The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Richard Oland ‘seemed happy to see’ son hours before murder

Executive assistant testifies she did not see signs of troubled relationsh­ip

- BY CHRIS MORRIS

On the day he was savagely beaten to death, multi-millionair­e businessma­n Richard Oland was catching up on work in his Saint John office and appeared pleased when his only son, Dennis, popped in to discuss genealogy and the Oland family tree.

Over seven years later, Dennis Oland is on trial for a second time for the bludgeonin­g death of his dad on that day in 2011, and prosecutor­s have told the court money was the motive.

Maureen Adamson, Richard Oland’s executive assistant at the time of his death, was on the stand for Day 2 of the Oland murder retrial on Thursday, recounting the daily routine of the office in uptown Saint John which included keeping track of money Dennis owed his father.

She was the first to discover the body on the morning of July 7, 2011. Oland, 69, had been struck 45 times, mostly on the head, with a weapon that was never found.

Adamson said Dennis was making interest-only payments of $1,666.67 per month on a loan of more than half a million dollars Richard Oland had extended when Dennis was in a tight financial spot due to divorce several years earlier.

Under cross-examinatio­n by defence lawyer Michael Lacy, a new member of the Oland defence team, Adamson described what she knew about the relationsh­ip between father and son, saying she did not see signs of the strained and troubled relationsh­ip referred to by prosecutor­s.

Adamson said Dennis Oland was not a frequent visitor to his father’s uptown Saint John office, but when he showed up late in the day of July 6, 2011 — the day of the murder — Richard Oland seemed happy to see him.

“It was an animated hello, a ‘Hey, Dennis,’” she said of Richard Oland’s greeting to the man subsequent­ly accused of his murder. “He seemed happy to see him.” Adamson said both Olands were engrossed in research Dennis was spearheadi­ng into the family tree, stretching back to its roots in Great Britain. The Olands are one of the best-known business families in the Maritimes, where they have been involved in brewing beer since the 19th century.

Richard Oland was a former executive with Moosehead Breweries in Saint John, although he left the company in the early 1980s. Adamson said he was worth about $37 million.

On the day of the murder, she left shortly after Dennis Oland’s arrival at around 5:30 p.m. From that point on, father and son were alone in the office.

Dennis said he left a little after 6:30 p.m. and headed back to his home in Rothesay, on the outskirts of the city.

He told police his father was fine when he left and he has steadfastl­y maintained he is innocent of the crime.

Adamson said she thought the father and son got along well.

“Aside from the normal grumblings most people have with family members ... I thought they got along well,” Adamson said. “I did not see that stress I heard about later (during the first trial).”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Dennis Oland and his wife Lisa arrive at the Law Courts in Saint John, N.B., on Wednesday.
CP PHOTO Dennis Oland and his wife Lisa arrive at the Law Courts in Saint John, N.B., on Wednesday.

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