David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Replying to @DavidRayAmos @alllibertynews and 49 others
Methinks many lawyers are nervous because this story has taken on a life of its own N'esy Pas?
https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/03/daughter-of-dennis-olands-defence.html
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/conflict-of-interest-disclaimer-dennis-oland-murder-documentary-1.5490727
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 10 Mar 2020 15:35:53 -0300
Subject: YO Mayor Don Darling we just met in person and you played dumb Correct?
Fwd: Information Mr Gold Obviously I won't keep secrets with the Saint John cops
To: "Chuck.Thompson" <Chuck.Thompson@cbc.ca>, NHedges@entonegroup.com,
Don.Darling@saintjohn.ca, "carl.urquhart" <carl.urquhart@gnb.ca>,
"Anderson-Mason, Andrea Hon. (JAG/JPG)" <Andrea.AndersonMason@gnb.ca>,
andre <andre@jafaust.com>, Dan@polygraph-pro.com,
wayne.gallant@nbpolice.ca, "Roger.Brown" <Roger.Brown@fredericton.ca>
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
< oldmaison@yahoo.com>, AgentMargaritaville@
Jones" <Robert.Jones@cbc.ca>, "steve.murphy" <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>,
Nathalie Sturgeon <sturgeon.nathalie@
< news@dailygleaner.com>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>,
lisa.taylor@ryerson.ca
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2017 16:32:43 -0400
Subject: Fwd: Information Mr Gold Obviously I won't keep secrets with the Saint John cops
To: info@alandgoldlaw.com
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Alan D. Gold
Called to the bar: 1973 (ON)
Gold, Alan D., Professional Corporation
Ste. 210
20 Adelaide St. E.
Toronto, Ontario M5C 2T6
Phone: 416-368-1726
Fax: 416-368-6811
Email: info@alandgoldlaw.com
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Darling, Don" <Don.Darling@saintjohn.ca>
Date: Fri, 11 Oct 2019 17:25:44 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: I got tired of waiting for the Quispamsis Town Council
to get back to me so they can say Hey to Mayor Clark and the cops for me
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Thank you for your email. My intention is to send a response directly
or through the appropriate department. Doing so is very important to
me.
We do however, receive a significant number of emails and inquires.
Should you not receive a reply within 7 days, please resend your
correspondance.
To arrange appearances or meetings please contact Patrick Beamish with
my office at Patrick.beamish@saintjohn.ca<
Thank you for your message and please celebrate the best of our city.
This e-mail communication (including any or all attachments)
is intended only for the use of the person or entity to whom it is
addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged material. If
you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, any use, review,
retransmission, distribution, dissemination, copying, printing, or
other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon this e-mail, is
strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please
contact the sender and delete the original and any copy of this e-mail
and any printout thereof, immediately. Your co-operation is
appreciated.
Le présent courriel (y compris toute pièce jointe) s'adresse
uniquement à son destinataire, qu'il soit une personne ou un
organisme, et pourrait comporter des renseignements privilégiés ou
confidentiels. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire du courriel, il est
interdit d'utiliser, de revoir, de retransmettre, de distribuer, de
disséminer, de copier ou d'imprimer ce courriel, d'agir en vous y
fiant ou de vous en servir de toute autre façon. Si vous avez reçu le
présent courriel par erreur, prière de communiquer avec l'expéditeur
et d'éliminer l'original du courriel, ainsi que toute copie
électronique ou imprimée de celui-ci, immédiatement. Nous sommes
reconnaissants de votre collaboration.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Davidson, Stephen" <stephen.davidson@saintjohn.ca
Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 20:26:02 +0000
Subject: Information
To: "david.raymond.amos@gmail.com" <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Mr. Amos,
On September-17, 2017, I was made aware that you placed a call to Mr.
Paul Veniot, a lawyer with Public Prosecutions, and left a voicemail
(attached to this email) on September 15th, 2017, regarding something
that you had read about in the news. In your message you are heard
saying, "You guys got some problems to iron out for me, for my
friend's son, again. I think I'm one of those problems."
I can only assume that you are referring to the upcoming re-trial of
Dennis Oland, please correct me if I am wrong. If so, as the
investigator assigned to this case, I am required to follow up on your
comments as to what you are referring to in your message to Mr.
Veniot, for any potential information you may have relating to the
case, or upcoming trial.
If you could, please provide me with the information you may have via
email, postal service, in person or telephone. The particulars for
contact are listed below,
Thank you,
Saint John Police Headquarters: One Peel Plaza, Saint John New Brunswick
Mailing address: Saint John Police Force, c/o Cst. Stephen Davidson -
PO Box 1971, One Peel Plaza, Saint John New Brunswick E2L 4L1
Major Crime Unit:(506) 648 3211
This e-mail communication (including any or all attachments)
is intended only for the use of the person or entity to whom it is
addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged material. If
you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, any use, review,
retransmission, distribution, dissemination, copying, printing, or
other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon this e-mail, is
strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please
contact the sender and delete the original and any copy of this e-mail
and any printout thereof, immediately. Your co-operation is
appreciated.
Le pr?sent courriel (y compris toute pi?ce jointe) s'adresse
uniquement ? son destinataire, qu'il soit une personne ou un
organisme, et pourrait comporter des renseignements privil?gi?s ou
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interdit d'utiliser, de revoir, de retransmettre, de distribuer, de
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et d'?liminer l'original du courriel, ainsi que toute copie
?lectronique ou imprim?e de celui-ci, imm?diatement. Nous sommes
reconnaissants de votre collaboration.
https://www.broadcastnow.co.
‘The Suspect has the stickiness that the SVoDs like and with the
real-life crime aspect and family story, it has global appeal’
Distributor eOne International Distribution
Producer eOne
Length 4 x 60 minutes
Broadcaster CBC (Canada)
This eOne production, in association with Seven Knots Media, is a
true-crime doc that follows the retrial of Dennis Oland, who in 2015
was found guilty of the murder of his millionaire father Richard.
The sixth generation of the family-owned Moosehead Beer dynasty,
Richard Oland was a prominent businessman in Nova Scotia with several
trucking companies and an investment firm to his name.
Unravelling in the quiet port city of New Brunswick in Canada, the
vicious murder of one of the area’s most prominent and wealthy
inhabitants captured the national headlines.
This 4 x 60-minute documentary follows Dennis Oland’s retrial, as well
as highlighting a justice system broken from its very foundation – it
is alleged that once the Saint John Police Department had identified
the younger Oland, who owed his father half a million dollars for a
loan that bankrolled a divorce from his first wife, as the main
suspect, tunnel vision set in and other avenues of investigation could
have been missed.
EOne executive vice-president of acquisitions Noel Hedges says the
project has finally been revealed after being under a large cloak of
secrecy for nearly two years.
Ahead of its TX next February on CBC in Canada, The Suspect will be
taken to Mipcom, where Hedges expects to receive attention from SVoD,
digital and PSB players.
