The Niagara Falls Review

Crown won’t appeal Oland acquittal

Dennis Oland was accused of killing his father with a hammer

- KEVIN BISSETT

FREDERICTO­N — New Brunswick’s Public Prosecutio­n Services announced Tuesday they will not appeal last month’s acquittal of Dennis Oland on a charge of second-degree murder in the 2011 bludgeonin­g death of his multimilli­onaire father, Richard.

Oland, 51, was charged with the killing in 2013 and spent close to a year in prison after being convicted by a jury in 2015. That verdict was overturned on appeal in 2016 and the new trial ordered — this time before judge alone.

In his July 19 decision, Justice Terrence Morrison of the New Brunswick Court of Queen’s Bench said Crown prosecutor­s failed to prove their case against Oland.

“More than suspicion is needed to convict someone of murder,” the judge said. “In short, I am not satisfied the Crown has proved beyond reasonable doubt that it was Dennis Oland who killed Richard Oland.”

Morrison also said he “cannot accept outright the accused’s denial of guilt.” He said there was much to implicate Oland in the crime, including blood stains containing his father’s DNA on the jacket he was wearing the day of the killing in Saint John, N.B.

But the presumptio­n of innocence and the need for proof beyond a reasonable doubt are high standards in law, he said, and they were not overcome by prosecutor­s.

The prosecutio­n services issued a statement Tuesday saying the ultimate aim of any trial must be to seek and ascertain the truth.

“This search for truth is qualified however by other laudable principles upon which our system is based: the presumptio­n of innocence, the principle of reasonable doubt, fair process, the prohibitio­n against double jeopardy, among many,” the statement said. “Public Prosecutio­n Services pursues the truth in every trial and appeal process, but we do so simultaneo­usly as guardians of these equally important principles upon which our system is based.”

It said Justice Morrison’s 146page decision was closely reviewed before it was determined “there is no basis upon which the Crown can appeal the acquittal of Dennis Oland.”

The news was welcomed by Oland’s defence lawyer, Alan Gold, who called Morrison’s decision “legally impeccable.”

“It was their only possible decision in law and expected for all the reasons they set out,” Gold said in an email to The Canadian Press.

“Now we hope the police will move forward and actually solve this tragic case.”

Dennis Oland and his family did not make any public comment following the verdict last month. At a news conference the day of the decision, Gold said Dennis Oland’s immediate plans were to decompress from the pressures of the past eight years and spend time with his family.

He said Oland was a victim of police tunnel vision.

The family-owned business, Moosehead Breweries, is based in Saint John, and Richard Oland was a former vice-president until he lost out in a succession dispute and left to run his own enterprise­s.

Oland was bludgeoned to death sometime during the night of July 6, 2011, in the office of his investment firm Far End Corp. He was struck 45 times with a hammerlike weapon, leaving his skull cracked in several places.

Dennis Oland was the last known person to have seen his father alive.

The police and prosecutio­n theory was that during his visit to the office that day, Dennis Oland used something like a drywall hammer to beat his father to death.

During his time on the witness stand, Oland described that theory as “absolutely ridiculous,” saying he is “not that kind of monster.’’

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Dennis Oland and family members head from the Law Courts in Saint John, N.B., after he was found not guilty of murdering his father on Friday, July 19.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Dennis Oland and family members head from the Law Courts in Saint John, N.B., after he was found not guilty of murdering his father on Friday, July 19.

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