The last testimony was heard Wednesday at the trial of the two men accused of killing Tim Bosma.

The Crown finished its cross-examination of Mark Smich, one of the two accused, after which Smich answered a few questions from his own lawyer.

As Smich’s lawyer is not calling any other witnesses and co-accused Dellen Millard is not mounting a defence, testimony at the trial is complete.

Smich and Millard have both pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of Bosma, who disappeared after taking two men to test drive a truck he was selling.

Smich has said that he and Millard were those two men. He claims that Millard killed Bosma in his truck, while he was behind them in a second vehicle.

The Crown disagrees. Crown attorney Craig Fraser used his questioning of Smich to illustrate the version of events as pieced together by authorities – that Smich and Millard acted together in killing Bosma, and had planned a murder for about one year before actually carrying it out.

Wednesday’s testimony began with Fraser reminding Smich of what Bosma’s wife Sharlene had told jurors earlier in the trial, including that Bosma was frustrated the men interested in his truck showed up two hours late for the test drive.

Smich said he didn’t recall Bosma being nervous during the test drive, and believed he himself was mainly silent while he was in the truck.

“There was a lot of unusual things that night,” he said.

Asked why he chose to follow Millard around Waterloo Region after the alleged shooting – when in his own words Millard was behaving like a “lunatic” – Smich said that he was “shocked” and “didn’t know what to do.”

Smich has maintained through his testimony that he believed the test drive was only a mission to scope out Bosma’s truck, which they may have returned to steal later.

At one point, Fraser said that Bosma was killed minutes, or possibly only seconds, after leaving his Hamilton home – about 200 metres away.

Smich claims that he became aware of the shooting at an industrial area on the outskirts of Brantford.

Millard’s lawyer has suggested that the shooting occurred while the three men were driving down Highway 403, all in the same truck.

The trial will hear legal arguments over the next few days, without the jury present.

Jurors were instructed to return June 1 for closing arguments.