“The Suspect has the stickiness that the SVoDs like and with the
real-life crime aspect and family story, it has global appeal,” says
Hedges.
“Real crime sells all over the world and is a popular genre with
women. We expect the series to do well in Latin America and
Scandinavia, and it will make up a key show within our real-crime
slate.”
Producer and distributor eOne has been pushing hard into factual
content in recent years after making its name as the vendor of dramas
such as The Walking Dead and producer of Rookie Blue, Designated
Survivor and Private Eyes.
The company was recently sold to toy firm Hasbro for $4bn (£3.3bn) – a
deal that will bolster reserves and allow its executives to double
down on premium fare such as The Suspect.
Hedges says the documentary takes viewers through the entire case,
digging into the aftermath of the murder and winding a path full of
twists and turns up to the retrial and its verdict.
“Richard Oland wasn’t a particularly liked person and came from a
community that was relatively poor,” says Hedges. “This series raises
questions over the son’s motivation and the police activity. It is a
really interesting story, which has plenty of questions left
unanswered at the end.”
Richard Oland’s wife had said her husband was never the same after
losing a bitter family battle for the helm of Moosehead to his
brother. He was described as a “verbally and emotionally” abusive
character who had an eight-year affair.
Hedges believes The Suspect is a primetime, primarily post-watershed
show that will attract both old and younger audiences as it ticks a
lot of boxes in terms of drama, intrigue and scandal.
“This is a ‘did they, didn’t they’ story with labyrinthine complexity
and it is very much a premium show,” said Hedges.
CBC won't add conflict of interest disclaimer to Oland documentary
Documentary was co-produced by defence lawyer's daughter, but CBC maintains she had no editorial input
· CBC News · Posted: Mar 09, 2020 2:56 PM AT
Dennis Oland, acquitted after a second trial for the first-degree murder of his father, Richard, was interviewed for CBC's 4-part series, The Oland Murder. The documentary was co-produced by Caitlin Gold, the daughter of Alan Gold, who was Dennis Oland's lead attorney. (The Oland Murder/CBC)
CBC has no plans to add a disclaimer or pull The Oland Murder, a four-part documentary series that aired last week and was co-produced by the daughter of Dennis Oland's defence lawyer.
"She had no editorial input at all, and if she had, then that would be a different conversation," said Chuck Thompson, CBC spokesperson.
Last week, CBC News learned that co-producer Caitlin Gold Teitelbaum is the daughter of Alan Gold, Oland's top defence lawyer.
The revelation called into question the corporation's transparency and application of its Journalistic Standards and Practices, known as JSP.
Caitlan Gold, the co-producer of The Oland Murder. (CBC)
The JSP says CBC news operations should "refrain from any involvement with stories in which a member of our immediate family (including in-laws) has a strong stake."
CBC defended the credibility of the documentary in an email to CBC News on Friday and reiterated that statement Monday, saying it believes "the documentary gives viewers a fair and thorough account of the trial and its impact on the Oland family; it met all of our JSP guidelines."
The Oland Murder began airing on CBC Television on March 4. The documentary delves into the retrial of Dennis Oland, who was charged with the murder of his father, Richard.
Dennis Oland was convicted by a jury in 2015 but was acquitted by Justice Terrence Morrison at a retrial last July.
CBC commissioned the documentary series and signed a contract with Seven Knots Media Inc., an independent production company.
Journalism professor urges transparency
CBC leadership has not come nearly clean enough about who knew what and when, said Lisa Taylor, a journalism professor at Ryerson University.Taylor worked for CBC News for a decade and has worked for the corporation from time to time in training roles since then.
She said the relationship between the co-producer and the defence diminishes the value of the documentary.
"We're supposed to come to the table and be upfront and candid about not just anything that is a true conflict or presents true bias, but just something that would give people pause."
"I think now that this otherwise really compelling story will be compromised in so many people's eyes."
Not all divisions of CBC have to adhere to the corporation's journalistic standards and practices because CBC is not just a journalistic organization.
"There's so many divisions within this entity that is the public broadcaster, but on the public-facing stuff it's just the CBC," Taylor said.
Lisa Taylor, a Ryerson University journalism professor, said CBC should put a disclaimer on The Oland Murder documentary series. (Ryerson University)
The lead producer of the documentary series, Deborah Wainwirght, told a court last year that she would adhere to the same standards as CBC journalists.
Taylor said the public would expect the same standards across different divisions anyway, as most viewers and listeners wouldn't be able to distinguish what's produced by CBC News and a documentary produced by the corporation's entertainment section.
"The public doesn't understand that this is not a product that comes from the news division."
CBC News reporters Bobbi-Jean MacKinnon and Robert Jones were interviewed for the series without being told about the Gold connection.
The documentary features unprecedented access to the Olands and was heralded in the Globe and Mail as "terrific true-crime storytelling."
The Oland Murder, a four-part series based on the murder of Richard Oland and the criminal trials of his son, Dennis is being broadcast on CBC. (The Oland Murder/CBC)
In an interview with CBC's Information Morning Fredericton, Wainwright cast aspersions on the local on-the-ground journalism, suggesting she brought less of a bias to the story.
"I think perhaps the timing was right, and the fact I was from the other side of the country maybe seemed like I came with less of a bias," Wainwright said.
"I didn't know the Olands. I didn't know anything about New Brunswick, so I think I came with an open mind."
During the interview, Wainwright did not reveal that Gold Teitelbaum's father was Oland's defence lawyer.
Thompson doesn't know if Gold Teitelbaum was always part of the production team or if she joined at a later date.
Reason for access
Gold Teitelbaum did provide Wainwright and her production crew access to Oland and his defence team, Thompson confirmed.When asked to do a live on-air interview, Thompson said he thinks he's already given CBC News journalists enough information.
Taylor said a disclaimer should be added at the top of each of the four parts of the series that states the connection between the co-producer and the Olands, and someone from CBC's national leadership should make themselves available for an interview.
"As taxpayers and as audience members we deserve a lot more insight."
With files from Jacques Poitras, Information Morning Fredericton and Information Morning Saint John
68 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story. David Amos
Content disabled
Surprise Surprise Surprise David Amos
I just talked to Lisa Taylor and was very impressed with her integrity.
David Amos
Reply to @David Amos: On the other hand I called two Yankee again and was not impressed
David Amos
Methinks if Dennis Oland were wise he would have studied my comments in the last article N'esy Pas?
David Amos
For the record only one Yankee called me back after he had told me earlier that he could not talk to me until he heard back from the lawyers. When he called me I refused to talk to him because I was not done talking to lawyers and that he and should confer in writing byway of emails. Methinks Dan seemed like an ok dude out of the gate but once a cop always a cop N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Methinks many lawyers are nervous because this story has taken on a life of its own N'esy Pas?
Jake Quinlan
Reply to @David Amos: Agree, careful what you wish for.
David Amos
Reply to @Jake Quinlan: Why?
