Montreal Gazette

OLAND LAWYERS BACK IN COURT.

- KEVIN BISSETT

SAINT JOHN, N.B. • Prosecutor­s and lawyers for Dennis Oland will be back in New Brunswick court Tuesday for a hearing to set a date for a new second-degree murder trial, but it’s expected they will ask for a month-long delay. “They want to have more time to prepare,” said Court of Queen’s Bench clerk Amanda Evans.

It’s now expected the scheduling hearing will be bumped until Sept. 5.

Oland is charged in the 2011 bludgeonin­g death of his well-known multimilli­onaire father, Richard Oland, who was found face down in a pool of blood in his Saint John, N.B., office on July 7, 2011.

An autopsy showed he suffered 45 sharp and blunt force blows to his head, neck and hands. A murder weapon was never found.

During Dennis Oland’s trial, the court heard he had visited his father’s office the night before and was the last known person to see him alive.

Oland was convicted in 2015, but was released on bail last October when the New Brunswick Court of Appeal ordered a new trial, citing an error in the judge’s instructio­ns to the jury.

Dennis Oland had told police he was wearing a navy blazer when he visited his father, but witnesses and video evidence showed him wearing a brown Hugo Boss jacket that was later found to have tiny traces of blood and DNA that matched his father’s profile.

The Crown portrayed Oland’s original statement about the jacket as an intentiona­l lie, while the defence said it was an honest mistake. The appeal court said the trial judge did not properly instruct the jurors as to the probative value of that statement.

Last month, the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed an applicatio­n by the Crown to restore the conviction, and a cross-appeal seeking an acquittal.

Court documents indicate the retrial is expected to last up to 65 days — the same length as the original trial.

Nicole O’Byrne, a law professor at the University of New Brunswick, said that’s not unexpected. “We’ll have the same amount of evidence to be presented, if not more,” she said.

O’Byrne said it all depends on what evidence will be deemed admissible at the trial.

 ??  ?? Dennis Oland
Dennis Oland

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada