8.5 Years in Jail for Driving, HPV Vaccine dispute, and a Driving Appeal by 80 Year Old

8.5 Years in Jail for Driving, HPV Vaccine dispute, and a Driving Appeal by 80 Year Old

What happens when the law collides with contentious family decisions and public safety? Join us as we sit down with Michael Mulligan, a barrister and solicitor from Mulligan Defence Lawyers, to dissect a variety of complex legal scenarios. From the stringent criteria required to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada to a severe sentence handed down in Ontario for driving while disqualified, we explore the heavy legal consequences that can arise from repeated offences. This episode sheds light...

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Episoder(311)

When Police Records Disappear

When Police Records Disappear

A province says a police misconduct record is sealed and destroyed. The Supreme Court of Canada says a fair trial can’t work that way. We walk through a major ruling on criminal disclosure and why it ...

9 Jul 21min

Aboriginal Title And The Future Of Private Land

Aboriginal Title And The Future Of Private Land

A court ruling can change more than a headline, it can change how safe you feel about the basics: owning property and trusting the people who handle your money. We walk through a remarkable British Co...

2 Jul 20min

When Governments Write The Rules To Sue

When Governments Write The Rules To Sue

A province suing over opioids is one thing. A province passing a statute that makes it easier for itself to sue, then launching a sweeping class action on that foundation, is something else entirely. ...

25 Jun 20min

What Counts As A Right When There’s Nowhere To Sleep

What Counts As A Right When There’s Nowhere To Sleep

A city changes a bylaw, two parks get added to a no-camping list, and suddenly the real question isn’t “is this fair?” but “who has the legal power to decide?” We walk through a fresh BC Supreme Court...

19 Jun 19min

Punitive Damages For Political Firing

Punitive Damages For Political Firing

A public servant gives three decades to the province, then gets fired without cause on the very day a government is about to fall. The BC Supreme Court doesn’t just disagree with how it was handled, i...

12 Jun 21min

When Poker Winnings Become Taxable

When Poker Winnings Become Taxable

A million-dollar poker run sounds like the ultimate loophole, until the CRA decides it looks like a job. We talk with criminal defence lawyer Michael Mulligan about a Supreme Court of Canada leave dec...

4 Jun 22min

Camp Thunderbird Gate Fight And A 15-Year Lawsuit Over A Supposed Public Road

Camp Thunderbird Gate Fight And A 15-Year Lawsuit Over A Supposed Public Road

A locked gate at a kids’ camp sounds like a small-town nuisance until you trace it back to 1935 and forward to a trial date in 2027. We dig into a Greater Victoria dispute where companies say a histor...

28 Mai 21min

The Supreme Court Of Canada Just Opened A New Door To Sue Your Ex

The Supreme Court Of Canada Just Opened A New Door To Sue Your Ex

A single Supreme Court of Canada decision can quietly change the ground rules for thousands of breakups, and this one just did. We unpack the Court’s creation of a new tort tied to intimate partner vi...

21 Mai 21min

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