This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

A phone belonging to a teenager accused of the abduction, rape and murder of a six-year-old girl was used to Google “how do police find DNA”, a court has heard.

Peter Benson, the leader of a cybercrime team, told the Alesha MacPhail murder trial he helped compile a report of relevant information following a forensic investigation of the 16-year-old boy’s phone.

From his internet history, two items were deemed relevant for inclusion, including a Google search for the term “how do police find DNA” at 12.32am on 3 July, the day after Alesha’s body was found in woods on the Isle of Bute. Benson said this would be “something you type in”.

A minute later, the internet history shows a page on collecting DNA evidence, which Benson said indicated “the person using the phone has gone to one of the hits”.

The former police officer was also questioned about any communication on Instagram between the accused, who cannot be named for legal reasons, and the person the teenager blames for Alesha’s death.

The teenager has lodged a special defence of incrimination, blaming Toni McLachlan, the girlfriend of Alesha’s father, Robert MacPhail, for the killing.

Advocate depute Iain McSporran QC asked Benson if there was Instagram communication between the accused and McLachlan.

He replied: “I can say there was no indication of that at all.”

Giving evidence earlier in the trial, McLachlan denied suggestions from the accused’s defence lawyer, Brian McConnachie QC, that she and the teenager had been in contact on Instagram in the early hours of 2 July.

McConnachie suggested they had messaged on Instagram, then met and had sex in a shed, before McLachlan took Alesha from her room, “attacked and brutalised her” and “planted” the accused’s semen from the condom used earlier, then murdered her, all of which McLachlan denied.

Last Wednesday, McLachlan told jurors she “loved” Alesha and had nothing to do with her death.

McLachlan was staying in the house Alesha’s grandparents shared with her partner on Ardbeg Road, Bute, when the schoolgirl went missing after arriving for the school holidays.

The court also heard from DC Ian Wilson on the sixth day of the trial. He said the accused gave a “no comment” response when charged by police.

The teenager was arrested on 4 July and taken to Glasgow for a police interview, where he responded “no comment” to questions. On being charged with Alesha’s murder, he also responded: “No comment.”

Wilson said this was not unusual and was within the teenager’s rights.

DC Graham McIlwraith also gave evidence and said he searched the accused’s home and noticed one knife missing from a block of five. Shown a photograph of a knife found on the shore opposite where Alesha had been staying, he said it “would appear to be the same design” as the Jamie Oliver brand knives found in the accused’s house.

The teenager denies abducting, raping and murdering Alesha, and attempting to hide evidence.

The trial continues.