Calgary Herald

Former boss of the Vancouver Olympics says he’s been vindicated

- CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD

Beverly Mary Abraham, Grace Jessie West and Daniel Morice: let their names stand as stark evidence of the kid- glove treatment so often given the modern accuser.

In 2013, these three aboriginal people filed civil lawsuits against former Vancouver Olympics boss John Furlong, alleging, in the most lurid detail, how he had sexually and physically abused them while they were students at Immaculata Elementary school in Burns Lake, B. C., and he was a young volunteer teacher.

This week, the last of the suits — Morice’s — was dismissed by B. C. Supreme Court Justice Elliott Myers.

As it turns out, Morice received $ 120,822 from Ottawa in compensati­on for similar abuse allegedly committed by another man at a residentia­l school in a different town during the same time period he claimed in the civil suit that Furlong had been abusing him.

The money was paid out as part of the Indian Residentia­l Schools Settlement Agreement, the largest class- action agreement in Canadian history.

That was just the most significan­t problem with Morice’s credibilit­y: he also has a long criminal record, mostly for offences of dishonesty, didn’t bother even to show up for court on Monday, and once even left a voice mail for Furlong’s lawyer, threatenin­g that “there’s some natives that want to lay a beating” on Furlong.

Late last year, Abraham dropped her suit, by consent and without explanatio­n, after her lawyer, Jason Gratl, withdrew ( he once represente­d the three claimants but in the end withdrew from all the suits), while West’s case was tossed in February by Supreme Court Justice Miriam Gropper, who concluded that on the evidence, West “did not ever attend Immaculata.”

Yet to the bitter end, the three accusers were still being protected by not all, but surely some, of the press, their names not used or only sparingly. No one dared suggest they had any misconduct for which to answer.

In any case that limited publicity, such as it was, is the only sanction they will ever face.

As Furlong said Tuesday in a statement, “It is extraordin­ary and unacceptab­le that anyone can make ruinous, toxic allegation­s against a citizen, put them on the public record via the courts and then abandon them with impunity, seemingly without consequenc­es and leaving untold damage and pain behind.

“How can this be acceptable? More importantl­y, how did it even happen?”

Increasing­ly, Canadian institutio­ns are showing themselves as unable or unwilling to recognize that Furlong’s situation is far from unique, let alone do anything about it.

His particular nightmare unfolded in the civil courts, where even the basic winnowingo­ut function of prosecutor­ial decision- making — prosecutor­s must satisfy themselves that a charge has a “reasonable prospect of conviction” either, depending on the province, before laying it or proceeding — is absent.

The best recourse to salvaging a ruined reputation remains, on the civil side, the defamation suit.

Furlong has dropped his against the Georgia Straight journalist whose September 2012 story appears to have animated the three accusers to file suit ( one, Abraham, was quoted in that piece, though sexual abuse wasn’t alleged at that time), he said because of exhaustion, his need to start living again, and because he considers himself effectivel­y cleared.

But defamation suits are “not very satisfacto­ry” anyway, says Gavin MacKenzie, a Toronto lawyer whose practice focuses on profession­al responsibi­lity and ethics.

There are three key problems: the enormous costs of pursuing a suit are rarely matched by the modest damages awarded; the trial itself has the effect of republishi­ng the libel and breathing fresh life into it; and in an anonymous Internet age, tracking down alleged offenders is often difficult and sometimes fruitless.

On the criminal side, alleged victims of sexual assault routinely have their names protected by court- ordered publicatio­n ban; all they have to do is ask.

I covered part of a trial last year where two Toronto doctors were charged with gang sexual assault and drugging, and there, the names of the complainan­t, another woman and a female witness were all duly protected. The only names the media could publish were the names of the two men attached to the most awful allegation­s.

The men were acquitted but, thanks to the web, their infamy lives forever.

As for non- judicial institutio­ns, the situation is even worse.

From Parliament, where two Liberal MPs got the boot and saw their political careers ruined because of allegation­s informally made by two female NDP MPs still not named, to Canadian universiti­es ( from the University of Ottawa, where the men’s hockey program has been suspended for two seasons, its coach fired, and among the players punished are some who weren’t even in the same city where a single alleged criminal incident took place, to Dalhousie’s fourth- year dental students punished for making offensive remarks on a Facebook page in the complete absence of victims), there is growing evidence that the mere levelling of an allegation of any sort of sexual impropriet­y is enough to destroy a career, and a life.

And the press, the vaunted fourth estate, mostly adheres to the convention­s of the day. And one of them now is that accusers, especially if they are female or native or from an otherwise marginaliz­ed group, must be believed. Poor John Furlong. I watched the video where he read his prepared statement. He looked frail, drained and so sad, the newest member of that club no one wants to join.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? John Furlong pauses for a moment after addressing the media from his lawyer’s office in Vancouver on Tuesday. Furlong says he has been vindicated by the courts after the last of three sexual abuse lawsuits was thrown out Monday.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS John Furlong pauses for a moment after addressing the media from his lawyer’s office in Vancouver on Tuesday. Furlong says he has been vindicated by the courts after the last of three sexual abuse lawsuits was thrown out Monday.
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