David Amos
"The revelation called into question the corporation's transparency and application of its Journalistic Standards and Practices, known as JSP."
Methinks everybody knows that I have been questioning the same thing since July of 2002 N'esy Pas?
Lou Bell
Reply to @David Amos:
Nope , most have never even heard of you. Maybe write a book and see
how it sells . Might even sell as many as the votes you get when you
run. What's that , maybe 15 or 20 ?
David Amos
Reply to @Lou Bell: Clearly Higgy and your fellow Conservatives have heard of me N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Reply to @Lou Bell:
FYI I just crossed paths Higgy's buddy Mayor Don Darling on budget day
in Fat Fred City in front of witnesses. Did you see us? The Not So
Little Darling tried hard to pretend that he didn't know who I was and
refused to answer my questions. Methinks the fact that he could not
scurry away any faster was Too Too Funny Indeed N'esy Pas?
Fern Robichaud
The best advice for anyone is to ignore the documentary altogether, it's obviously a publicity stunt.
David Amos
Reply to @Fern Robichaud: A publicity stunt for whom? I say it was obviously for the benefit of the lawyers.
George Smith
Much ado about nothing. The real story was the investigation. Shoddy police work and a crime scene used as a tourist site for police officers. It couldn't have ended any other way. Many in this area just see it as a rich guy getting off while ignoring all the information out there. Who the co-producer was is irrelevant.
David Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @George
Smith: FYI I sold Dick Oland a brand new Z1R which he rode to Laconia
with me a couple of times. I was told that he kept it until the day he
died. I wonder where it is now. BTW His son is NOT guilty of Dick's
murder
David Amos
Reply to @George Smith: Interesting that my reply to went "Poof"
David Amos
Reply to @George Smith: In a nutshell you are wrong about my friend's son
Walter Kowalski
Nobody watches CBC Television. And, nobody cares about Oland, or his son.
David Amos
Reply to @Walter Kowalski: Obviously I disagree
Lou Bell
Most likely this story can be found in the " Fiction " section of your local Library .
David Amos
Reply to @Lou Bell: So you say
John McInerney
Important that the potential bias has been widely disseminated, The CBC needs to admit it's journalistic shortcoming . Silence is not a satisfactory response !
David Amos
Reply to @John McInerney: True
Don Cameron
Refuse the disclaimer and bury the story in the New Brunswick local news.
Typical of our 'National Public Broadcaster'.
David Amos
Reply to @Don Cameron: YUP
Buddy Best
Run it!! Let CBC live with the shame. Anything for a Buck. Thought that was the NP way of doing things.
David Amos
Content disabled
Methinks if Dennis Oland were wise he would have studied my comments in the last article N'esy Pas? Jeff LeBlanc
He did it, I mean come on man. Don't need a documentary to tell me otherwise.
sandymctavish726 mctavish
Reply to @Jeff
LeBlanc: we all have our opinions but I don't think he did it...I don't
think he had the cudos to actually kill another human, nor does oland
the kid have a temper that would lead to killing. but saint john police
found an opening to rattle the oland family and then set out to prove
their point of view. because of this the person actually killing senior
oland got away with it.
Michel
Forgeron
Reply to
@sandymctavish726 mctavish: I tend to agree that he’s innocent. The
amateur actions of police at the crime scene, plus ignoring the stairs
and back door, all a literal mess. And the effort of the police to
surreptitiously & illegally try to get information on the potential
jurors are the reasons the last judge granted trial by judge alone. Add
to that jealously of some (many?) locals for the Oland fortune. If he is
guilty and got away with it, that’s on the cops, not the judge.
Buddy Best
Reply to
@sandymctavish726 mctavish: No offence but you clearly missed the
evidence that convicted him the first time and the law going to allow a
jury a second chance to convict.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Michel
Forgeron: This was a slam dunk with more than enough evidence to
convict. The only piece of evidence against a testimony by one of the
guys working in the shop below. I know both gentlemen and of the two I
would go with John the owner as the most astute. If Anthony was wrong
Oland had no alibi.
David Amos
Reply to @Buddy Best: Methinks its interesting that you can slam him but I can't defend him N'esy Pas?
Allen
Vincent
Reply to @Buddy Best:
Wasn’t there new evidence at the second trial that the Jury didn’t hear
the first time around? Like Ainsworth and Lowe?
Allen
Vincent
Reply to @Buddy Best:
Three people, Ainsworth, Shaw and Lowe gave alibi evidence of 7:45-8pm.
How do you dispute the value of that?
Buddy Best
Reply to @Allen
Vincent: Grasping at straws after conviction. I have spoken to both John
And Anthony on the matter. Trying to muddy the waters more.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Allen
Vincent: John's recollection put Oland on sight in time to get to
Rothesay. Gerry Lowe was not sure what day it was and Anthony after
claiming it was later worried about cred if he retracted. No doubt the
Lawyers and investigators were very persuasive with what they wanted to
here. If Anthony was sure it was later it could have meant a 4th visit
that night throw the rear door. Remember the milk run after they had
already established half an alibi in the brown Jacket.
Allen
Vincent
Reply to @Buddy Best:
Man your facts are ALL wrong! Shaw/Ainsworth told cops morning body was
found that it was 7:45-8pm. Same at Trial. Lowe didn’t know date but
knew there was a photo shoot same night at Thandi. That was the same
night as the murder and he’s seen on video come/going from Thandi. Sorry
to make you look bad dude but these are definitely the facts. You have
skin in this game?
David Amos
Reply to @Jeff LeBlanc: Well man I am am telling you otherwise
Allen
Vincent
Reply to @Buddy Best: I
think you need to revisit yours....your information is not backed up by
facts. visit at 8pm? Remember oland was on video shopping in Rothesay
around that time how could he be two places at once? Coveralls? That’s
1st degree murder. Crown charged him with 2nd degree which means it
wasn’t planned. Crown said zero evidence to charge 1st degree. Who’s to
say Anthony was wrong? Wow you are clearly down to speculation now. All
three Ainsworth/Shaw and Lowe saw/hear something around the same time
and that’s fact dude. John and Anthony were in conflict? What conflict
and why are you the only one aware of any conflict? R u trying to
protect Ainsworth? Btw, this is friendly debate don’t let me get under
your skin. Cheers
Reply to @Allen
Vincent: They had no choice but to go with what was on the table. No
witnesses and no weapon. Man slaughter was a slam dunk. Why risk a
sympathy verdict? Where was contents of red bag? How hard is it to go to
a hardware store and pick up a set of painter coveralls and booties?
Might as well get a hammer at the same time? Out of town far away
purchases.
Buddy Best
Reply to @David Amos: There is no defence. He murdered his father.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Allen
Vincent: You need to revisit your source of information. John and
Anthony were in conflict and who is to say Anthony was wrong. Perhaps
another visit at 8 pm for something he forgot. He had been there 3 x
during the time of the murder. There is no doubt about that. None!!!
