Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2015 08:13 PM
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — The lead investigator into the murder of Richard Oland says police suspect a drywall hammer or similar instrument was used to kill the Saint John businessman.
     
    The Court of Queen's Bench has heard that Oland was struck more than 40 times in the head and neck with a hammer-type instrument and a blade-like weapon, but Const. Stephen Davidson told the jury Thursday that while the weapon hasn't been found there has been speculation about it.
     
    "There was speculation a drywall hammer or drywall type of instrument was used," he said.
     
    Davidson said police became aware that was the probable type of weapon early in the investigation after the autopsy.
     
    He was testifying at the second-degree murder trial of the victim's son, Dennis Oland, who has pleaded not guilty.
     
    Richard Oland, 69, was found face down in a pool of blood in his Canterbury Street office on July 7, 2011.
     
    During questioning by Crown Prosecutor P.J. Veniot, Davidson said that aside from the crime scene, police searched the home of Dennis Oland in Rothesay and other areas, such as the Renforth Wharf and nearby Bill McGuire Centre, a multi-purpose meeting and banquet facility.
     
    Davidson said a murder weapon hasn't been found and neither were police able to find an iPhone that belonged to Richard Oland.
     
    Davidson has detailed tests that were done with another iPhone, which was used to call a specific telephone at the Saint John police department to determine the cell towers it linked with. Those calls were made from various locations in Saint John, near Dennis Oland's home and from the proximity of different businesses in Rothesay.
     
    On Wednesday, the court was shown video of the police interview with Oland on July 7, 2011, the day his father's body was found.
     
    During the interview, Oland said he had no involvement in his father's death.
     
    The two had met at Richard Oland's office on July 6, 2011, but Dennis Oland told police that he left around 6:30 p.m. and went straight home except for a quick stop at the Renforth Wharf and beach to see if his children were there swimming. They were not, he wrote in a hand-written statement to police on July 7, 2011.
     
    Oland wrote that he and his wife Lisa later went out to buy cold medication and food at Cochran's Market. The court has been shown security video of the stop at Cochran's.
     
    He said they went home to watch a movie and at one point he went to an Irving station to buy milk.
     
    The trial was scheduled to continue on Friday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wife Says Man Who Crashed Into Patio, Killing 2-Year-Child, Was Not Drunk

    Wife Says Man Who Crashed Into Patio, Killing 2-Year-Child, Was Not Drunk
    The wife of an Edmonton man who crashed his SUV into a restaurant patio, killing a two-year-old boy, says although he had a couple of drinks that night, he was not drunk.

    Wife Says Man Who Crashed Into Patio, Killing 2-Year-Child, Was Not Drunk

    Premiers Meet By Phone, Agree To Attend Paris Climate Summit With Justin Trudeau

    Monday's surprising Liberal majority has cleared the path for an invigorated Canadian presence at the United Nations climate conference, known as COP21, that begins Nov. 30.

    Premiers Meet By Phone, Agree To Attend Paris Climate Summit With Justin Trudeau

    Pakistan Promises Action Against LeT; Kashmir Figures In Joint Statemen

    Pakistan Promises Action Against LeT; Kashmir Figures In Joint Statemen
    Pakistan managed to get a call for an India-Pakistan dialogue to resolve all issues including Kashmir included in a joint statement in return for an assurance that Islamabad would take effective action against Pakistan based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and its affiliates.

    Pakistan Promises Action Against LeT; Kashmir Figures In Joint Statemen

    Justin Trudeau's 2013 'Just Watch Me' Note Fetches $12,000 On EBay

    Justin Trudeau's 2013 'Just Watch Me' Note Fetches $12,000 On EBay
    The document is a 2013 note in which then-Liberal leadership contender Justin Trudeau predicted he would succeed Stephen Harper as Canada's prime minister.

    Justin Trudeau's 2013 'Just Watch Me' Note Fetches $12,000 On EBay

    Privacy Commissioner Alerts RCMP, Claims B.C. Employee Gave False Testimony

    Elizabeth Denham found it's likely that Transport Ministry assistant George Gretes deleted emails, didn't completely respond to freedom of information requests and then lied about it under oath.

    Privacy Commissioner Alerts RCMP, Claims B.C. Employee Gave False Testimony

    B.C. Government Aims To Set Population-Based Expense Limits For Local Elections

    The limits starting in 2018 would apply to people running for mayor, councillor, electoral area director and also for park board positions in Vancouver and Cultus Lake.

    B.C. Government Aims To Set Population-Based Expense Limits For Local Elections