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Tim Bosma is seen in an undated handout photo. Dellen Millard, of Toronto, and Mark Smich, from Oakville, Ont., are both charged with first-degree murder in Bosma’s death.The Canadian Press

Police officers testifying at the trial of two men accused of killing Tim Bosma described a frantic search of a trailer found north of Toronto as they looked for the missing Hamilton man.

Constable Cory Weick told court Tuesday he and another officer responded to a call in Kleinburg, Ont., about a "suspicious trailer" that might be related to Mr. Bosma, who had disappeared a week earlier after taking two men for a test drive in the truck he was trying to sell.

Constable Weick, a York Regional Police officer, said he had to call the force's tactical team to break into a large trailer that was parked at the home of Madeleine Burns, Dellen Millard's mother.

Mr. Millard, 30, of Toronto, and Mark Smich, 28, of Oakville, Ont., have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder charges in the death of Mr. Bosma, whose body was found burned beyond recognition.

Constable Weick said he and the other officer were responding to a call on May 12, 2013, from Frank Cianfarani, who testified Tuesday he noticed a large trailer parked at the home of his neighbour, Ms. Burns, in the early morning hours of May 9.

Mr. Cianfarani said that he called police after a "snooping" reporter came around showing a picture of Mr. Millard with the trailer in the background. He said he thought it was the same trailer as the one parked at his neighbour's house.

At this point, court has heard, Mr. Millard was already under arrest.

Constable Weick said he called Hamilton police to find out more information about Mr. Bosma, who had disappeared on May 6.

A Hamilton detective, he said, indicated Constable Weick needed to search the trailer immediately because "a missing person was now an abduction investigation and that the male party could be inside."

After the tactical team broke the locks, Constable Weick said they found a black pickup truck and he saw a tarp, car parts, ramps, but no licence plate and nothing underneath the truck.

The inside of the truck was "partially stripped" and Mr. Bosma wasn't inside the trailer, Constable Weick said.

He then found the truck's vehicle identification number and yelled it out to another officer, Mark Levangie, who stood outside the trailer and also testified on Tuesday.

It was Mr. Bosma's truck and Constable Weick said when they looked up information for the trailer, they found it was registered to Millardair, the aviation company owned by Mr. Millard.

The officers said they knocked on the door of the home, but no one answered.

Another neighbour, Gianluca Consiglio, testified he saw the trailer and a pickup truck across the street, and told court he remembers the incident because the lights of the truck were shining into his bedroom as he was about to go to sleep.

He said he didn't see anyone outside and couldn't see inside the pickup truck, but remembered the front door of Ms. Burns' house being open in the early hours of May 9.

The Crown alleges Mr. Bosma was killed inside his truck and that his body was later burned in an incinerator.

Earlier Tuesday, a Rogers Communications employee testified she received a request from Hamilton police about a missing man and provided investigators with a phone number registered to Mr. Millard and locations of the phone on May 6, 2013.

Danielle Fortier said the phone pinged off a cell tower in Ancaster, Ont. – Mr. Bosma lived in that part of Hamilton – at 9:02 p.m. when the phone received a text.

She said the same phone pinged off towers in Brantford, Ont., at 9:44 p.m. when the phone received two more texts.

Court earlier heard Mr. Bosma disappeared shortly after 9 p.m. when his wife, Sharlene Bosma, said she saw her husband drive off in his truck with two men.

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