That red shopping Bag??? Weapon and coveralls!!!
David Amos
Reply to @Buddy Best:
I strongly disagree and folks at very least should agree with the fact
that I have a real name to back up my words Correct?
Buddy Best
Kind of gives you the feeling they were in the loop from the start. MSM doing what MSM does. Manipulate!!!!
David Amos
Reply to @Buddy Best: What is it that you are doing?
Freddy Rose
I would be curious to know how much Dennis Oland is getting from this "documentary".
Allen
Vincent
Reply to @Freddy
Rose: Do you really think Canadian Documentaries make enough money to
pay off anyone? I don’t think they bring in that kind of cash.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Allen
Vincent: After the first commercial break I count 29 ads in 2 breaks. 28
minutes of ads. I would say it was well financed.
David Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @Freddy
Rose: I would lay odds that Mr Oland got nothing and is likely
regretting allowing these people to profit from his troubles.
David Amos
Reply to @David Amos: Methinks I touched a nerve N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Reply to @Freddy Rose: Wow Methinks its Interesting that my reply to you went "Poof" N'esy Pas?
Jake Quinlan
"The public doesn't understand that this is not a product that comes from the news division."
A key statement. As I was watching part 1 I was thinking something is "off" here. It may have been my bias as I think he is guilty and relative to this bias, the part 1 anyway seemed bias in favour of Oland.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Jake
Quinlan: You would have to be pretty den se not to see where this is
going. White wash after letting a ki ller go free. The worst kind of ki
lling. Mur der one's parent for money.
David Amos
Reply to @Jake Quinlan: "The public doesn't understand that this is not a product that comes from the news division."
Trust that I am part of the aforementioned "public" and I certain understand the wicked games corporate media plays.
Trust that I am part of the aforementioned "public" and I certain understand the wicked games corporate media plays.
David Amos
Reply to @Jake Quinlan: Go Figure who said this
"Real crime sells all over the world and is a popular genre with women. We expect the series to do well in Latin America and Scandinavia, and it will make up a key show within our real-crime slate.”
"Real crime sells all over the world and is a popular genre with women. We expect the series to do well in Latin America and Scandinavia, and it will make up a key show within our real-crime slate.”
Bob Smith
Sounds like the series should have been pulled the minute the conflict of interest was brought to light. Probably won't due to threat of lawsuit by lawyers. In the end, though, most folks made up their mind long ago about this case and the details therein.
David Amos
Reply to @Bob Smith: FYI as soon as my first words went "Poof" again I picked up the phone and called guess who?
Matthew Smith
her name should be " entitled-balm "
David Amos
Reply to @Matthew Smith: Now Now Play Nice
It won't matter one iota to the 5 people who'll watch the series.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Hugh
MacDonald: Out of curiosity for how bad they wanted to clean this up of
already established public opinion I watched. It was shockingly clear
where they were going and the money they were expecting to generate from
this propaganda. Sixty minute program with 32 minutes of tainted and
one sided material with 28 minutes of commercials. I counted 29 ads
After the first break. Someone is looking to make another ki lling here.
David Amos
Reply to @Hugh MacDonald: So you say
Lauchlin Murray
This part of the story is the most obvious, "..., because CBC is not just a journalistic organization." Appealing family conflicts to the CBC ombud is useless and the CBC ombud thinks their job is to be the CBC's advocate.
David Amos
Reply to @Lauchlin
Murray: Methinks you and i finally agree on something Its an amazing
world after all despite my grammar N'esy Pas?
https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies
David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Replying to @DavidRayAmos @alllibertynews and 49 others
If Dennis Oland is wise he would study my comments then ask his family and friends and particularly his lawyers about my contacts with them and the Crown after he went to prison
https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2020/03/daughter-of-dennis-olands-defence.html
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-dennis-oland-alan-gold-oland-murder-1.5488634
Daughter of Dennis Oland's defence lawyer was a producer of CBC documentary The Oland Murder
Revelation raises questions about journalistic judgment in 4-part series airing on CBC
· CBC News · Posted: Mar 06, 2020 3:34 PM AT
Dennis Oland was acquitted last year after a retrial on a charge of first-degree murder in the death of his father, Richard Oland. He was interviewed for CBC's four-part series, The Oland Murder. (The Oland Murder/CBC)
A co-producer of a major documentary series on the Richard Oland murder case broadcast by the CBC is the daughter of Dennis Oland's lead defence lawyer, CBC News has learned.
The revelation casts a new light on the unprecedented access that the documentary team had to Dennis Oland and his defence team, including top criminal lawyer Alan Gold.
It also raises questions about journalistic judgment, given that series co-producer Caitlin Gold Teitelbaum is Gold's daughter.
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices (JSP) says the corporation's news operations will "refrain from any involvement with stories in which a member of our immediate family (including in-laws) has a strong stake."
The Oland Murder, a four-part series that began airing on CBC Television on March 4, was not produced by CBC News employees but was commissioned by the corporation and produced by an independent production company, Seven Knots Media Inc.
The Oland Murder was co-produced by Caitlin Gold, the daughter of Alan Gold, Dennis Oland's lead defence lawyer. (The Oland Murder/CBC)
Even so, lead producer Deborah Wainwright told a court last year that she would adhere to the same standards as CBC journalists.
"Am I correct to say that you don't consider yourself to be a journalist?" Crown lawyer Kathryn Gregory asked Wainwright, during a hearing on whether she could use audio recordings of Dennis Oland's two trials.
"I'm not a journalist, but for this project I'm adhering to the Journalistic Standards and Practices of the CBC," Wainwright replied. "I'm following the JSP for this project."
Gold Teitelbaum is listed as co-producer "Caitlin Gold" in the credits of the documentary, which tells the story of the July 2011 murder of Richard Oland and the prosecution of his son Dennis for the crime.
Caitlan Gold got a co-producer credit as a courtesy after she helped the film crew gain access to the Oland family and defence team, the CBC says. (CBC)
Dennis Oland was convicted by a jury in his first trial in 2015 but, following an appeal of that decision, was acquitted by Justice Terrence Morrison at a retrial last July.
Wainwright did not respond to a request left on her voicemail.
CBC spokesperson Chuck Thompson said Friday in an emailed statement that the CBC was not aware of the family relationship before now, but the documentary "met all of our JSP guidelines," and "we have final say over the creative."
Gold Teitelbaum "provided the producers with unprecedented access to the defendant, as well as his defence team," Thompson said.
"She received an associate producer credit as a courtesy and while we acknowledge the family connection could be perceived as a conflict of interest, Caitlin had no editorial input."
Thompson's response contradicts Wainwright's account of how the team got access to the Oland family.
Richard Oland, 69, was found dead in his Saint John office on July 7, 2011. (Canadian Yachting Association)
She told CBC's Information Morning Fredericton earlier this week that the family was "a little leery at first" but eventually agreed.
