Canadian True Crime - Bruce Lorenz [1]
Episode Date: November 22, 2024ONTARIO[Part 1 of 2 ] On a dark icy evening at a suburban Toronto subway station, a parking lot attendant came across an odd sight: protruding out of the driver’s side window of a tan Mustang, was a... pair of legs.They belonged to a 36-year-old lawyer. And he was dead. The investigation that ensued uncovered a deadly tale of sex, lies, betrayal and corruption, that would be called Canada’s version of “Double Indemnity”.The intention of this series is to take a look back at a shocking crime sensationalized through headlines and reveal the inner workings of the criminal justice system.If you happen to know anyone related to this case, please respect their privacy.Special thanks to Barbara Cooper, and Erik Krosby for voiceover, and Terry O’Reilly of CBC Podcasts’ Under the Influence with Terry O’Reilly (in Part 2).Part 2 will be released to all in a week.Listen early and ad-free now:Part 2 is available right now for premium feed subscribers on Amazon Music (included with Prime), Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast.Podcast recommendation:We Regret To Inform You: The Rejection Podcast from Apostrophe Podcast Network. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.Full list of resources, information sources, credits and music credits:See the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, and welcome back to Canadian True Crime.
This is part one of a two part series.
It's a deadly tale of sex, lies, betrayal and corruption.
A case considered so sensational that onlookers lined up around the block to score a seat at the 10 week trial in Toronto.
The non-stop courtroom drama did not disappoint. the block to score a seat at the 10-week trial in Toronto.
The non-stop courtroom drama did not disappoint.
Neither did the unexpected twist.
This episode has been pieced together from the news archives of the Toronto Star, which
covered this case extensively.
We've also relied on the incredible behind the scenes insights of famed Canadian criminal
defence lawyer Edward Greenspan in several publications including his 1987 book Greenspan
the case for the defence.
Part 2 will be released in a week and for everyone listening on our premium feeds on
Amazon Music included with Prime, Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast, it's
available right now.
So with that, it's on with the show.
On Monday, March 20th of 1978, a parking lot attendant at a suburban Toronto subway station
set out on his early evening rounds.
Warden station is located in the city's east end near the Scarborough suburbs
and is a drop-off point for commuters working downtown.
Just after 6.30pm on that dark, icy evening,
the station's parking lot attendant came across an odd sight.
Protruding out of the driver's side window of a tan Mustang
was a pair of legs belonging to a tall man.
One leg was bent, the other straight up in the air.
The parking lot attendant assumed
the man was fixing something under his dashboard
and carried on with his rounds.
He wasn't the only one.
Several other drivers in the parking lot saw the same odd sight, that pair of men's
legs protruding out of the driver's side window.
Some of them said they also saw a second man standing on the other side of the car,
who seemed to be helping the man into the front seat.
It was dark outside so visibility wasn't great,
but they speculated it was probably just a drunk driver sleeping it off.
When the parking lot attendant came back around to the scene, he was spooked by the fact that the pair of legs hadn't moved in an hour.
He alerted his supervisor who took a closer look. The man up, with a pair of long legs hanging out the window.
Here's how they described it, quote, clutching a bloodstained wad of tissue paper. There were many bloodstains on the interior of the car.
The door on the driver's side was partly open and the key was in the ignition.
A briefcase and a newspaper were lying on the back seat.
The victim wore a gold watch, his wallet containing $200,
as well as a check and some credit cards still in his pocket.
There was no weapon to be seen anywhere in or around the car.
There was a lot of blood, a pool of it where the man's head was.
The console of the car between the bucket seats was filled and overflowing with blood.
There was also blood on the outside of the car and drops on the pavement.
It was an icy night and the police came to the conclusion that this man had likely
stepped on some ice in the parking lot and fell to the ground where he sustained a grave head wound.
fell to the ground where he sustained a grave head wound. He then tried to make his way into the front seat of his car, but he succumbed to his injuries. The victim was a 36-year-old real
estate lawyer named Bruce Lorenz. Police drove to the Scarborough address listed in his wallet.
a Garbaro address listed in his wallet. There, they met his wife, 33-year-old Laura Lee Lorenz,
and broke the news that her husband had died
of a tragic accident.
They handed her all his belongings,
the wallet and his watch, glasses, briefcase, and pen.
A friend visiting Laura Lee at the time
said she seemed shocked. She sat down
at a table and muttered, I don't believe it. Deciding it was an accident was not the
last mistake police would make in this case. It wouldn't even be the worst one. After the police delivered the bad news to Laura Lee Lorenz, a morgue attendant examining
her husband's body discovered something both the police and the coroner had missed.
