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Christina Noudga goes on trial November 22, 2016 in a Hamilton, Ontario courtroom. She is charged with being an Accessory After the Fact to the murder of Tim Bosma. Noudgas former boyfriend, Dellen Millard, and his co-accused Mark Smich, were both found guilty in the first degree murder of Tim Bosma.
Noudga has elected trial by judge alone, and she will be represented by the law firm of prominent defence lawyer, Brian Greenspan.
Should I have asked every time he showed up pulling a trailer? Bosma killers girlfriend to face her own trial
Ann Brocklehurst, Special to National Post | October 26, 2016 | Last Updated: Oct 28 3:26 PM ET
CLAIRMONT: Fingerprints are evidence whether Noudga likes it or not
Hamilton Spectator
By Susan Clairmont
Noudga has elected trial by judge alone, and she will be represented by the law firm of prominent defence lawyer, Brian Greenspan.
Should I have asked every time he showed up pulling a trailer? Bosma killers girlfriend to face her own trial
Ann Brocklehurst, Special to National Post | October 26, 2016 | Last Updated: Oct 28 3:26 PM ET
Christina Noudga was the prosecutions final witness at the trial of Dellen Millard and Mark Smich for the murder of Tim Bosma last spring. Her own trial as accessory after the fact to murder begins in Hamilton next month. The charge relates to Noudgas activities on the night of Thursday, May 9, 2013, and into the early morning hours the next day. The prosecution alleges she helped her boyfriend Millard escape arrest. Under the Canada Evidence Act, her testimony at the Bosma trial cannot be used against her. Noudga is pleading not guilty.
CLAIRMONT: Fingerprints are evidence whether Noudga likes it or not
Hamilton Spectator
By Susan Clairmont
On May 10, 2013, the night of Millard's arrest for forcible confinement and theft of a truck, Noudga and Millard's mother Madeleine Burns hid out in a hotel room to avoid media. They checked in, "brainstormed" about what could be in the big trailer at Burns' house (A Tesla? A Mother's Day present? The missing man's truck?) then drove back to wipe their fingerprints off it.
Noudga put on dish gloves, grabbed a cloth and wiped down the two locks on the trailer doors that she had checked to ensure they were secure when she and Millard parked it the night before. Burns pointed out her own prints at the back of the trailer and Noudga wiped those too, she testified.