The trial for two men accused of murdering Tim Bosma has resumed after a juror fell ill in a Hamilton courtroom this morning.

On Wednesday morning, as the jury was listening back to testimony from April given by Dellen Millard’s friend Matt Hagerman, Justice Andrew Goodman noticed one of the jurors appeared to be sick.

After a 20-minute recess, Goodman informed the court that the juror was seeking medical attention and would return shortly.

The jury was told to suspend deliberations until the juror returned and at around 1:30 p.m., Goodman informed the court that the juror was feeling better after suffering a migraine.

The jury resumed deliberations at around 2:30 p.m. after wrapping up their review of Hagerman’s testimony.

The incident was the second time court was disrupted Wednesday morning.

In the middle of listening to recorded testimony, a woman burst into the room muttering something inaudible.

She was promptly removed from the courtroom by a court clerk.

The testimony under review today came from Millard’s childhood friend Matt Hagerman, who said Millard gave him a toolbox to hold on to shortly before his arrest on May 10, 2013.

The Crown alleges the toolbox at one point contained a gun but the weapon was not inside the toolbox when it was seized by police.

The weapon used to kill Bosma has never been found.

According to his testimony, Hagerman said Millard dropped off the toolbox to Hagerman’s parents’ home in the early morning hours of May 10.

He said Millard appeared ‘disheveled’ when he arrived and suggested it was better Hagerman didn’t know what was inside the box.

Hagerman said he had seen the toolbox at Millard’s house before and that in the past, it contained narcotics that they brought out at parties.

He said he assumed that was what was inside the box that morning.

Hagerman testified that he quickly stored the box in his parents’ fruit cellar in the basement and went back to sleep.

On May 11, the morning after Millard was arrested, he said he received several texts from Millard’s roommate Andrew Michalski, who said Millard had given him a backpack to hold on to.

Hagerman said Michalski knew that Millard had given Hagerman the toolbox for safe keeping.

Both said they did not look inside the backpack or the toolbox to see what was inside.

When they met up at a park near Hagerman’s home later that day, Hagerman testified that the two ultimately decided to “dump” the items somewhere in Oakville, where Millard’s co-accused Mark Smich was living at the time.

Ultimately, Hagerman said the plan was for Smich to pick the items up somewhere in Oakville.

While he knew Millard had been arrested in connection with a truck robbery, Hagerman said it wasn’t until he and Michalski got in his Intrepid and started driving to Oakville that he heard on the radio Millard was a suspect in Bosma’s disappearance.

He said the two panicked, pulled over to the side of the road and decided to ditch the items in a stairwell at an Oakville strip mall.

The jury also listened back to Hagerman’s cross-examination by lawyers for both Smich and Millard.

During the cross-examination with Smich’s lawyer, Hagerman tearfully denied the assertion that he knew that there was more than just drugs in the toolbox Millard handed him.

Smich’s lawyer accused Hagerman of obstructing justice by lying to police.

Jurors began deliberations on Monday night and this is the second time the jury has returned to court to request a review of testimony.

On Monday night, the jury made a request to listen back to Sharlene Bosma's testimony about when her husband went to fill his truck up with gas the day he disappeared. It was later determined by Justice Andrew Goodman and the lawyers in the case that no such testimony existed.

Millard and Smich have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in Bosma’s death.

Bosma disappeared from his Ancaster home on May 6, 2013 after taking two men to test drive his pickup truck.