Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ex-Olympics Boss Feels Vindicated After 'Nightmare' Of False Abuse Allegations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2015 01:08 PM
  • Ex-Olympics Boss Feels Vindicated After 'Nightmare' Of False Abuse Allegations

VANCOUVER — Former Olympics CEO John Furlong says he feels vindicated that he's been cleared of sexual assault allegations after suffering an unimaginable nightmare for nearly two years.

Speaking a day after a B.C. Supreme Court judge dismissed a third and final sexual assault lawsuit against him, Furlong says he felt paralyzing pain but is now ready to move on with his life.

A man who failed to show up for the start of a trial on Monday claimed Furlong sexually abused him 45 years ago at a Roman Catholic school in northern B.C.

Since December, suits against Furlong by two women have been withdrawn or dismissed that made similar allegations, which he says have caused him incalculable financial loss.

Furlong says he has fought against being angry with the three plaintiffs and hopes they find inner peace, though noting they will have to live with what they have done.

Furlong on Tuesday also dropped a defamation lawsuit against a reporter whose story in a Vancouver weekly newspaper in 2012 sparked the three cases against him, but he says he will still defend himself against a counter defamation filed by Laura Robinson.

MORE National ARTICLES

Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case

Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case
TORONTO — A sentencing hearing for Sunrise Propane, the Ontario company convicted in a deadly explosion at a Toronto propane plant, has resumed today after a 10-month adjournment.

Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case

'The Plane Came Down, Bang!' Passengers Tell Of Surviving Plane Crash In Halifax

'The Plane Came Down, Bang!' Passengers Tell Of Surviving Plane Crash In Halifax
HALIFAX — Passengers on board an Air Canada flight that crashed Sunday morning as it landed in Halifax shared their experiences after the plane skidded along a runway. Here are some of their stories:

'The Plane Came Down, Bang!' Passengers Tell Of Surviving Plane Crash In Halifax

Opposition Calls On Manitoba Government To Release Review Into Teen's Death

Opposition Calls On Manitoba Government To Release Review Into Teen's Death
WINNIPEG — Manitoba's Opposition says an internal investigation into how a 15-year-old girl in the care of social workers disappeared before being found dead in the Red River is complete and should be released.

Opposition Calls On Manitoba Government To Release Review Into Teen's Death

Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers

Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers
HALIFAX — The Transportation Safety Board says investigators will spend the today documenting the site and sorting through the debris after an Air Canada flight crashed Sunday at Halifax's airport.

Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers

Vote Expected Late Monday On Military Mission Against ISIL In Iraq, Syria

Vote Expected Late Monday On Military Mission Against ISIL In Iraq, Syria
OTTAWA — The House of Commons is expected to vote tonight on the Conservative government's proposal to extend its military campaign in Iraq for up to one year and authorize airstrikes in Syria.

Vote Expected Late Monday On Military Mission Against ISIL In Iraq, Syria

First Nation Occupies Fisheries Office In B.C. As Herring Fight Escalates

First Nation Occupies Fisheries Office In B.C. As Herring Fight Escalates
BELLA BELLA, B.C. — Members of a First Nation in B.C. are occupying a federal fisheries office in their latest action against a contentious herring fishery on the province's central coast.

First Nation Occupies Fisheries Office In B.C. As Herring Fight Escalates