As the attendant felt underneath the blood-encrusted head. He discovered a small hole behind the victim's ear.
Bruce Lorenz had not stumbled and died.
He'd been shot in the head with what looked like a.22 caliber bullet.
The police made their way back to Laura Lee's house to correct their mistake and retrieve
her husband's personal belongings,
because now they were looking at a murder investigation.
What they didn't know was that Laura Lee had already picked up the phone twice.
First, she called her husband's brother Brian, who also happened to be a police officer with
the nearby city of Woodaloo.
He would tell Toronto investigators that Laura Lee told him that Bruce had been shot dead.
It was an odd statement for Laura Lee to make, since the police hadn't yet returned to let her
know that Bruce had in fact been shot dead. They'd only told her that her husband's death was an accident.
The second person Laura Lee Lorenz spoke to on the phone that night
was a man named Gordon Allen.
Investigators would soon learn that Gordon had once been Laura Lee's boyfriend.
In fact, a few years earlier she left her husband
Bruce for him. Laura Lee and Gordon lived together for almost two years but the
relationship soured and she decided to reconcile with her husband and now he
was dead. A sordid tale was beginning to emerge, as well as a possible motive for the murder of
Bruce Lorenz.
But as the investigation proceeded, everyone would make a series of bad decisions, including
Laura Lee Lorenz, Gordon Allen starts three years earlier in 1975 in a dark bar along Toronto's airport strip.
It was a seedy, glittery stretch of road on the western outskirts of the city, a mix of motels, nightclubs and strip bars. The area attracted a transient crowd,
mostly pilots, flight attendants and businessmen in town during brief layovers.
Gordon Allen was in the last category.
He was an insurance agent who worked for his father's insurance agency in the town of Orillia,
almost two hours drive north of Toronto.
A confirmed bachelor in his early 30s at the time, Gordon often travelled back and forth from
Toronto and Montreal, and he frequented those airport bars. One night an attractive blonde
nurse caught his eye. Her name was Laura Lee Lorenz,
and she was 30 years old at the time.
Almost immediately, they began a torrid affair.
Gordon knew that Laura Lee had been married
to a Toronto lawyer for almost 10 years at the time.
They had two young sons and owned a house
in the city of Mississauga in the Greater
Toronto area. He also knew her marriage was an unhappy one. Laura Lee spilled her heart out to
Gordon, telling him that her husband Bruce had a volatile temper, that he was disappointed that
they couldn't have children of their own. He had a hard time accepting his adopted sons,
especially their second son,
who they only recently adopted and was still a baby.
It appeared that Bruce Lorenz was so distracted by his work
and disconnected from his sons
that he had little to no idea he was losing his family. Laura Lee was able to accompany Gordon on business trips to Montreal
and even introduced him to her sons, who she said loved spending time with him.
Gordon also introduced Laura Lee to some of his own family members.
By the following summer, Laura Lee's marriage to Bruce
Lorenz was officially over and he moved out of their home. Then Gordon Allen
moved in. Even though Laura Lee never filed for divorce from Bruce, she
changed her last name to Allen and the boys began to call Gordon Dad. By most accounts, Bruce Lorenz took the separation hard,
but was pragmatic about it and got on with his life.
He and Laura Lee sold their Mississauga home,
but stayed in close contact with an amicable relationship.
She took her share of the money from the sale
and invested it in a franchise for a furniture
refurbishing company, naming herself as director and her boyfriend Gordon Allen as president.
Bruce agreed to help the new couple out with the legal work for their company.
Laura Lee and Gordon purchased a new house in Toronto, and for a while everything seemed okay.
The new couple had made it through the volatility of their affair, the end of Laura Lee's marriage to Bruce Lorenz,
the sale of her house, starting up a business and forging a new blended life with the children.
life with the children. Bruce Lorenz's life meanwhile wasn't as rosy. He spent time in a rooming house and eventually bought a house for himself in Scarborough
close to the Warden subway station in the East End of Toronto. The same station
where he would be found dead just a few years later.
Bruce Lorenz had put his hand in the ring for a much-coveted partnership at his law firm.
When he was denied the promotion, he blamed it on his separation from Laura Lee.
The firm wanted family men as partners, and he had lost his wife to another man.
Around this time, Laura Lee and Gordon's new business started failing.
The honeymoon was over and real life was coming for them.
The stress of it caused them to argue a lot.
