Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Expert In DNA Analysis Takes The Stand At Murder Trial Of Dennis Oland

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2015 11:01 AM
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — An expert in DNA analysis has taken the witness stand as the trial looking into the murder of New Brunswick businessman Richard Oland enters its 11th week.
     
    Joy Kearsey was a scientist at the RCMP lab in Halifax between 1997 and 2013.
     
    Crown prosecutor P.J. Veniot said in his opening statement at the start of the trial that DNA samples taken from a brown jacket seized from the home of Dennis Oland matched the profile of Richard Oland.
     
    Dennis Oland has pleaded not guilty to a charge of second-degree murder.
     
    Crown prosecutor Patrick Wilbur asked questions Monday morning as Kearsey lead the jury through a tutorial on DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid.
     
    She said it is genetic material that is inherited from each parent and is in essentially every cell of the body.
     
    Kearsey said human DNA is 99.9 per cent identical, while 0.1 per cent is different between individuals — which represents three million differences.
     
    "Forensic analysis targets those differences," she said.
     
    She explained how DNA samples are compared, and explained some of the math used to determine the probability of a possible match.
     
    Dennis Oland is the last known person to see his father alive.
     
    Investigators focused on his brown sports jacket as a key piece of evidence since the day after the murder when Oland told police he was wearing a navy blazer during a visit to his father's office on July 6, 2011.
     
    Witnesses and security video played at the trial show Oland wearing a brown jacket that day.
     
    Richard Oland was found face down in a pool of blood in his Saint John office on July 7, 2011.
     
    He had suffered about 40 blows to his head and neck from a blunt instrument and bladed weapon.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Killed, Man Faces Charges, In Two Vehicle Crash Near Nanaimo

     A 51-year-old Ladysmith, B.C., woman has been killed in a two vehicle crash on Vancouver Island.

    Woman Killed, Man Faces Charges, In Two Vehicle Crash Near Nanaimo

    2 Men, 1 Woman Killed In Crash Near Merritt, B.C., Identified

    The BC Coroners Service says 40-year-old Sean Anderson, 26-year-old Kim Dunstan and her brother, 21-year-old Jarrett Dunstan, died at the scene.

    2 Men, 1 Woman Killed In Crash Near Merritt, B.C., Identified

    Toronto Alternative Medicine Practitioner, 53, Charged With Sexual Assault

    Toronto Alternative Medicine Practitioner, 53, Charged With Sexual Assault
    Police say a 22-year-old woman went to the Natural Healings Health Solutions clinic (on Bloor Street West) on Nov. 5 to be treated for back pain.

    Toronto Alternative Medicine Practitioner, 53, Charged With Sexual Assault

    Canadian Couple Found Dead In Mexican Hotel, No Signs Of Violence

    Canadian Couple Found Dead In Mexican Hotel, No Signs Of Violence
    In the Caribbean coast state of Quintana Roo the bodies of the man and the woman were found in a whirlpool spa and showed no signs of violence.

    Canadian Couple Found Dead In Mexican Hotel, No Signs Of Violence

    Premier Christy Clark Wishes All British Columbians A Happy Diwali

    I  encourage all British Columbians to come together and take part in one of the many vibrant Diwali festivities throughout the province

    Premier Christy Clark Wishes All British Columbians A Happy Diwali

    A Justin Trudeau-Style Gender-equal Cabinet Pledge For The U.S.? No Thanks, Says Donald Trump

    A Justin Trudeau-Style Gender-equal Cabinet Pledge For The U.S.? No Thanks, Says Donald Trump
    Trump replied that he has many, many women working for his companies. Perhaps even more than 50 per cent, he said. But he said he'd make cabinet appointments based exclusively on merit, not quotas.

    A Justin Trudeau-Style Gender-equal Cabinet Pledge For The U.S.? No Thanks, Says Donald Trump