"I think perhaps the timing was right, and the fact I was from the other side of the country maybe seemed like I came with less of a bias," Wainwright said.
"I didn't know the Olands. I didn't know anything about New Brunswick, so I think I came with an open mind."
Lead producer Deborah Wainwright didn't mention Caitlin Gold's connection when asked in interviews this week how she gained such broad access to the defence team during the murder trial. (CBC/The Oland Murder)
Wainwright did not reveal in that interview that her co-producer's father was Oland's defence lawyer.
In a Facebook post last month, Gold Teitelbaum described the project to friends as a three-year "journey" for her and "a wild ride," adding it was finally ready for air.
"Congrats Cait!" wrote one friend. "Does the best criminal defense lawyer in Canada (who shall remain nameless) make an appearance?"
Gold Teitelbaum replied with three heart emojis.
Lisa Oland, Dennis Oland's wife was interviewed for The Oland Murder, which the CBC began broadcasting this week. (The Oland Murder/CBC)
She did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent via Facebook, and by mid-Friday afternoon the post about the series was no longer public on her page.
Stephen Kimber, who teaches journalism at the University of King's College in Halifax, said the CBC should be transparent about the Gold connection.
A screen capture from Caitlin Gold's Facebook makes a reference to her father, Alan Gold. (Facebook)
Kimber said audience members would "have a hard job" distinguishing between CBC News content and an independently produced documentary, and in any case the corporation owes it to its audience to be up front about the Gold link.
"In this era of fake news, it's really important that all media outlets be as transparent as possible," he said.
While the broadcaster's documentary unit is separate from its news unit, CBC communications and marketing staff contacted CBC News producers in New Brunswick in recent weeks to ask for news coverage of the documentary's release.
Connie Oland, Dennis Oland's mother and Richard Oland's widow, was interviewed for the four-part documentary. (The Oland Murder/CBC)
Wainwright appeared on the three local Information Morning shows in Saint John, Fredericton and Moncton, N.B., earlier this week to promote the documentary and also spoke to CBC Television in the province.
Two CBC News reporters who covered the trial, Bobbi-Jean MacKinnon and Robert Jones, were interviewed for the documentary without being told about the Gold connection. The series also uses CBC News archival footage.
Doyle noted the production's intimate access to Dennis Oland, his family and his defence lawyers, and said the series raised questions about the prosecution's case.
In her affidavit, she said Oland's defence lawyers had told her they did not object to the request. She said Gold had told her he didn't want her to use Oland's emotional reaction to the guilty verdict in the first trial, and she agreed.
She eventually dropped her request to use the audio.
With files from Hadeel Ibrahim
232 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
David Amos
"Poof"??? Oh My My Methinks that was not wise N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Content disabled
Methinks Chucky Thompson should agree that would not be wise to block my latest comment N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Content disabled
If
Dennis Oland is wise he would study my comments then ask his family and
friends and particularly his lawyers about my contacts with them and the
Crown after he went to prison David Amos
"This content is temporarily unavailable. Please try again. (WT_Catalog_400)"
Need I say HMMMM???
Andre Legault
Reply to @David Amos:
What are you talking about?
What are you talking about?
David Amos
Reply to @Andre Legault: Can you watch the show?
David Amos
Reply to @Andre Legault: I got to Part 4 then they all went "Poof"
David Amos
Reply to @David Amos: Its back
David Amos
WOW Methinks its truly amazing how much went "Poof" in the last hour alone N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Content disabled
Methinks Chucky Thompson should agree that would not be wise to block my latest comment N'esy Pas? David Amos
For the record Dick Oland was a friend of mine and I never met the rest of his family. However I know as sure as i am sitting here that his son did not murder him. Everybody knows that I do not trust his lawyers and the cops as far as I could throw them.
ROB CLARK
Reply to @David Amos: Methinks N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Reply to @ROB CLARK: Your point is???
David Amos
Methinks Wainwright and Oland's lawyers and friends can never deny that I tried to talk them N'esy Pas?
Manny Fredrick
Reply to @David Amos: What language are you speaking?
Larry Larson
Reply to @Manny Fredrick: Il speaks Chiac!
David Amos
Reply to @Larry Larson: C'est Vrai However methinks I am a man not a thing N'esy Pas?
David Amos
Reply to @Manny Fredrick: Google the following in English
David Amos Alan Gold
David Amos Alan Gold
David Amos
I am watching this "documentary" for the first time Thus far I have found that the opinion of the John Blackshear Phd to be the most impressive. So I called him and told him so just now byway of his voicemail.
David Amos
Reply to @David Amos: FYI I believed Dan Sosnowski too Trust that I called him as well and told him so personally.
David Stairs
Karma has a way with situations like this and patience is a virtue...to reap what you sow....
Jeffrey Winterbottom
Reply to @David Stairs: thats not what karma means.
David Amos
Reply to @Jeffrey Winterbottom: Karma is what Karma does
toby mockler
CBC is 100% above board 100% of the time and is always 100% unbiased.
Buddy Best
Reply to @toby mockler: LOL Sarcasm!!!
David Amos
Reply to @toby mockler: Yea Right
perry edwards
So obvious why this is a big story while Toronto's daily murders are ignored by this media
David Amos
Reply to @perry edwards: MONEY
Robert William
What does it really matter, Dennis Oland was found not guilty, end of story.
Max Kaminsky
Reply to @Robert William:
Now comes the task of rehabilitating the image of a Liberal Party fundraiser.
Now comes the task of rehabilitating the image of a Liberal Party fundraiser.
Diane Knight
Reply to @Robert William: If it was your father, it would matter.
David Amos
Reply to @Robert William: Nope The killer has yet to meet justice
David Amos
Reply to @Max Kaminsky: Methinks Higgy's minions have no class N'esy Pas?
Buddy Best
Reply to @Robert William: Merely one humans opinion. The judge in each of their involvements were wrong except for the first one. Jury said Guilty!!! End of story!!!!!
Robert William
Reply to @Buddy Best: Jealous much. end of story.
David Amos
Samual Johnston
Reply to @Buddy Best: fortunately a jury saying guilty is not the end of the story in our system. Mistakes were made and the judge made the correct decision based on the facts and not feelings like the jury. You say one jury is the be all and end all. OJ was innocent right?
Buddy Best
Reply to @Robert William: Merely one humans opinion. The judge in each of their involvements were wrong except for the first one. Jury said Guilty!!! End of story!!!!!
Robert William
Reply to @Buddy Best: Jealous much. end of story.
David Amos
Reply to @Robert
William: Nope Methinks the fat lady ain't sung yet because the killer is
still foot loose and fancy free N'esy Pas?
Samual Johnston
Reply to @Buddy Best: fortunately a jury saying guilty is not the end of the story in our system. Mistakes were made and the judge made the correct decision based on the facts and not feelings like the jury. You say one jury is the be all and end all. OJ was innocent right?
