, but that there was no specific amountshe would keep in each bag.

"If it doesn't go in the bank, I'll hide it all over the house," Boudreau said.

Munro turned to the guns found in the kitchen of theduplex, one a homemade weapon and the other a sawed off shotgun.During parts of her testimony, Boudreausaid Leger was "very respectful" with the weapons around her.

She described being uncomfortable with firearms. She agreed with Munro's assertion that Leger had a "fetish," or "fascination with guns."

A crude firearm made of wood and metal with a zip tie through the barrel.
A homemade gun found in Joedin Leger's home has been entered as an exhibit in the trial of Riley Phillips. (Shane Magee/CBC)

She said she believed the homemade gun fired blanks, because that's what Leger told her.

Munro asked if she was questioned by police on April 22, three days before Leger's death, about a car that had bullet holes. Initially, Boudreau said she didn't recall it.

"Oh, yes, the police showed up at my door looking for Joedin," Boudreau said when Munro pushed. She said Leger had nothing to do with the damage.

She also faced questions about another interaction with police, this time on the day of the celebration of life for Leger in May 2022.She said police stopped the car she was driving that day that had several youths who were Leger's friends.

A shotgun was found in the trunk of the car.She said she didn't know the gun was in the vehicle.

Cross-examination to continue

Munro also asked aboutvaping products found in the home, which she said had been given to her by a man. He asked how she received the items.

"In my hand," she replied.

Boudreau said she couldn't recall the name of the person who gave her the vape products, or where the transaction happened.

At times during the cross-examination of Boudreau,a jurorsmirked and appeared to silently laughat the exchanges.

The cross-examination continues Wednesday.