Lawyer Inquiry
How an award-winning Canadian police department was ripped apart, and four honest cops' lives destroyed, by a crackpot conspiracy theory, dishonest journalism, and opportunistic political activists.
If there is a police officer in your life that you care about, this is a case study you need to be aware of. If you care about police officers in your life – yourself, your colleagues, your family, friends, neighbours, or even the law enforcement officer who just gave you a speeding ticket – you owe it to them to click this link and spend five minutes reading the truth about the real injustice that was perpetrated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
This is the tragic story of how an international award-winning police department was torn apart, its reputation irreparably damaged, by a couple of crackpot news reporters who became obsessed with a far-fetched conspiracy theory. Two decorated police officers – both of whom had received multiple commendations, including commendations for saving the lives of native children – went to prison, literally for failure to arrest a native man when they had every justification to do so; two others were unfairly accused by the media of murder, and fired due to public pressure despite compelling evidence of their innocence, even though they were never charged or tried; and a courageous investigative reporter who tried to tell the truth has been blacklisted, boycotted, demonized, cancelled, threatened, and ignored by the mainstream media.
THIS IS A TRAGIC STORY.LIVES WERE DESTOYED WHILE MEDIA SPREAD DISINFORMATION
For years, efforts to right this wrong through the Canadian courts have proven futile. Political pressure from special interest groups with a vested interest in maintaining the fiction, combined with activist social media and an increasingly anti-police bias in the mainstream media, have resulted in a shutdown and blackout on the evidence showing the Saskatoon police to be innocent of any wrongdoing.
The only hope for justice at this time appears to lie in courts outside of Canada. To this end, we are proposing to sue Wikipedia for libel, on the grounds that their editors have knowingly published false and defamatory information about former constables Larry Hartwig, Brad Senger, Ken Munson, and Dan Hatchen, and about the Saskatoon Police Service.
We would, therefore, like to find a lawyer who is willing to provide initial pro bono advice on the feasibility of this idea and how to proceed with it, and an estimate of the funds needed to conduct such a lawsuit. We are also looking at a crowdfunding campaign, aimed at police and police sympathizers who agree that it is in all our interests, as a civilized society, to push back against those who unfairly defame and vilify the police. We welcome any input from all sympathetic readers.