Buddy Best
Reply to @Samual
Johnston: In the jury trial they were given every (EVERY POSSIBLE)
opportunity to challenge the evidence. They failed. The defence was not
about to allow a jury of his peers to deliver the same verdict. Out of
5000 possible jurors these 12 were selected and then relegated to the
dunce category for their undivided attention for 3 months. Anyone else
gets 14 days to prove innocence.
Max Kaminsky
CBC defending friends of the Liberal Party of Canada.
drew Currah
Reply to @Max Kaminsky:
Never!!!!!
Never!!!!!
Fred Dee
Reply to @drew Currah: lol
Buddy Best
Reply to @drew Currah: You missed the trial and the doc!!
Mackenna Wilson
Reply to @Max Kaminsky: Ironic when Putin's employees call the CBC an engine of the Liberal Party.
David Amos
Reply to @Mackenna Wilson: Methinks the truth is more often ironic than not N'esy Pas/
Film has zero credibility!
Buddy Best
Reply to @Larry
Larson: The defence team had a high priced investigation team to dig up a
lot of evidence and didn't do so well. They could find one single other
suspect. Is Oland suing for costs now and this is the catalyst. I
expect this cost the family million$.
Samual Johnston
Reply to @Buddy Best:
is not up to them to find another suspect. A blind man at midnight
could see the police bungled the whole investigation and tried to pin it
on the son. So much reasonable doubt existed it is a crime that he was
found guilty to begin with. Saint John jealousy
Mackenna
Wilson
Reply to @Buddy Best:
They weren't looking for suspects. It's not their job. It's the
crown's job to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt. Defense has no
obligation to find suspects.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Mackenna
Wilson: If they had found so much as a hair that pointed in any other
direction you would be singing a different tune and so would they. The
came, they looked and they found nothing!!!!! The crow must stay with
just provable facts, but the defence can claim Martians did it as an
alternative. In this case the cops did it? Guilty.
David Amos
Reply to @Larry
Larson: Methinks many folks found it well worth watching even if it was
just a self promoting production by Gold and his pals at the expense of
their client whether he win or lose They made out like bandits N'esy
Pas?
David Amos
Reply to @Buddy Best:
Methinks you should watch it again with your lawyer I suspect that he
will tell you done it.I bet even you must have laughed when Mindless
Morris rolled her eyes when she said Gold must be a good lawyer merely
because he has represented the Hells Angels N'esy Pas?
Reply to @Buddy Best: less than perfect investigation....ok there is no convincing someone that says that.
Buddy Best
Reply to @Samual Johnston: Finally you get it. Truth talks and BS walks. There are none so blind as they who will not see. You see only what you want to see. I got it!!
Jeffrey Winterbottom
The irony of talking about journalistic integrity here
David Amos
Reply to @Jeffrey Winterbottom: Welcome to the circus
Chris Melvin
So first... tax payers pay both Bobbi Jean McKinnon and Robert Jones to sit in a courtroom for months to report on the trial... then McKinnon earns additional income from that by selling a book. Then Jones and McKinnon are likely paid to appear in this “documentary” funded by CBC but both claim they didn’t know Caitlin Gold was related to Alan Gold? Interesting....
jean forbes
Reply to @Chris
Melvin: don't ya know - it is disrespectful to ask 'personal'
questions of folks telling you what they want you to know?
Buddy Best
Reply to @Chris Melvin: I had the utmost respect for Robert and Bobbi Jean until now.
David Amos
Reply to @Buddy Best: Trust that I NEVER did
Whodunnit: CBC hits the true-crime jackpot with The Oland Murder
The popular culture moves along in odd
patterns, shifting this way and that. A format or genre is popular and
then there’s a reaction against it, sometimes propelled by new
technology and sometimes just by human curiosity.
When CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
arrived on CBS 20 years ago, it offered something new – a procedural
forensics crime drama that relied heavily on the audience’s belief that
cutting-edge science took the guesswork out of crime-solving. The show,
its spinoffs and shows that imitated it were often unnervingly explicit,
especially in depicting sexual fetishism, but also unnervingly admiring
of science-based police work.
Real
crime-solving is never as cut and dried as depicted on such TV shows and
the rise of the true-crime genre, first in podcasts and then in
documentary series on streaming services, was the inevitable reaction to
CSI-like crime-solving drama. The key ingredients for
successful, gripping true-crime docuseries are a murder, a puzzle,
possible miscarriage of justice and possible mistakes or bias by those
in authority.
The Oland defence counsel meeting.
Courtesy of Seven Knots Media Inc. / CBC
The Oland Murder (starts
Wednesday, CBC, 9 p.m.) has the key ingredients by the bucketful. CBC’s
four-part look at the murder of Richard Oland, of the Moosehead
Breweries family, and what happened after, is terrific true-crime
storytelling. CBC says, “The Oland Murder offers viewers
extraordinary and unprecedented access to the accused, his legal team
and their private investigators.” That’s not an idle boast. The story is
both sensational and macabre, but it isn’t presented as sensationalism.
It just digs deeper and deeper with impressive insider access to key
players.
We are first given a
portrait of “small, foggy” Saint John, New Brunswick. That’s where, on a
warm July evening in 2011, Richard Oland was brutally murdered in his
office. At first, the visuals seem a bit overstated, but when the
brutality of the murder is made clear, they don’t seem overstated at
all. Then we hear the voice of Dennis Oland saying, “A small-town police
force decided that I killed my father.”
Dennis
Oland immediately became the police’s only suspect. You can see why, at
the beginning of this tangled tale. The story takes place at the
intersection of class, money, power and tricky family dynamics.
Assumptions were made on that basis. There was evidence that Dennis had
visited his father at around the time of death. There was evidence that
Dennis had money troubles. There was history: a successful, abrasive
father having a sometimes-tense relationship with his son.
Dennis Oland, seen here, immediately became the police’s only suspect for the murder of Richard Oland.
Courtesy of Seven Knots Media Inc. / CBC
That son was convicted of second-degree murder and sent to prison. He
insisted on his innocence. After he spent 10 months in prison, the
original verdict was overturned, Dennis Oland was released and a new
trial ordered. That’s the point at which this series really starts.
Series director Deborah Wainwright persuade Dennis Oland, his mother and other
family members to participate in the project. But it’s not just that
access that gives the series depth and force. CBC’s regional resources
and archives are a huge part of it.
By
the end of the first hour, it becomes clear that Dennis Oland’s defence
team has issues with the original police investigation. An
extraordinary number of people wandered through the crime scene. And
that’s not the only suggestion of incompetence. As one of the defence
lawyers says with contempt, “You don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to
think you might check the bathroom to see if the killer cleaned up.”
What arises, as often happens in genuinely gripping true-crime series,
is the possibility that the police had a tunnel-vision approach and
could not be shifted from their first assumption, no matter how much
contrary evidence piled up.
Dennis Oland researches in his own defence.
