Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jurors In Murder Trial Shown Video Of Police Interview With Dennis Oland

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Oct, 2015 10:32 AM
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — During an interview with police the day Richard Oland's body was found, Dennis Oland said he wasn't involved in the murder and had no reason to kill his father.
     
    The jury in the younger Oland's murder trial is being shown video of the interview conducted by officers with the Saint John Police Force on July 7, 2011, the day Richard Oland's body was found in his Canterbury Street office.
     
    Dennis Oland has pleaded not guilty to a charge of second-degree murder.
     
    In the video, Oland said his father Richard would often argue with him and say hurtful things.
     
    But when Const. Stephen Davidson of the Saint John Police Force asked whether Dennis Oland had any involvement in his father's death, Oland replied, "No."
     
    "I have no reason to want my father dead."
     
    Oland said his father had "pissed off a lot of people," but he couldn't think of anyone who would want him dead.
     
    Asked to describe his movements the day before Richard Oland's body was found, Dennis said he first arrived at his father's office around 5:15 p.m. on July 6, 2011, but realized he had forgotten some genealogy documents at his own office.
     
    He left, but realized that he didn't have the pass to get back into his office building and decided he had enough documents for his meeting with his father.
     
    He said he arrived again at his father's office at about 5:30 p.m., where his father's secretary, Maureen Adamson, was finishing up for the day. She left 10 to 15 minutes later.
     
    Oland said he left about an hour later, making one stop at a local wharf, and then went home.
     
    Asked if he could suggest who might have killed his father, Oland told Davidson perhaps a vindictive ex-girlfriend or a crack-head looking for money.
     
    Davidson asked Oland what he had been wearing that day. Oland said tan pants, dress shirt and navy blazer.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fracking Firm Linked To 2014 B.C. Temblor Says Cause Of Recent Quake Not Established

    Fracking Firm Linked To 2014 B.C. Temblor Says Cause Of Recent Quake Not Established
    VANCOUVER — A natural gas operation that halted work after a 4.6-magnitude earthquake in northeastern British Columbia last week has been linked to the largest earthquake in the province that's been attributed to fracking.

    Fracking Firm Linked To 2014 B.C. Temblor Says Cause Of Recent Quake Not Established

    Suspect In Letter Bomb That Injured Winnipeg Lawyer Seeking Bail

    Suspect In Letter Bomb That Injured Winnipeg Lawyer Seeking Bail
    Guido Amsel is facing more than a dozen criminal charges related to  the July 3 blast.

    Suspect In Letter Bomb That Injured Winnipeg Lawyer Seeking Bail

    B.C. Communities On Evacuation Alert Over Concerns About Washington State Blaze

    B.C. Communities On Evacuation Alert Over Concerns About Washington State Blaze
    GRAND FORKS, B.C. — Evacuation alerts have been issued in southeastern British Columbia over fears that so-called ember showers from a Washington state wildfire could ignite flames north of the border. 

    B.C. Communities On Evacuation Alert Over Concerns About Washington State Blaze

    Mohamed Fahmy Braces For Verdict In Cairo, Wants Nnightmare' To End

    A Cairo court is expected — once again — to deliver a verdict Saturday for the Canadian journalist on trial for widely denounced terror charges and Fahmy is cautiously optimistic.

    Mohamed Fahmy Braces For Verdict In Cairo, Wants Nnightmare' To End

    June Emails Urged Stephen Harper To Open MP Expenses To Auditor General

    OTTAWA — Emails sent to Prime Minister Stephen Harper in June suggested that some Canadians didn't trust politicians to police their own spending and wanted the auditor general to look at their books.

    June Emails Urged Stephen Harper To Open MP Expenses To Auditor General

    Alaskans Warm Up To B.C. Mines Minister But Still Demand Concrete Assurances

    It was the first time residents spoke directly with Bennett and gave him a tour along the Taku River, which they worry could become contaminated by a mining accident.

    Alaskans Warm Up To B.C. Mines Minister But Still Demand Concrete Assurances