Then their franchise's parent company went bankrupt, leaving them with a
hefty $22,000 debt and a lot of legal issues. Bruce Lorenz was called in to help the woman
who was still technically his wife and her new boyfriend to sort through the mess. Before long, he and Laura Lee were speaking daily about various business and legal issues.
They were getting along well compared to her relationship with Gordon, which was now strained.
When the couple eventually had to file for bankruptcy themselves,
they were arguing constantly, mostly over money.
They had to start from scratch.
Gordon would say that Laura Lee, as a lawyer's wife, had grown accustomed to living a certain
lifestyle and having to be on a budget bothered her.
Then, almost two years after they first moved in together, Gordon returned home to find Laura Lee packing her bags.
She told him she and the kids were moving back in with her mother
until she could get back on her feet.
Within a few months, Laura Lee Lorenz had in fact reunited with her husband, Bruce,
and the family was now living together at his Scarborough home.
Gordon Allen would later say he believed it was a business decision, that Laura Lee didn't love
her husband Bruce anymore but reunited with him so that he would make partner at his firm.
It was for financial security, he said. But Bruce Lorenza's parents told a different story.
So did his co-workers.
As far as they knew, this was a happy time for the reunited couple.
The Gordon Allen era was over, and Bruce and Laura Lee were keen on repairing their marriage
and raising their two young sons together.
repairing their marriage and raising their two young sons together.
But as the months ticked by, Laurelis claimed that her husband began to sour on her.
As she would later tell the court, quote, Bruce was just not happy with me as a person,
as a woman, especially as a lawyer's wife.
He seemed to think I could do better than I was doing. It came to a point where I was being compared
to a lot of women that Bruce had gone out with
when we were separated.
By September of 1977, Laura Lee felt their marriage
had begun to deteriorate again.
So she reached out to her old boyfriend, Gordon Allen, for comfort and reass, again. So she reached out to her old boyfriend Gordon Allen for comfort and reassurance, again.
They began to talk three or four times a week. Laura Lee claimed it was because they were still
dealing with the aftermath of their failed business and bankruptcy, and her husband knew about their contact because he was also helping them out with
legal issues. But it was more than that.
She was also reportedly spending weekends with Gordon in Irelia,
sometimes even bringing their sons.
When she had to have a routine surgery,
he visited her in hospital several times.
Although Laura Lee's reunion with Bruce wasn't going very well, they had booked a two-week
family vacation in Florida that was coming up fast. Bruce approached his bosses at the law firm
about the partnership again and was told he'd
get an answer when he got back from vacation.
This was early March of 1978.
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The Lorenz family returned to Toronto from their two-week vacation in Florida on a Sunday night.
The next morning was Monday, March 20th of 1978, a day that would be scrutinized for years to come.
Bruce Lorenz parked his 1976 Mustang at Warden Station and caught the subway downtown to work, anxious to hear his law firm's decision
about becoming a partner. But it was bad news again. Having the appearance of an intact family
did not help his cause and his bid was rejected for a second time. Crushed, he phoned Laura Lee at home and gave her the bad news.
She would say she suggested he get a drink with friends after work to blow off steam.
She then called a close friend of her own to come over for dinner that night.
Bruce Lorenz left work shortly after 5.30pm and headed to the Osgood station downtown to catch
the subway home.
Apparently, he'd decided not to get that drink.
A co-worker from his firm walked to the train station with him and told police that as they
entered the train station, Bruce saw a man he knew on a payphone there and called out hello.
The co-worker said she'd never seen the man on the payphone before, so it didn't mean
anything to her, but she recalled he had freckles, reddish-coloured hair and wore a light-coloured
coat.
She walked away slowly as she overheard the man commenting on Bruce's Florida tan.
She then watched them get on the subway car travelling north.
Bruce the Renz would typically switch over to the intersecting subway line, which took him east to
the Scarborough suburbs, specifically Warden Station, where he parked his car. Bruce would have arrived at Warden Station
somewhere between 6.05 and 6.15pm that evening.
At around 6.40pm, other drivers in that parking lot
saw that odd scene on the front seat of the Mustang,
one man lying across the driver's seat
and the other outside the car on of the Mustang, one man lying across the driver's seat and the other outside
the car on the passenger side, who seemed to be leaning into the car.
To them, it didn't seem sinister, it looked like the man was helping his sick or drunk
friend into the vehicle.
As for the man's appearance, it was dark outside, so they could only describe him as having light-coloured hair
and wearing a trench coat or overcoat that was light or tan in colour.
It was shortly after that that the parking lot attendant
spotted the two legs belonging to Bruce Lorenz
protruding from the driver's side window.