Courtesy of Seven Knots Media Inc. / CBC
We get to see inside defence team
meetings and hear from local reporters and forensic experts. We witness
the arrival into the story of a woman, allegedly Richard Oland’s
mistress, who was in touch with him on the day of the murder. We hear a
lot about a missing cellphone and where it might have been in the hours
after the crime. What we don’t get is footage from inside the courtroom.
For that, the series uses animation that’s rooted in courtroom
sketches. It takes a while to adapt to this technique but it works.
This
is a gripping, sobering account of a grisly murder, the knotted legal
case that followed and it is insightful about the social landscape of
one very particular part of Canada. All four episodes are available for
streaming on CBC Gem.
With that, I leave you for a few days. Enjoy what you watch, be good to each other and wash your hands often. Back next week.
Editor’s note:
(March 5, 2020): Due to erroneous information from the broadcaster, a
previous version of this review said all four episodes were not yet
available on CBC Gem.
https://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/international/the-suspect/5143636.article
October 9th, 2019
Distributor eOne International Distribution
Producer eOne
Length 4 x 60 minutes
Broadcaster CBC (Canada)
This eOne production, in association with Seven Knots Media, is a true-crime doc that follows the retrial of Dennis Oland, who in 2015 was found guilty of the murder of his millionaire father Richard.
The sixth generation of the family-owned Moosehead Beer dynasty, Richard Oland was a prominent businessman in Nova Scotia with several trucking companies and an investment firm to his name.
Unravelling in the quiet port city of New Brunswick in Canada, the vicious murder of one of the area’s most prominent and wealthy inhabitants captured the national headlines.
This 4 x 60-minute documentary follows Dennis Oland’s retrial, as well as highlighting a justice system broken from its very foundation – it is alleged that once the Saint John Police Department had identified the younger Oland, who owed his father half a million dollars for a loan that bankrolled a divorce from his first wife, as the main suspect, tunnel vision set in and other avenues of investigation could have been missed.
EOne executive vice-president of acquisitions Noel Hedges says the project has finally been revealed after being under a large cloak of secrecy for nearly two years.
Ahead of its TX next February on CBC in Canada, The Suspect will be taken to Mipcom, where Hedges expects to receive attention from SVoD, digital and PSB players.
“The Suspect has the stickiness that the SVoDs like and with the real-life crime aspect and family story, it has global appeal,” says Hedges.
“Real crime sells all over the world and is a popular genre with women. We expect the series to do well in Latin America and Scandinavia, and it will make up a key show within our real-crime slate.”
Producer and distributor eOne has been pushing hard into factual content in recent years after making its name as the vendor of dramas such as The Walking Dead and producer of Rookie Blue, Designated Survivor and Private Eyes.
The company was recently sold to toy firm Hasbro for $4bn (£3.3bn) – a deal that will bolster reserves and allow its executives to double down on premium fare such as The Suspect.
Hedges says the documentary takes viewers through the entire case, digging into the aftermath of the murder and winding a path full of twists and turns up to the retrial and its verdict.
“Richard Oland wasn’t a particularly liked person and came from a community that was relatively poor,” says Hedges. “This series raises questions over the son’s motivation and the police activity. It is a really interesting story, which has plenty of questions left unanswered at the end.”
Richard Oland’s wife had said her husband was never the same after losing a bitter family battle for the helm of Moosehead to his brother. He was described as a “verbally and emotionally” abusive character who had an eight-year affair.
Hedges believes The Suspect is a primetime, primarily post-watershed show that will attract both old and younger audiences as it ticks a lot of boxes in terms of drama, intrigue and scandal.
“This is a ‘did they, didn’t they’ story with labyrinthine complexity and it is very much a premium show,” said Hedges.
https://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/the-oland-murder/dennis-oland-accused-of-his-father-s-brutal-murder-breaks-his-silence-in-new-cbc-true-crime-series-1.5461321
Dennis Oland, accused of his father's brutal murder, breaks his silence in new CBC true crime series
Filmmakers get intimate access to Oland, his family and his defence team as they prepare for retrial
Deborah Wainwright · Posted: Feb 12, 2020 2:01 PM ET
"If the police ever call you in to the police station … just to question you and interview you, don't trust them." It was a quick phone conversation, but one that offered me a lot of insight into what Dennis Oland had been going through over the last five years. "Don't trust a thing they say. Get a lawyer right away." It was 2016, almost a year since Dennis had been convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in one of Canada's most notorious maximum-security prisons. For five years, he hadn't spoken to anyone in the media. But he was talking to me.
The entire Oland family had been close-lipped since the day multimillionaire Richard Oland was found bludgeoned to death, lying face-down in a pool of blood in his office in historic uptown Saint John, N.B. The rules were simple: speak to no one, keep your head down, get through it together.
Because of that, the story had only been told from the outside. And if you asked an Oland, far from accurately. "This idea that there's investigative journalists out there that wanna … tell the truth … that certainly hasn't happened," says Dennis.
So we knew that what we had proposed — letting our cameras inside the Oland front lines — was a big ask. Why would they speak to me? What did I have that the others did not? I think the answer was simple: I'm "from away."
I'm from Vancouver, so prior to working on this film, the Oland name didn't mean much to me. But in the Maritimes, Oland is a very big name. For more than 150 years, the family has been brewing Moosehead beer there. So the murder of Richard Oland was a very big story. And when they arrested his son for the crime, it became huge. "Eyes are on you all the time," says Dennis. "I hear them whispering, 'That's the guy. He killed his father.'" The Oland murder was to become one of the most high-profile cases in Canadian history, and we got to follow the story in real time. It was an unprecedented opportunity.
Dennis Oland meets with his defence team (Seven Knots Media)
We met Dennis's defence counsel for the first time standing outside the appeal court in Fredericton. Dennis was still in prison. Two months later, we were sitting in his lawyer's office in Toronto recording our first interview. We had managed to persuade Dennis, his family and his defence team to give us intimate and exclusive access as they prepared for his retrial.
Telling the story of an ongoing criminal case was something I'd never done before. I knew of no other Canadian documentary that had attempted to do this. It came with tremendous responsibility. The Olands felt that most people had written Dennis off as guilty and that this series could be a way of getting their side of the story out.
But we all knew the rules. The series would report the facts — no matter how uncomfortable they may be for the people involved. They agreed, and I felt privileged. And a little bit scared. The challenge of objective truth-telling became clear as we began to interview people tearfully talking about the effect this case has had on their lives. They've lost a husband, a son, a grandfather, a dad.
If we were going to tell this story in a fair and balanced way, I knew I had to relocate to Saint John. And so, over the last three years, I spent more time in the Maritimes than I did in B.C. During that time, our production team talked our way into defence team meetings and followed investigators as they tracked unexplored leads. We called, requested, begged and cajoled, asking everyone from police and prosecutors to witnesses and journalists for their help in understanding this story. I can only tell the story I'm granted access to and so I'm very grateful to those who opened up.
