Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Journalist Continued To Attack Furlong After Initial Article: Lawyer

The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2015 11:08 AM
    VANCOUVER — A freelance journalist's attacks on John Furlong were "sustained, continuing and unrelenting," even after she published an article alleging he abused First Nations students, his lawyer has argued.
     
    Laura Robinson is suing the former Vancouver Olympics boss for public comments he made after her article was published in 2012 alleging he beat and taunted children at a Roman Catholic school in northern British Columbia some 45 years ago.
     
    Defence lawyer John Hunter accused Robinson of continuing to assail Furlong throughout 2012 and 2013, by writing an academic paper that contained unproven sexual abuse claims and pressuring corporations to cut ties with Furlong.
     
    Robinson testified Thursday that she presented a paper at a 2013 sports conference in Denmark that included statements that a man and two women had filed lawsuits accusing Furlong of sexual abuse at Immaculata School in Burns Lake, B.C.
     
    During tense cross-examination, Robinson said she knew the man had filed for government compensation for abuse at a separate school in 1969 and 1970, the same years he claimed he was taught by Furlong.
     
    "It wasn't unusual for students to be ferried about to the different schools," she testified. "Children were taken from one school to the next and often within that year."
     
    The man's suit was dismissed earlier this year after he failed to show up in court. Another woman dropped her lawsuit in 2014 while the third accuser's legal action was dismissed after a judge found she attended a different school at the time.
     
    Robinson acknowledged that she incorrectly wrote in her 2013 paper that a fourth person had filed a sexual abuse lawsuit. She said she included the claim because the woman told her she had taken legal action.
     
    The journalist testified she later sent an amended version of the article to the organizers of the Play the Game conference. An online version of the paper — which says it was last updated in April 2015 — does not include any specific allegations of sexual abuse.
     
    Hunter questioned Robinson about whether it crossed her mind that accusers might have been looking for a payout. Since Immaculata was a day school, former students had no access to compensation that was available for residential school survivors, he noted.
     
    "I said that I wanted honesty and I felt that people spoke honestly to me," she replied.
     
    He also interrogated her about a number of emails she sent to sports organizations and corporations questioning why they had not cut ties to Furlong since her initial article was published in the Georgia Straight newspaper in September 2012.
     
    Among the corporations she contacted were Own the Podium, Canadian Tire, Rocky Mountaineer and Whistler Blackcomb. She testified that she was working on her academic paper, which was about the sports community's reaction to the allegations.
     
    The court also heard that Robinson sent emails to aboriginal news publication NationTalk and the Musqueam Indian Band in 2013 asking about a First Nations event being held by the Vancouver Whitecaps soccer team, of which Furlong is the executive chair.
     
    Robinson denied trying to pressure the groups to drop advertising for the event, although NationTalk took down the Whitecaps press release after her email.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Summer Conditions Forecast To Be Similar To Last Year: Weather Network

    Summer Conditions Forecast To Be Similar To Last Year: Weather Network
    TORONTO — Wonder what this summer's forecast will look like? The Weather Network suggests some hints for the future lie in the past.

    Summer Conditions Forecast To Be Similar To Last Year: Weather Network

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt
    A Canadian family is demanding action from the federal government after a 28-year-old man died under mysterious circumstances at an airport in Laos.

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant
    TORONTO — A Winnipeg girl, whose family went public with its plea for a liver donor, was undergoing transplant surgery in Toronto on Monday after suddenly receiving word about a possible organ match.

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks
    Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government is backing the motion to get rid of so-called pay-to-pay fees because people feel they are being nickeled and dimed by the big banks.

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile
    The woman's complaint in January prompted a search for Phillips and evacuations in two Halifax-area communities where chemicals were found, including what a police hazardous devices technician described as 750 bottles and other containers.

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group
    Dr. Brian Day was declared the winner last week by just one vote, but the group's CEO Allan Seckel says there was another vote that should have been counted.

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group