New Brunswick

Dennis Oland's bloodstained jacket sat untested for 4 months, murder trial hears

Dennis Oland's bloodstained brown sports jacket sat in a Saint John police locker for nearly four months before undergoing forensic testing because officers didn't realize what they had, his second-degree murder retrial heard on Tuesday.

Oland is being retried for 2nd-degree murder in the death of his father, Richard Oland

Dennis Oland is the last known person to see his father alive when he visited him at his investment firm office on Canterbury Street on the evening of July 6, 2011. (CBC)

Dennis Oland's bloodstained brown sports jacket sat in a Saint John police locker for nearly four months before undergoing forensic testing because officers didn't realize what they had, his second-degree murder retrial heard on Tuesday.

The jacket is a key piece of evidence in the Crown's case against Oland in the bludgeoning death of his multimillionaire father, Richard, more than seven years ago.

Oland, 50, was wearing a brown jacket when he visited his father at his investment firm office on the evening of July 6, 2011, when he became the last known person to have seen him alive.

The body of the 69-year-old was discovered face-down in a pool of blood in the office the next morning. He had suffered 45 sharp- and blunt-force injuries.

Police seized the jacket from Oland's home a week later. Forensics officer Const. David MacDonald testified it was handled by the former lead investigator with an ungloved hand and then folded up into a brown paper bag measuring about 30 centimetres by 30 centimetres. 

But it was November before MacDonald retrieved it from storage for processing.

Forensic Const. David MacDonald of the Saint John Police Force is expected to be cross-examined by the defence on Wednesday.

MacDonald told the court he had processed eight pairs of seized footwear first because he had noticed some of the clothing items had been dry cleaned, including the jacket, which still had a dry cleaning tag attached to the collar.

The officer wasn't asked to explain what he meant.

When MacDonald did examine the jacket, he found four small red "blood-like" stains on the front of the jacket and "diluted" stains on the inside of both cuffs. He also noted the top button was broken.

Earlier in the trial, the court heard Oland had told police he was wearing a navy blazer when he visited his father the night he was killed, but security video and witness testimony showed he was actually wearing a brown sports jacket.

The brown jacket and several other articles of clothing were taken to be dry cleaned the morning after Oland was questioned.

The trial resumed in Saint John's Court of Queen's Bench as scheduled on Tuesday, despite the winter storm that hammered the region with snow, freezing rain and rain on Sunday.

MacDonald is scheduled to be cross-examined by the defence on Wednesday at 9:30 a.m.

MacDonald used a white china marker to circle the 'red, blood-like' stains he found on Dennis Oland's brown sports jacket. (Court exhibit)

MacDonald was the forensics officer in charge of seizing items during the execution of a search warrant at Dennis Oland's home in Rothesay on July 14, 2011.

He testified he asked Const. Rick Russell of the major crime unit to identify which items he wanted seized from the closet in the master bedroom.

"​He identified a brown jacket and did so by grabbing the jacket with this hand," MacDonald said.

Crown prosecutor Jill Knee asked what, if anything, Russell was wearing on his hands.

"​He had bare hands," said MacDonald.

"Would it be normal to touch an object when you're going to be seizing it in that kind of manner?" asked Knee.

"No," he replied.

MacDonald seized several items from Dennis Oland's bedroom closet, including a brown sports jacket, which he marked with the letter A in this photo. (Court exhibit)

MacDonald donned a fresh pair of gloves for each item he seized, which included several of Oland's shirts and shoes.

The jacket was the only brown jacket found.

MacDonald "folded [the jacket], rolled it into" a paper exhibit bag and stored it in the forensics office at the police headquarters.

On Nov. 9, 2011, MacDonald examined the jacket in bright lighting  and noticed a "red blood-like stain" on one of the elbows. He then found three more — two on the right elbow and one on the left shoulder, he said.

MacDonald said he circled the stained areas with a white china marker, placed a scaled sticker beside each one and photographed them.

The stains were small and difficult to capture in the photos of the dark jacket, said MacDonald. He magnified one of them 500 per cent, much like he was trained to do with fingerprints, he said.

For Oland's preliminary inquiry in 2014, MacDonald brightened the exposure on some of the photos to better represent the "slight discolouration of the threads" he had observed under the bright halogen lights.

A 500 per cent magnification of one of the stains MacDonald found on the sports jacket. (Court exhibit)

Nine days after he examined the jacket, MacDonald drove the jacket to Halifax to hand-deliver it to the RCMP forensic lab for testing. He picked it up eight months later.

He transported the jacket to the lab again on Oct. 26, 2012, and picked it up on Feb. 14, 2013. Cuttings of the jacket were subsequently sent for analysis.

None of the lab results were discussed in court on Tuesday, but during the Crown's opening statement at the beginning of the trial on Nov. 21, Knee said the jacket had four areas of bloodstains on it and DNA that matched the victim's profile.

MacDonald identified a brown jacket in a clear plastic bag as being the jacket in question. It was entered into evidence for the retrial on Tuesday.

A jury found Oland guilty of second-degree murder in December 2015, but the New Brunswick Court of Appeal overturned his conviction in October 2016 and ordered a new trial, citing an error in the trial judge's instructions to the jury.

He is being tried by judge alone.

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Tuesday marked Day 22 of the retrial. There was a chance the trial wouldn't sit all week if two of Oland's defence lawyers, who are based in Toronto, were unable to fly into Saint John because of Sunday's storm. But they arrived late Monday night.

Lead Crown prosecutor P.J. Veniot, who is based in the northern part of the province, missed the morning session but arrived in the afternoon, making his way down on snow-covered, icy highways.

Justice Terrence Morrison, who is based in Fredericton, said his own drive on Monday was challenging.

Richard Oland, 69, was found dead in his Saint John office on July 7, 2011. (Canadian Yachting Association)

MacDonald also attended the autopsy on July 8, 2011, to assist forensic Sgt. Mark Smith with examining the body and collecting evidence, the courtroom heard.

They used tape to collect fibres from the victim's sweater and cut out a section from the middle lower back, which had a "tiny shiny substance" on it, and seized the clothing, he said.

They also took swabs and fingernail clippings and examined his body using a special forensic light with multiple bandwidth settings, designed to make various compounds fluoresce. An area on the victim's shin fluoresced, was photographed and swabbed.

On July 15, 2011, MacDonald assisted Smith with processing the car Dennis Oland had driven to and from his visit with his father. MacDonald said he took swabs of the Volkswagen Golf City and performed presumptive tests for blood.

In 2016, MacDonald received a gold commendation for his work in an unrelated case. He was cited for "demonstrating the highest standards of police conduct, under high risk conditions, by using strong verbal commands and sound tactical skills to successfully and peacefully unarm an individual who posed an immediate threat" of death or harm.