In a landmark pre-trial ruling delivered on April 28, 2026, a High Court judge has cleared the way for murder suspect Bevan Alford’s trial to move forward, upholding the admissibility of key self-incriminating statements and messages collected by law enforcement. The decision rejects a full-throated defense challenge that claimed the evidence was obtained through improper, coercive police tactics that violated Alford’s legal rights.
Alford stands accused of the 2023 murder of Freddy Chicas, and has formally entered a not guilty plea to the charge. His legal team launched a multi-pronged attack to suppress all prosecution evidence centered on two collections of admissions: first, a combined written and video-recorded police interview where Alford acknowledged he had told third parties he killed Chicas, while still maintaining he only moved the victim’s body and did not commit the killing; and second, a series of private electronic messages recovered from Alford’s personal phone that allegedly contain a direct confession to the murder.
Before the substantive murder trial could get underway, the court was required to hold a voir dire, a specialized evidentiary hearing, to evaluate the defense’s challenges to the admissibility of the materials. Over the course of several weeks of hearings, Alford’s legal team laid out a series of serious allegations against the investigating officers. Under oath, Alford testified that officers approached him at his workplace before the interview, where Corporal Alphonso Chuc allegedly promised he would be allowed to leave if he disclosed all details of the incident. He further claimed a second unnamed officer from the gang intelligence unit, referred to only as “Dennis,” repeated the promise of release in exchange for cooperation. Alford added that he had consumed cocaine, alcohol, and marijuana the night before the interview, arrived at the police station in an impaired, unwell state, and was denied access to food and water during questioning. Finally, he cited his long-documented history of severe mental illness, including substance-induced psychosis, past suicide attempts, and repeated self-harm, arguing his vulnerability made the interview inherently unreliable.
Presiding Justice Nigel Pilgrim rejected every single one of the defense’s arguments, grounding his final decision in the unedited video recording of the entire interview that told a far different story than the one Alford presented. In his written ruling, Justice Pilgrim noted the footage clearly showed investigating officers treated Alford’s rights with scrupulous care, with no visible evidence of coercion or improper pressure. The video captured Alford leaning back in his interview chair with his hands clasped behind his head, a posture the judge described as consistent with casual, relaxed conversation rather than a pressured interrogation. Alford shared a laugh with the investigating officer at one point, refused to provide his mother’s name when asked — a clear demonstration he understood he had the right to decline to answer questions — caught and corrected a typographical error about his age in the interview notes, and explicitly nodded to confirm he understood the Miranda caution that any statement he made could be used against him in court. “The body language between the defendant and the investigator demonstrated no fear,” Justice Pilgrim wrote. “The strength of the evidence [from the video recording], by itself, would cause the Court to reject the defendant’s evidence on this issue.”
The judge dismissed Alford’s claim about the unnamed officer “Dennis” entirely, noting testimony from a senior police official confirmed no staff member by that name is assigned to the department’s gang intelligence unit. He also found Alford provided contradictory accounts of where the alleged encounter with “Dennis” took place, and when confronted with the inconsistency, refused to acknowledge the discrepancy — a finding Alford was untruthful on this point.
On the allegations of intoxication and denial of food, Justice Pilgrim highlighted compelling contradictory evidence: Alford had ridden his bicycle for an hour and a half to reach his workplace on the morning of the interview, and his supervisor had cleared him to work, both facts that are inconsistent with a claim of severe impairment. The video and officer testimony also confirmed that a full welfare check was completed before the interview began, Alford voluntarily stated he was fit to be questioned, and when he later requested a break, officers immediately provided him with food and water.
The most legally impactful portion of the ruling addressed Alford’s mental health history. Under existing Commissioner of Police Rules, if a detainee appears to be experiencing active symptoms of mental illness, officers must arrange for an “appropriate adult” — a family member, mental health professional, or trained specialist — to be present during any questioning. No appropriate adult was present during Alford’s interview, a point the defense argued required automatic suppression of all evidence. However, Justice Pilgrim ruled the critical legal question was not whether Alford had a documented history of mental illness, but whether he displayed observable signs of active impairment to officers at the time of the interview. He accepted the prosecution’s evidence that no such signs were visible to the investigating team, clearing the way for the evidence to be admitted.
With this pre-trial issue resolved, Alford’s murder trial will proceed as scheduled, with the contested statements and messages now part of the Crown prosecution’s formal case against the defendant.