The police wondered, could this man with the light-coloured hair
in the parking lot be the same man with reddish hair seen with
Bruce Lorenz about 45 minutes earlier as he caught the subway
home after work?
And further, could this man have been Gordon Allen,
Laura Lee's ex-boyfriend?
The police certainly thought so.
The first thing they did was surreptitiously take photos of Gordon Allen to show Bruce
Lorenz's co-worker and asked her if he looked like the man she saw on the subway
platform talking to Bruce.
A positive identification would have been grounds enough for an arrest, but because
the photos were only black and white, his hair looked dark brown.
The co-worker was uncertain if it was the same man. Police also wired up Gordon Allen's
roommate, hoping that he'd be able to get Gordon to admit to the murder. He didn't.
Then they placed a wiretap on Laura Lee's phone and accessed her phone records
from the last few months as well as Gordon Allen's. For a couple who had
broken up, there had been an astonishing
amount of contact between them. They spoke almost daily even while Laura Lee was in Florida with
Bruce and the kids right before he was murdered. After wiretapping her phone one of the first calls
police intercepted between Laura Lee and Gordon
concerned Bruce's funeral. The two could be heard agreeing that Gordon should not attend
for the sake of appearances. In another call recorded a few days after the funeral,
Gordon checks in on Laura Lee after a visit by two police officers newly assigned to this case.
We've used actors to dramatise the wiretaps edited for length. Pardon? Are you getting a lot of heat? Oh, yeah. Pretty severe? No.
No, are you sure?
Yeah.
Is anyone concerned why you haven't gotten in touch?
I can't say very much.
You know.
Your parents?
Yeah.
Three weeks later, police recorded another call
that began with a warning from Laura Lee.
Well, just be careful.
Pardon?
You know, don't lay anything on too thick, you know.
I can't hear what you're saying.
Well, it's the best I can do right now.
How about I call you Wednesday morning, okay?
Yeah, okay, sure.
Okay, and I won't say anything, you know, thick. Apt to upset.
Pardon?
I won't say anything that's apt to upset.
The officers assigned to lead the investigation were Staff Sergeant Gerald Stevenson and Sergeant Robert McClain.
They had honed in on Gordon Allen as their only suspect almost from the beginning.
They weren't certain if Laura Lee Lorenz played a role in her husband's murder, but
they kept a close eye on her too. The two investigators tried a few different tactics
to break them or get them to turn on each other. At one point they told Laura Lee that she was a suspect but not Gordon.
Then they told Gordon that he was the suspect. The couple did not bite. In other taped calls with
various people, Laura Lee was often heard insisting that Gordon Allen wouldn't hurt a fly.
She maintained that their affair was a thing of the past and that Gordon wasn't jealous
of her husband Bruce.
Quite the opposite.
Laura Lee told everyone that Gordon had fully accepted that it was over between them and
knew that she was in love with her husband.
And Gordon always maintained his innocence too. He told police he was in Orillia the whole time, almost two hours drive north of Toronto
and therefore nowhere near the murder scene.
But investigators Stevenson and McLean were not buying it.
In all, they had records of more than 130 calls between Gordon Allen and Laura Lee Lorenz in the months leading up to Bruce's murder and in the days after.
Then there were the calls on the actual day of the murder.
Laura Lee called Gordon that morning, and later that night at around 9.30, she received a call from him.
Some of the evidence they had was beyond circumstantial.
During one of the searches of Gordon Allen's home, they found a curious remote-controlled device
often used to power electrical cars or trains or detonate bombs from a distance.
Investigators were still looking for the actual murder weapon, The police learned some very interesting information from Bruce's death. Bruce's death was a very short time, and it was only a few minutes.
The police were able to identify the bullet, and the bullet was found in the middle of Bruce's head.
The bullet was found in the middle of Bruce's head, and the bullet was found in the middle of Bruce's head.
The bullet was found in the middle of Bruce's head, and the bullet was found in the middle of Bruce's head. unconsciousness and death within 30 to 90 seconds. The police learned some very
interesting information from Bruce Lorenza's brother. Apparently Bruce had
been loaned a 22 caliber firearm from his father which was missing but they
never found any weapons during any of the searches of Gordon Allen's home.
Perhaps the most important item they did find there was a credit card receipt for a gas
purchase dated the same day that Bruce Lorenz was murdered.