The often unpredictable nature of our court system was one of the most significant challenges we faced. Motions are brought forward. New evidence has to be considered. All of this meant never knowing when the story we were following would come to its conclusion. And of course, when a case is ongoing, everyone involved is wary. In a criminal trial, the stakes couldn't be higher.
There are humans at the heart of the story, and every important piece of the puzzle cannot be covered in a 500-word news piece.
- Deborah Wainwright, The Oland MurderWe were there, with the camera rolling, as investigators uncovered new leads and the judge rendered important decisions. We drove with the accused to the courthouse to hear his verdict for a second time. It was a humbling opportunity.
While viewers may be split on their feelings about the verdict, I hope that our series encourages them to think critically about the coverage they see of any murder trial. There are humans at the heart of the story, and every important piece of the puzzle cannot be covered in a 500-word news piece.
Deborah Wainwright is the director of The Oland Murder.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgN1_kGp2r4
Interview w Filmmaker Deb Wainwright on CBC Original True Crime Docuseries “The Oland Murder”
83 views
•Premiered Mar 2, 2020
https://gem.cbc.ca/season/the-oland-murder/season-1/7e442dde-2424-4cc1-8818-6e6d324f855f
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https://cfe.ryerson.ca/people/lisa-taylor
The Centre for Free Expression at Ryerson University
Lisa Taylor
Senior Fellow
Assistant Professor and Undergraduate Program Director
School of Journalism, Ryerson University
Throughout her career, Lisa has focused on the intersection of law, ethics and journalism.
She is a former lawyer and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation journalist who teaches journalism law and ethics to undergraduate and graduate students. Lisa’s research interests include state impediments to journalists’ freedom of expression and access to information. She is the co-editor of *The Unfulfilled Promise of Press Freedom in Canada* (University of Toronto Press, 2017), a Senior Fellow with Ryerson University’s Centre for Free Expression and a member of the Canadian Association of Journalists’ ethics advisory committee. She also leads the Canadian Worlds of Journalism study team, an interdisciplinary group that, together with researchers from 70 countries, regularly assesses the state of journalism throughout the world.
Her CBC journalism has been recognized by the Gemini Awards, the Atlantic Journalism Awards and the B’nai Brith Media Human Rights Awards. Her independent documentary production work has been recognized by the Ann Arbor Film Festival, the Atlantic Film Festival and the Yorkton Film Festival.
She holds both an LLB and an LLM from the Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University, where her graduate research focused on sexual assault complainants who face legal impediments when seeking to speak publicly about their experiences.
Lisa is an accomplished teacher who previously lectured at King’s College School of Journalism and Mount Saint Vincent University, both in Halifax. She regularly leads professional development workshops at CBC locations across Canada. In 2015, Lisa received the Faculty of Communication and Design’s Dean’s Teaching Award at Ryerson University.
She is a former lawyer and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation journalist who teaches journalism law and ethics to undergraduate and graduate students. Lisa’s research interests include state impediments to journalists’ freedom of expression and access to information. She is the co-editor of *The Unfulfilled Promise of Press Freedom in Canada* (University of Toronto Press, 2017), a Senior Fellow with Ryerson University’s Centre for Free Expression and a member of the Canadian Association of Journalists’ ethics advisory committee. She also leads the Canadian Worlds of Journalism study team, an interdisciplinary group that, together with researchers from 70 countries, regularly assesses the state of journalism throughout the world.
Her CBC journalism has been recognized by the Gemini Awards, the Atlantic Journalism Awards and the B’nai Brith Media Human Rights Awards. Her independent documentary production work has been recognized by the Ann Arbor Film Festival, the Atlantic Film Festival and the Yorkton Film Festival.
She holds both an LLB and an LLM from the Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University, where her graduate research focused on sexual assault complainants who face legal impediments when seeking to speak publicly about their experiences.
Lisa is an accomplished teacher who previously lectured at King’s College School of Journalism and Mount Saint Vincent University, both in Halifax. She regularly leads professional development workshops at CBC locations across Canada. In 2015, Lisa received the Faculty of Communication and Design’s Dean’s Teaching Award at Ryerson University.
Rogers Communications Centre
80 Gould Street
Toronto, Ontario
cfe@ryerson.ca
(416) 979-5000, ext. 6396
80 Gould Street
Toronto, Ontario
cfe@ryerson.ca
(416) 979-5000, ext. 6396
https://experts.ryerson.ca/lisa-taylor
Award-winning assistant professor Taylor joins tenure stream,
Ma leaves CBC and launches new course, Building the Brand
August 30, 2015
This fall, the Ryerson School of Journalism is fortunate to welcome assistant professor Lisa Taylor to Ryerson’s tenure-stream faculty and Adrian Ma (M.J., Ryerson 2009) as a limited-term professor.
Taylor who has taught has taught nine undergraduate courses at Ryerson, touching all media platforms, and had previously been a limited-term faculty member since 2008. Taylor has won and been nominated for multiple awards for both journalism and teaching, including several honours voted on by journalism students. Most recently, she won the 2015 Ryerson Teaching Award for the Faculty of Communication and Design.
Taylor has been part of the RSJ’s undergraduate-program committee and, in that role, she was one of the leaders in the planning, design and implementation of the new, innovative undergraduate curriculum launching in September.
A member of the Law Society of Upper Canada, the Nova Scotia Barristers’ Society and Ad Idem (the Canadian Association of Media Defence Lawyers), Taylor has always been interested in the intersection of law and journalism. Prior to attending law school at Dalhousie University, she spent a decade with the Canadian Broadcasting Corp in a variety of journalistic roles. Taylor has written extensively on news-media quality and accountability and has been a frequent media presence as an authority on media law and ethics, with particular scholarly interests in accountability systems and news coverage of sexual assault.
Ma is leaving a position as digital producer,
CBC Network Talk for this opportunity. He will teach JRN 305, the
digital news reporting workshop, this fall and in the winter will
coordinate JRN 112, the second-year intro to digital journalism two
courses for which which he has already taught labs or sections over the
past two years. He will also teach, in both semesters, the new course,
JRN 842, Building the Brand.
As an undergraduate at Laurier (B.A. in political science and philosophy), Ma served as the Ontario bureau chief of Canadian University Press. While at Ryerson, he worked the radio room at the Toronto Star. Since his graduation from Ryerson’s M.J. program in 2009, he has been in digital journalism at CBC, working as a senior news writer/media encoder, and social media producer, before taking his current position in 2011.
As an undergraduate at Laurier (B.A. in political science and philosophy), Ma served as the Ontario bureau chief of Canadian University Press. While at Ryerson, he worked the radio room at the Toronto Star. Since his graduation from Ryerson’s M.J. program in 2009, he has been in digital journalism at CBC, working as a senior news writer/media encoder, and social media producer, before taking his current position in 2011.
Lisa Taylor
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Communication and Design School of Journalism
lisa.taylor@ryerson.ca
Office: (416) 735-1026
(416) 979-5000 ext. 7195
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