Cape Breton Post

Man heard ‘stomps’ after Dennis Oland left father’s office, murder trial told

Defence has seized on the noises

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A man who worked in Richard Oland’s small office building told police he heard five or six “loud stomps” on the night the multi-millionair­e was bludgeoned to death — but the timing would exclude Dennis Oland as a suspect in the killing.

More Saint John police officers took the stand on Tuesday as Dennis Oland’s retrial for the second-degree murder of his father moves into its second week.

The officers questioned so far were all early responders on July 7, 2011, when Richard Oland’s body was found lying in a pool of blood on the floor of his uptown Saint John office.

Const. Don Shannon, one of the first officers on the scene, told the court about the steps he followed in securing the building, searching the grounds and interviewi­ng potential witnesses.

Shannon said he spoke to John Ainsworth and Anthony Shaw, who were working in the printing office directly below Richard Oland’s second-floor office.

They said they were there from roughly 6 p.m. until 9:20 p.m. on July 6, 2011 — the night Oland was killed. Shannon recorded in his notes that “Mr. Shaw said he heard something at 8 p.m. when he heard five or six loud stomps coming from the second floor.”

It is key informatio­n for the defence case, since Dennis Oland was caught on security video at around 7:40 p.m. shopping with his wife, Lisa, first at a pharmacy and then at a vegetable and fruit store in Rothesay, a bedroom community of Saint John.

Dennis had been alone with his father in the office from about 5:45 p.m. to a little after 6:30 p.m. He has always maintained his father was alive when he left.

Prosecutor Jill Knee said in her opening statement that while both Ainsworth and Shaw said they heard thumping noises, they “did not note the time.” Ainsworth said it could have been any time between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.

But the defence has seized on the noises, especially Shaw’s contention that they occurred around 8 p.m.

“Could these sounds have been anything other than the horrible beating of Richard Oland, sounds that were being heard while Dennis and Lisa were in Rothesay picking up medicine and groceries?” defence lawyer Alan Gold said in his opening statement at the trial.

Oland, 50, was convicted of the second-degree murder in December 2015, but the jury verdict was set aside on appeal and the new trial ordered. He has been free on bail since the appeal court decision.

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