Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dennis Oland To Testify In His Own Defence At Murder Trial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2015 01:22 PM
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — Dennis Oland's lawyer says his client will testify at his murder trial examining the death of his father.
    Gary Miller presented his opening statement to the jury in New Brunswick's Court of Queen's Bench, arguing that the Crown has not proven its case.
     
    "Let me make one thing perfectly clear: to be sure it is our position that the Crown has not presented a case that satisfies the legal burden on this charge," Miller said.
     
    Oland has pleaded not guilty to a charge of second-degree murder in the July 6, 2011 death of his father, New Brunswick businessman Richard Oland, whose family operates Moosehead Breweries.
     
    Oland's badly beaten body was found in a pool of blood on the floor of his Saint John office the next day.
     
    He had suffered 40 blunt and sharp force blows to his head and neck, and another six sharp force blows to his hands.
     
    Miller said the trial, now into its 11th week, is not an ordinary murder trial, and the second longest in his career.
     
    He said Dennis Oland and his family have lived under intense media scrutiny for four years.
     
    "It will soon be time for him and some of his family members to speak publicly for the first time about what they know about any circumstances in this long ordeal," he said. 
     
    In addition to Dennis Oland, the defence will call Oland's wife Lisa, his sister Jacqueline Walsh, his uncle Jack Connell and his mother, Connie Oland.
     
    "At the end of the day you will see the only verdict you can come back with is not guilty," Miller told the jurors.
     
    The Crown wrapped up its case Wednesday with a DNA expert who testified that samples taken from a sport jacket seized by police from Dennis Oland's home matched the profile of his father.
     
    The Crown presented witnesses that said Dennis Oland visited his father at his office on the evening of July 6, 2011 and was the last known person to see him alive.
     
    Saint John Police considered Oland a suspect when they interviewed him on the evening of July 7. He told police he had been wearing a navy blazer when he visited his father, but witnesses and security camera video shown during the trial show him wearing a brown sports coat.
     
    The first witness for the defence, Patrick Laturnus, an expert in blood stain pattern analysis, said he examined all the forensic evidence from the case including the hundreds of blood spatter stains that radiated 360 degrees around the victim's body.
     
    Laturnus said he would expect there would be significant spatter on the assailant.
     
    "There would have been so much blood on the jacket you would have been able to see it in a photograph," he said.
     
    The trial heard during the Crown's case that there were three confirmed blood stains on Dennis Oland's jacket that were very small in size and hard to detect because of the colour of the material.
     
    Laturnus said there's no way to determine how that blood got on the jacket or how old it was.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Christy Clark Says Funding Details On B.C.-Bound Refugees To Be Worked Out With Feds

    Clark says the newcomers need the strongest-possible chance of succeeding, and Metro Vancouver's housing prices alone are the highest in the country.

    Christy Clark Says Funding Details On B.C.-Bound Refugees To Be Worked Out With Feds

    Ottawa Sues UBC, Former Dentistry Faculty Member Over Alleged Misuse Of Funds

    Ottawa Sues UBC, Former Dentistry Faculty Member Over Alleged Misuse Of Funds
    The lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court says UBC received $10.6 million from Health Canada between 2002 and 2013 to provide dental services for First Nations living on B.C.'s remote Haida Gwaii archipelago.

    Ottawa Sues UBC, Former Dentistry Faculty Member Over Alleged Misuse Of Funds

    Analysts Anticipate Black Friday And Cyber Monday Sales Boom In Canada

    Analysts Anticipate Black Friday And Cyber Monday Sales Boom In Canada
    TORONTO — Despite recent challenges faced by Canada's retail sector, analysts have a rosy outlook for the looming holiday shopping season — particularly on Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

    Analysts Anticipate Black Friday And Cyber Monday Sales Boom In Canada

    Airlines Resent Paying Tab To Return Passengers Rejected By Canada

    Airlines Resent Paying Tab To Return Passengers Rejected By Canada
    Major Canadian airlines say they're unfairly shouldering the costs of removing from Canada people who arrive with a passport or other valid document only to be turned away by federal officials.

    Airlines Resent Paying Tab To Return Passengers Rejected By Canada

    Quebec To Welcome 3,650 Syrian Refugees This Year And Another 3,650 In 2016

    QUEBEC — The Quebec government says it will accept 3,650 Syrian refugees before the end of this year and another 3,650 in 2016.

    Quebec To Welcome 3,650 Syrian Refugees This Year And Another 3,650 In 2016

    Repeat B.C. Poppy Thief Anthony Britt Sentenced To Five Months In Jail, Probation

    Criminal Justice Branch spokesman Neil MacKenzie says Anthony Britt pleaded guilty to four separate theft charges arising out of incidents on Nov. 3 and Nov. 6.

    Repeat B.C. Poppy Thief Anthony Britt Sentenced To Five Months In Jail, Probation