The Standard (St. Catharines)

Oland out on bail

New Brunswick court grants bail pending murder appeal

- KEVIN BISSETT CANADIAN PRESS

FREDERICTO­N — Dennis Oland held hands with his wife and children as he exited by the front door of the Fredericto­n courthouse Tuesday, free on bail a day after an appeal court quashed his murder conviction and ordered a new trial.

“As a family, we are very relieved,” said Moosehead Breweries Ltd. executive chairman Derek Oland, who has steadfastl­y maintained his nephew’s innocence.

Dennis Oland had been delivered to a back entrance of the courthouse in a sheriff’s van, wearing handcuffs and shackles. But Justice Marc Richard said Oland has regained the presumptio­n of innocence, and that he was no threat to the public or a flight risk, and ordered him set free.

The judge said the public’s faith in the justice system would be shaken more by Oland’s continued detention than by an order granting him bail.

“Any reasonable member of the public would understand that Mr. Oland has reacquired the presumptio­n of innocence as a result of the decision of this court yesterday,” Richard said.

New Brunswick’s Court of Appeal ordered a new trial Monday, 10 months after a jury convicted him of second-degree murder in the bludgeonin­g death of his multimilli­onaire father, Richard.

The appeal court found that the trial judge did not properly instruct the jury on evidence around the jacket Dennis Oland was wearing the day of the murder.

Oland, a financial planner and scion of one of the Maritimes’ most prominent families, told police he was wearing a navy blazer, but later admitted he was wearing a brown Hugo Boss jacket.

The Crown portrayed the statement as an intentiona­l lie, while the defence said it was an honest mistake.

The brown jacket was later found to have minuscule blood stains and DNA matching the profile of Oland’s 69-year-old father, who was found dead in his Saint John office on July 7, 2011.

On Tuesday, the judge ordered Oland be subject to the same release conditions he had before his now-vacated conviction.

“It’s obvious from the affidavits that have been filed that he has the strong support of several reputable friends and family members, some of whom offer to stand as sureties for him if he is released,” said the judge.

Richard asked Derek Oland if he would continue to act as a surety for Dennis, putting up $50,000.

“Yes, your honour,” Derek Oland replied from the gallery.

Dennis Oland looked upbeat and smiled with family members in the courtroom as he listened to his lawyers and Crown prosecutor­s present the case for bail. Afterward, reporters repeatedly asked him for comment, but he stayed silent as he walked with family members and supporters to a law office a block away from the courthouse.

“Obviously we’re delighted that this Christmas is going to be better for them than last Christmas was,” said his lawyer, Alan Gold.

The Supreme Court of Canada was to hear an applicatio­n for bail pending appeal on Monday. Gold said the court will decide this week if it still wants to hear the case.

Oland is to be back in court Dec. 5 to set a date for the new trial.

Gold wouldn’t say if he’d seek a trial by judge alone or go for another jury trial.

“I don’t want to discuss anything about the future right now. Obviously there’s a lot of work that has to be done,” he said.

WOLSELEY, Sask. — Some people in a small Saskatchew­an community say they are disgusted and disappoint­ed after a beaver was beaten to death with a chair.

Residents say surveillan­ce video from a bakery in Wolesley showed four men leaving a bar on Friday and going after the rodent.

Resident Joselyn Linnell says the beaver had been hanging out around the village for about a year.

Linnell says the animal appears to have hissed at the men before it was killed.

She says it’s sad to think there are people in Wolesley who would do that sort of thing.

RCMP say they are looking into a report that came in Saturday morning, but there’s no active investigat­ion.

There’s no word on whether a dead or injured beaver was found.

Animal Protection Services says anyone found guilty of inhumanely killing an animal faces a maximum penalty of 18 months in jail and/or a fine of up to $25,000.

“Very ashamed. This is a good town with good people in it,” said another resident, Candice Malo. “Doing that to an animal is disgusting.”

Linnell said the beaver was considered to be “a friendly guy.”

“We have beavers in town because we have a lake and a dam,” she said. “They are here naturally.”

The Associatio­n for the Protection of Fur-Bearing Animals has written a letter to Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall asking him to come out strongly against what happened.

“Although your government would never condone such actions, we fear that attitudes leading toward such behaviour (are) endorsed by policy,” the letter says.

Wolesley is about 100 kilometres east of Regina. Canadian Press

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dennis Oland and his wife Lisa, along with family members and friends, head from a bail hearing after being released from custody in Fredericto­n on Tuesday. The New Brunswick Court of Appeal has ordered a new trial in the seconddegr­ee murder conviction...
ANDREW VAUGHAN/CANADIAN PRESS Dennis Oland and his wife Lisa, along with family members and friends, head from a bail hearing after being released from custody in Fredericto­n on Tuesday. The New Brunswick Court of Appeal has ordered a new trial in the seconddegr­ee murder conviction...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada