LATEST STORIES:

Bosma day 46

Share this story...

[projekktor id=’23958′]

Christina Noudga blames Dellen Millard for putting her in the public eye, and making her face charges of accessory after the fact of murder. Her anger was on full display for the jury today at the Tim Bosma murder trial.

She faced cross examination by Millard’s lawyer, who painted his client as a sad, lovelorn man falling apart with the loneliness of prison, someone who loved Noudga and told her so often before his arrest.

He also played up the parts of Noudga’s testimony where Millard was blaming Smich for Tim Bosma’s murder.

When it was Smich’s lawyer’s turn, Thomas Dungey, it was under his cross exam that Noudga showed the first bit of emotion, other than distain and sarcasm.

Christina Noudga says she started falling out of love with Dellen Millard after his arrest, and after she was arrested, she started to feel contempt and loathing for him. “got to spend four months of my life in a tiny little box,” Noudga said.”he put me in a situation I didn’t belong in. He also cheated on me and I found out after the fact.”

Noudga spoke louder, with more emotion, and used more words than in her other answers on the stand. The jury has already heard from realtor Lisa Whidden, who testified that she and Millard had a casual sexual relationship. They’ve also seen text messages from a woman named Jenn who also thought she was in a relationship with Millard.

“The fact that he couldn’t tell me to my face? And I’ve been humiliated in court…” Noudga went on. She said the media had destroyed her life.

Noudga was grilled on why she and Millard’s mother wiped their fingerprints from the trailer left on mom’s driveway, and why they didn’t tell police Tim Bosma’s truck might be inside. “Intoxication, stress,” Noudga listed several reasons.

Dungey also went into greater detail about the notes Noudga wrote to herself, they were found alongside letters Millard wrote to her from jail.

She had lists of things like circumstantial evidence, and wondered if police could tell where someone was by their phone records, and whether police could get someone’s deleted browser history.