Skip to main content

Wab Kinew's accuser finally gets to speak. Will NDP delegates hear...



Shamed by The Black Rod, Winnipeg's professional "journalists" finally decided there was something to report about an assault charge Manitoba NDP leadership candidate Wab Kinew didn't mention in his memoir.

These "professionals" sat on their hands for almost three weeks after the revelation that Kinew had been hiding the existence of domestic abuse charges from 2003. Kinew said the charges were dropped because they were false, so the press stopped digging.

Only after The Black Rod questioned why the woman's voice wasn't being heard did the professional journalists stir themselves. Within a day, Steve Lambert of Canadian Press had located the complainant and her story was picked up by the rest of the news herd. And what a story it turned out to be!

“I went to the police because he assaulted me; physically injured (me)." she told Lambert.

Tara Hart is her name. And she isn't backing down an inch on her claim of being assaulted by Kinew. 

She says she lived with him for a year when one day in May, 2003, they got into an argument and he flung her across the room. She landed on her knees so hard she suffered rug burn. She was so scared of him that she packed a single bag and fled the home as soon as she could.  She called the RCMP and he was charged.

He called her three weeks ago when the secret of the domestic abuse charges against him began circulating in Winnipeg to tell her she might be getting calls from reporters. But when he insisted nothing happened between them that night, she hung up on him.

For his part, Kinew declares that Tara Hart is lying. The matter was investigated and the charges were dropped, he says disingenuously.

As we reported, the RCMP did investigate the complaint---and then laid the charges.  Hart says she only made one complaint, but there were two charges. That suggests something she told police in May about an incident in April supported a second charge.  

The details of that incident are still unknown, with Wab Kinew keeping mum and the press asleep.
 
His supporters are twisting themselves into pretzels trying to dismiss Hart's story without joining Wab in actually calling her a liar.

NDP MLA Nahanni Fontaine, the uber-feminist who once denounced a women's shelter for taking money from a fundraiser at a burlesque show, now gladly defends a man accused of assaulting an indigenous woman.  

While she believes the woman, she told CBC, Fontaine is willing to throw her under the bus if it means Kinew will win the NDP leadership, women's solidarity be damned. 

University of Manitoba law professor Karen Busby implied in an interview with CBC (where Wab Kinew was employed, a fact they no longer mention) that maybe there were "inconsistencies" with the complaint against him. That and a reluctance to testify by the complainant are the only two reasons why a charge would be stayed, she said.

Wrong.  As we pointed out in The Black Rod, the guidelines for prosecutors on domestic abuse charges back then were to proceed with trial unless the complainant admitted she lied or refused to go to court. Tara Hart reaffirms that she was assaulted, but says she didn't want to go to court then and wishes the matter would go away now. That's why the charges were stayed.

The legal charges expired 13 years ago, but the matter is now before a jury of public opinion.

Who to believe?

"I've been very open and honest that I was in a  difficult period in my life, when I was in my early 20's" he told a Winnipeg Free Press reporter. "the person who is running to lead the NDP ... is the person that I am today, it's not the man that I was when I was 20 or 21 years old."
 
In his memoir, Kinew says he graduated from the University of Winnipeg in May, 2003, the time of the alleged assault.  He admits that around that time he began a period of behaviour that got him into trouble with the law repeatedly.  Fights, car chases, cashing another man's money order and stealing the money, drunk driving.  He's smartened up, he says, and quit drinking.

But you know what they say about alcohol.  It doesn't make you an asshole; it just magnifies the asshole already in you.

Popular posts from this blog

The unreported bombshell conspiracy evidence in the Trudeau/SNC-Lavelin scandal

Wow. No, double-wow. A game-changing bombshell lies buried in the supplementary evidence provided to the House of Commons Judiciary Committee by former Attorney General Jody Wilson-Raybould. It has gone virtually unreported since she submitted the material almost a week ago. As far as we can find, only one journalist-- Andrew Coyne, columnist for the National Post--- has even mentioned it and even then he badly missed what it meant, burying it in paragraph 10 of a 14 paragraph story. The gist of the greatest political scandal in modern Canadian history is well-known by now. It's bigger than Adscam, the revelation 15 years ago that prominent members of the Liberal Party of Canada and the party itself funneled tens of millions of dollars in kickbacks into their own pockets from federal spending in Quebec sponsoring ads promoting Canadian unity. That was just venal politicians and a crooked political party helping themselves to public money. The Trudeau-Snc-Lavalin scandal is

