Oland defence abandons attempt to get cell tower list entered as exhibit at retrial - Action News
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New Brunswick

Oland defence abandons attempt to get cell tower list entered as exhibit at retrial

Dennis Oland's defence team has abandoned an attempt to get some new cellphone-related information entered as an exhibit at his murder retrial, at least for now.

List relates to possible location of father's missing iPhone the night he was killed

Dennis Oland is being retried for second-degree murder in the 2011 bludgeoning death of his father, multimillionaire Richard Oland. (CBC)

Dennis Oland's defence team has abandoned an attempt to get some new cellphone-related information entered as an exhibit at his murder retrial, at least for now.

Crown prosecutor Derek Weaver had challenged the veracity of the document presented Tuesday, which suggested a cell tower in Rothesay was a so-called neighbour site to the uptown Saint John cell tower on July 6, 2011 the day Richard Oland was killed.

It's potentially significant because the final text message received by the victim's missing iPhonebefore it fell silent was transmitted at 6:44 p.m. by a cell tower in Rothesay, the Saint John courtroom has heard.

The Crown alleges that's proof the multimillionaire was dead by then and his iPhone was with the accused as he drove home to Rothesay after leaving his father's Saint John office just minutes earlier, becoming the last known person to have seen him alive.

The defence, however, contends the iPhonecould have still been in Saint Johndespite connecting with the tower in Rothesay. The defence theory is especially salientif the Rothesay tower was in fact a designated neighbour to the uptown tower, designed to provide backup when either of the uptown's two sectors are out of service or over capacity.

On Wednesday, Weavertold the court he had contacted Rogers Communications in an attempt to verify the defence documentapurported list of neighbour sites, as of July 6, 2011. Weaver said the company's legal counsel told him the list "would not necessarily have been a neighbour list for 2011."

As Justice Terrence Morrison was reading a printout of Weaver's email exchange with Rogers, lead defence lawyer Alan Gold stood to address the court.

"It might be that as a result of further information, we may not seek to tender [the list] for the truth of its contents anymore," he said.

Morrison saidas it stands, he has "no idea" whether the Rothesay tower was a neighbour of the uptown Saint John ones or not.

If the defence seeks to enter the list into evidence at a later point, he'll hear further arguments at that time, he said.

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

The retrial had to adjourn Wednesday at noon in the midst of testimony frombloodstain pattern expert RCMPSgt. Brian Wentzell because a storm and deteriorating road conditions forced the closure of theSaint John Law Courts building.

Proceedings are scheduled to resumeThursdayat 9 a.m., 30 minutes earlier than usual, to try to make up for some lost time.

DennisOland, 50, is being retried for second-degree murder in the bludgeoning death of his father.

A jury found him guilty in 2015, but the New Brunswick Court of Appeal overturned the conviction in 2016 and ordered a new trial, citing an error in the trial judge's instructions to the jury.

Olandstopped by to visit his father at hisinvestment firm office at 52 Canterbury St., on July 6, 2011, around 5:35 p.m.He told police he left around6:30p.m., stopping at theRenforthwharf on his way home to see if his children were there.

The wharf is about two kilometres from the cell tower that transmitted thefinal message received by the victim's cellphone a text from DianaSedlacek, the woman with whom he was having an affair.

The body of the 69-year-old was found in the office the next morning with 45 sharp- and blunt-force injuries to his head, neck and hands. HisiPhonewas the only item that went missing from the crime scene. It has never been recovered.

On Tuesday,cellphonenetwork expert JosephSadountestifiedtheiPhonewas "most likely" near theRothesaycell tower that transmitted the last text message.

The chances of thecellphonebeing in Saint John and communicating with theRothesaytower, which is about 14 kilometres away, were "very small," he said.

Cellphone network expert Joseph Sadoun was on the stand for a second day Thursday to discuss his analysis of the cellphone data in the Oland case. (CBC)

Under redirect by the Crown on Wednesday, Sadonreiterated thatcellphones are designed to connect with the signal that will provide the best quality service.

As a cellphone moves away from a tower, the signal strength from that site decreases, he said. As a cellphone approaches the next tower, the signal from that site increases.

"From everything you've seen Mr. Sadoun, do you see any indication that [the Rothesay tower] in your opinion would provide a better signal at 52 Canterbury St. than other cellular sites present in that area?" asked Weaver.

"No," replied Sadoun.

Earlier in the day, while the victim was at work, hisiPhoneconnected with thetower nearhis office, on the roof of the Brunswick Square office tower at 1GermainSt., the court has heard.

And while textmessagescan betransmittedwithin fractions of sections and require less signal strength than phone calls, a phone would still choose the strongest signal available, said Sadoun.

Cell network expert Joseph Sadoun prepared this colour-coded map, illustrating which cell towers provide the best quality signal to which areas. The coverage area of the Fairvale tower in Rothesay, labelled SJFV, is in pink. The uptown Saint John tower is south of what's shown here. (Court exhibit )

Weaver asked Sadoun about the test calls lead investigator Const. Stephen Davidson had madefrom various locations in the greater Saint John area in March 2012 using an iPhonelike the victim's to see which towers would transmit the calls.

None of the 96 calls made at locations west of the government garage on Highway 1 connected with the Rothesay tower, confirmed Sadoun.

So while the Rothesay tower might be strong enough to send a signal as far as Saint John, that indicates the signals from the two sectors of the uptown tower on Germain Street and the tower on the city's east side at 292 Westmorland Rd. are stronger.

Although 15 of the 20 test calls made at Renforth wharf did not connect with the nearby Rothesaytower as anticipated but rather the tower on Mount Champlain about 20 kilometres away, Weaver noted five of the calls did not go through.

Sadoun said those calls were dropped because "there wasn't a sufficiently strong signal to maintain a call at that location."

That's consistent withthe colour-coded map he had producedto illustrate which celltowers provide the best quality signals to which areas of Saint John and Rothesay, he said. Itshowed no dominant signalat that location, but rather a lot of competing signals of "poor quality."