FORMER MINISTER SUES BROADCASTER OVER ONLINE GAMING
PROGRAM
20 April 2007
Claim that reputation ruined by CBC program in
2001
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is currently being
sued for libel by former Canadian government minister
Doug Lewis, who alleges that his reputation was ruined
by a negative program on Internet gambling aired in
2001.
After a distinguished political career in which he
served as Minister of Justice in 1988, Minister of
Transport in 1990, and Solicitor General of Canada in
1991, Lewis returned to private life and in 2001 was the
chairman and shareholder of Oxford Software Developers
Inc.
The company licensed off-shore Internet gambling sites
such as Tropical Casino, and became the subject of a
program by the broadcaster in which Lewis was
interviewed and claimed that the offshore website would
block Canadians from gambling.
The former minister now claims that CBC staff, including
news anchor Peter Mansbridge and reporter Sasa Petricic,
ruined his reputation in the subsequent broadcast about
the "evils of internet gambling in Canada."
The report, aired on Canada Now and The National on June
27, 2001, claimed that while internet gambling is
illegal in Canada [ed. note - an arguable statement], at
least one website, the offshore Tropical Casino licensed
by Lewis' company, allowed Canadians to log on and make
bets with a credit card.
Defending the program, the broadcaster's lawyer Jonathan
Lisus said Monday: "This broadcast was about that
paradox. It's a big problem in society, and Canadians
had a right to know."
In the program CBC reporter Petricic claimed he was able
to log on to the Tropical Casino website, place a bet on
the Toronto Blue Jays with his credit card, and received
his winnings of $20 which was sent to the CBC
Parliamentary Bureau in Ottawa a week later.
For the plaintiff, Lewis' lawyer, Peter Waldman, told
the court that the $20 was not winnings, but rather a
"refund" that was sent back to Petricic when it was
noticed he was a Canadian. "Petricic was caught,"
Waldman said. "That's why his money was refunded. The
defendant has made my client out to be a liar and the
public needs to know that this defamation was false and
wrong."
Lisus scoffed at the suggestion, and stated Lewis became
upset after the broadcast because he had thought it
would be a "puff piece" about his business.
The case continues this week.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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