Crips and Bloodz true cultural anchors of Winnipeg's aboriginal gangs

(Bebo tribute page to Aaron Nabess on the right, his handgun-toting friend on the left) At least six murder victims in Winnipeg in the past year are linked to a network of thuglife, gangster rap-styled, mainly aboriginal street gangs calling themselves Crips and Bloods after the major black gangs of L.A. The Black Rod has been monitoring these gangs for several months ever since discovering memorial tributes to victim Josh Prince on numerous pages on Bebo.com, a social networking website like Myspace and Facebook. Josh Prince , a student of Kildonan East Collegiate, was stabbed to death the night of May 26 allegedly while breaking up a fight. His family said at the time he had once been associated with an unidentified gang, but had since broken away. But the devotion to Prince on sites like Watt Street Bloodz and Kingk Notorious Bloodz (King-K-BLOODZ4Life) shows that at the time of his death he was still accepted as one of their own. Our searches of Bebo have turned up another five ga

Manitoba Hydro is on its deathbed. There, we said it.

Manitoba Hydro is on its deathbed. Oh, you won't find anyone official to say it. Yet . Like relatives trying to appear cheery and optimistic around a loved one that's been diagnosed with terminal cancer, the people in power are in the first stage of grief -- denial. The prognosis for Hydro was delivered three weeks ago at hearings before the Public Utilities Board where the utility was seeking punishingly higher rates for customers in Manitoba. It took us this long to read through the hundred-plus pages of transcript, to decipher the coded language of the witnesses, to interpret what they were getting at, and, finally, to understand the terrible conclusion.  We couldn't believe it, just as, we're sure, you can't--- so we did it all again, to get a second opinion, so to speak.  Hydro conceded to the PUB that it undertook a massive expansion program--- involving three (it was once four) new dams and two new major powerlines (one in the United States)---whi

Nahanni Fontaine, the NDP's Christian-bashing, cop-smearing, other star candidate

As the vultures of the press circle over the wounded Liberal Party of Manitoba, one NDP star candidate must be laughing up her sleeve at how her extremist past has escaped the scrutiny of reporters and pundits. Parachuted into a safe NDP seat in Winnipeg's North End, she nonetheless feared a bruising campaign against a well-heeled Liberal opponent.  Ha ha.  Instead, the sleepy newspeeps have turned a blind eye to her years of vitriolic attacks on Christianity, white people, and police. * She's spent years  bashing Christianity  as the root cause of all the problems of native people in Canada. * She's called for  a boycott of white businesses . * And with her  Marxist research partner, she's  smeared city police as intransigent racists . Step up Nahanni Fontaine, running for election in St. John's riding as successor to the retiring Gord Macintosh. While her male counterpart in the NDP's galaxy of stars, Wab Kinew, has responded to the controversy over

Exposing the CBC/WFP double-team smear of a hero cop

Published since 2006 on territory ceded, released, surrendered and yielded up in 1871 to Her Majesty the Queen and successors forever. Exposing the CBC/FP double-team smear of a hero cop Some of the shoddiest journalism in recent times appeared this long August weekend when the CBC and Winnipeg Free Press doubled teamed on a blatant smear of a veteran city police officer. In the latest example of narrative journalism these media outlets spun stories with total disregard for facts that contradicted the central message of the reports which, simplified, is: police are bad and the system is covering up. Let's start with the story on the taxpayer funded CBC by Sarah Petz that can be summed up in the lead. "A February incident where an off-duty Winnipeg officer allegedly knocked a suspect unconscious wasn't reported to the province's police watchdog, and one criminologist says it shows how flawed oversight of law enforcement can be." There you have it. A policeman, not

Winnipeg needs a new police chief - ASAP

When did the magic die? A week ago the Winnipeg police department delivered the bad news---crime in the city is out of control. The picture painted by the numbers (for 2018) was appalling. Robberies up ten percent in  a single year.  (And that was the good news.) Property crimes were up almost 20 percent.  Total crime was 33 percent higher than the five year average. The measure of violent crime in Winnipeg had soared to a rating of 161.  Only four years earlier it stood at 116. That's a 38 percent deterioration in safety. How did it happen? How, when in 2015 the police and Winnipeg's police board announced they had discovered the magic solution to crime? "Smart Policing" they called it.    A team of crime analysts would pore through data to spot crime hot-spots and as soon as they identified a trend (car thefts, muggings, liquor store robberies) they could call in police resources to descend on the problem and nip it. The police