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Accused murderer had grudge against man delivering pizza: Crown lawyer

WATCH: The trial for a Nova Scotia man charged with the first-degree murder of a young pizza driver seven years ago officially got underway on Tuesday. Natasha Pace was in court and brings us the latest – Mar 27, 2018

A Crown lawyer says an accused murderer had a grudge against a man who was gunned down while delivering a pizza in a Halifax suburb more than seven years ago.

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Randy Riley has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of 27-year-old Chad Smith.

In her opening statement in Nova Scotia Supreme Court on Tuesday, prosecutor Melanie Perry said that on the evening of Oct. 23, 2010, a man called a pizza shop in Dartmouth to place an order for delivery, and that Smith was working that night as the driver.

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She told the 14-member jury that about 45 minutes later, police found Smith lying on his back in a pool of blood in front of the address where the pizza was ordered from.

Perry says Smith had what appeared to be a gunshot wound to the upper right side of his body, and a red pizza delivery bag was found nearby.

She says Riley’s friend later told police that before the shooting, Riley had told him he had a grudge against a guy who delivered pizza because he had allegedly beaten Riley years before.

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Perry says on the same day of the shooting, the same friend told police he drove Riley and another friend to pick up what he believed was a gun.

The Crown lawyer says the friend told investigators that after the homicide, Riley had told him, “It had to be done.”

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