Ottawa Citizen

Family supports son held in dad’s death

Dennis Oland charged with murder of former Moosehead executive

- KEVIN BISSETT

SAINT JOHN, N.B. Members of a leading business family in Atlantic Canada that made its name in the brewing industry rallied Wednesday behind one of their own, publicly declaring they believe Dennis Oland innocent of murdering his father.

Oland, 45, made his first court appearance facing a charge of seconddegr­ee murder.

His mother, wife, two sisters, a cousin and his uncle were in the public gallery in the courtroom in Saint John on Wednesday to show their support.

“We are devastated that this nightmare for Dennis and for all of us is going to continue,” said a statement issued by his mother, wife and sisters.

“We know that he will be found innocent in an objective and fair process in a court of law. We wish that the police would turn their attention to finding out who is really responsibl­e for Dick’s death.”

Richard Oland, 69, was a wellknown businessma­n and a member of the Order of Canada who was found dead in his office in Saint John on July 7, 2011.

He was a member of the family that owns Moosehead Breweries Ltd., but left the company in the 1980s and went on to work in the trucking business and at the Saint John Shipbuildi­ng and Drydock Co.

Dressed in a sweatshirt over a plaid shirt, Dennis Oland smiled at family members as he arrived in provincial court. He was arrested Tuesday in nearby Rothesay.

Oland was remanded by Judge Marco Cloutier until his next court appearance Tuesday, when a date is to be set for a preliminar­y hearing.

He spoke only once in court, replying “Yes, sir” when Cloutier asked if he understood the charge he faces.

Oland was first identified as a suspect in his father’s murder in court documents released in May.

Since then, pieces of the police investigat­ion have been released by a provincial court judge after two media organizati­ons argued that search warrants and affidavits to support them should be made public.

Among the assertions that have been released in those documents was a sworn police affidavit that says blood on a sports jacket found in Dennis Oland’s home in Rothesay matched the DNA profile of his father.

‘We wish that the police would turn their attention to finding out who is really responsibl­e for Dick’s death.’ STATEMENT ISSUED BY THE OLAND FAMILY

The documents contain claims not proven in court.

Oland’s lawyer declined to comment Wednesday.

“It doesn’t matter what the case is, I’m used to trying cases in the courtroom, not the media,” Gary Miller said outside court.

At a news conference earlier Wednesday, Saint John police Chief Bill Reid said the Crown gave approval for the charge to be laid about three weeks ago. No one else will be charged as a result of the police investigat­ion, which Reid described as a complex case that required officers to “build the mosaic.”

“We built a case from nothing, essentiall­y. Our members did a fantastic job,” he added.

“But it was a process-driven investigat­ion, as opposed to someone saw something and they are our eyewitness, or here is where you are going to find this or here is where you are going to find that. We did not have anything like that in the case.”

Reid said Oland died after repeated blows, but wouldn’t elaborate or say whether police found a murder weapon.

The provincial court judge who heard the media applicatio­ns has blocked the release of any informatio­n considered to be hallmark evidence, which the Crown described as anything relating to the crime scene and physical condition and position of Oland’s body that only the killer or killers would know.

But other informatio­n has been made public in recent months including an affidavit from Sgt. Tony Hayes of Saint John police that says a brown Hugo Boss jacket with bloodstain­s on it was seized by police from Dennis Oland’s home and sent to a forensics lab in Halifax in November 2011 for testing. The affidavit dated Sept. 7, 2012, says the results from the lab show the bloodstain­s matched Richard Oland’s DNA.

 ?? MIKE HAWKINS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Derek Oland, uncle of accused Dennis Oland, and other family members leave provincial court Wednesday in Saint John, N.B., where Dennis, 45, appeared in connection with the July 2011 death of his father, Richard.
MIKE HAWKINS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Derek Oland, uncle of accused Dennis Oland, and other family members leave provincial court Wednesday in Saint John, N.B., where Dennis, 45, appeared in connection with the July 2011 death of his father, Richard.

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