Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

John Furlong Portrayed Journalist As Motivated By Contempt For Male Authority: Lawyer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jun, 2015 12:26 PM
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for a freelance journalist says former Olympics CEO John Furlong portrayed her as a heartless, cruel and callous activist who was motivated by contempt for male authority figures.
     
    Bryan Baynham has begun his closing arguments in a civil trial where Laura Robinson is alleging Furlong defamed her in public comments after she wrote an article that alleged he physically and verbally abused First Nations children decades ago.
     
    Furlong held a news conference the day the article was published in the Georgia Straight newspaper in September 2012 and accused Robinson of a shocking lack of diligence, inaccurate reporting and a personal vendetta.
     
    Baynham says Robinson sought Furlong's comment four times through his lawyer, but he refused to explain why he had omitted from his memoir "Patriot Hearts" his past work as a teacher at a Catholic school in northern B.C. in 1969 and 1970.
     
    He says the most serious of Furlong's defamatory statements was when he implied — intentionally or not — that Robinson was linked to an alleged attempt to extort money.
     
    Furlong's lawyer, John Hunter, has said that his client never implied that Robinson tried to extort money from him and that he had a right to respond to the journalist's "attacks."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Evidence Expected To Resume At Duffy Trial As Case Could Stretch Into August

    Evidence Expected To Resume At Duffy Trial As Case Could Stretch Into August
    After a three-week hiatus, the trial resumed Monday with a minor victory for the Duffy team. Justice Charles Vaillancourt ruled that a Senate committee report could be entered into evidence.

    Evidence Expected To Resume At Duffy Trial As Case Could Stretch Into August

    Edmonton School Bus Driver Kicks 13-Year-Old Student Off His Bus, Sparks Debate

    Edmonton School Bus Driver Kicks 13-Year-Old Student Off His Bus, Sparks Debate
    A video showing the exchange last week, along with angry shouts from children still on the Edmonton bus, was recorded by a student and released by Global News on the weekend.

    Edmonton School Bus Driver Kicks 13-Year-Old Student Off His Bus, Sparks Debate

    Man Stabbed To Death In Langley, One Person In Police Custody

    Man Stabbed To Death In Langley, One Person In Police Custody
    RCMP were called to the scene off Fraser Highway near Baselines Pub on 203rd Street just after 7 p.m. Monday.

    Man Stabbed To Death In Langley, One Person In Police Custody

    Canadian Food Inspection Agency Detains Corn Livestock Feed From India Over Health Concerns

    Canadian Food Inspection Agency Detains Corn Livestock Feed From India Over Health Concerns
    The agency says these imports must be tested after samples of organic feed corn were found to have up to 20 times the permitted levels of aflatoxins.

    Canadian Food Inspection Agency Detains Corn Livestock Feed From India Over Health Concerns

    A Look At The New Rules That Take Effect This Week For Canadians Cellphone Customers

    A Look At The New Rules That Take Effect This Week For Canadians Cellphone Customers
     Canadians locked into three-year wireless contracts will find themselves with extra freedom this week as new CRTC regulations kick in for mobile phone carriers. 

    A Look At The New Rules That Take Effect This Week For Canadians Cellphone Customers

    Judge Awards $15 Billion To Quebec Smokers; Cigarette Companies To Appeal

    Judge Awards $15 Billion To Quebec Smokers; Cigarette Companies To Appeal
    In a ruling described as "historic" by one lawyer, a Quebec judge has ordered three major cigarette companies to pay $15 billion to smokers in what is believed to be the biggest class-action lawsuit ever seen in Canada.

    Judge Awards $15 Billion To Quebec Smokers; Cigarette Companies To Appeal