While Gordon Allen claimed that he was north in Arillia all that day, almost two hours
drive from Toronto, the receipt, which had been signed by him,
indicated that he filled his car with gas at a gas station in Downsview, a northwest Toronto
neighbourhood. It appeared that Gordon Allen was definitely not in Arilia all day. The only detail
that wasn't on the receipt
was the time of the transaction
because nothing was electronic back then.
The gas station had to go through the sequence of receipts
from that day to identify and track down customers
who purchased gas before and after Gordon.
This placed Gordon Allen at the Downsview gas station in North Toronto
in the rough window between 5.45 p.m. and 7.10 p.m. Bruce the Renz was murdered at
around 6.40 p.m. at Warden station more than 20 kilometers southeast from
Downsview and even further away from Arillia.
With a vague 90-minute window of time, it was difficult for police to confidently place
Gordon Allen at the crime scene, but at the very least it proved he had lied about his
whereabouts that day, and perhaps that was more telling than anything.
And perhaps that was more telling than anything.
As for evidence against Laura Lee Lorenz, it was all circumstantial. Remember that call she made to her brother-in-law telling him Bruce had been shot dead before the police even knew it?
That was problematic, but still circumstantial. Bruce Lorenzo's secretary at his law firm told investigators that the day after the murder,
while the office was still reeling from the news, Laura Lee called her.
After crying together for a few minutes, Laura Lee asked if her newly deceased husband had signed the new will he'd had drawn up during their Florida vacation.
The secretary said the will was still sitting unsigned in his inbox and described Laura Lee's
reaction as sounding shocked, quote, he hadn't signed it yet? It was a strange comment for her to make less than 24 hours after his murder, especially
since that will made Laura Lee the major beneficiary of her husband's estate.
Then there was the sheer volume of calls between two people who swore their relationship was
over. Other witnesses told
police a different story of a couple still in love who spent weekends together. If these
two were lying about the true nature of their relationship, what else were they hiding?
The investigators had something up their sleeve, one last thing they could try to get a reaction.
They served Gordon Allen with an affidavit that had been signed by Laura Lee Lorenz,
where she claimed Gordon was still in love with her, in fact, that he was obsessed with her.
The affidavit indicated Laura Lee had tried to convince Gordon to leave her alone because she was in love with her husband again, and that he responded by making death threats against her and the children if she mentioned anything about his feelings for her to the police.
Gordon Allen read the affidavit, then looked out the window of the police cruiser.
He allegedly muttered something like,
I didn't think she'd turn on me.
Sergeant Stevenson told Gordon, quote,
In my opinion, the woman you loved and still do, she put you up to it.
According to the investigator, Gordon indicated that he understood the point,
but all he would say in response was quote,
This is really heavy and some of it is not true. I never made any threats to her life. That's not true.
Obsession and threats, that's heavy. I think I'd better get some counsel before I say anything."
Gordon was correct in his assessment.
Laura Lee had never said those things,
let alone signed an affidavit.
The whole thing was entirely made up,
another stunt that would later backfire on the police
in spectacular fashion.
After that, the police decided they had enough to arrest Gordon
Allen and Laura Lee Lorenz, and both were charged with the
first degree murder of Bruce Lorenz.
The news of the arrests made the front page of the Toronto Star,
and the story included a close-up shot of Laura Lee
Lorenz's face. Her blonde hair is wrapped up in a stylish headscarf and she's
laughing in the photo. For the duration of the upcoming trial, photos of Laura Lee
Lorenz would appear regularly in the papers, complete with detailed
descriptions of her outfit of the day.
On one occasion, she was in a flattering A-line dress and high heels, her blonde bangs flipped
Farrah Fawcett style.
Other times she's encased in a full length fur coat, usually on the arm of her defence
lawyer Clayton Powell. At the time, he was gearing up to defend Keith Richards on charges of possessing heroin,
stemming from a year earlier when the Rolling Stones toured Toronto.
But Clayton Powell had already established a reputation for himself for successfully
prosecuting the owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Harold Ballard.
Six years earlier in 1972, Ballard had been found guilty of fraud, theft and tax evasion
after he used funds from Maple Leaf Gardens Limited
to fund renovations for his home and cottage as well as other personal purchases.
So, Laura Lee Lorenz was represented by Clayton Powell.
Gordon Allen had hired his own legendary defence lawyer, Edward Greenspan.
You've heard his name on this podcast before.
A few years after the Bruce Lorenz murder, he would successfully defend
Antonio Scopoliti,
the Italian immigrant who shot and killed two teenagers
robbing his convenience store in Orillia.
The landmark case would end up
before the Supreme Court of Canada,
forming a new precedent known as Scopoliti evidence,
which later came into play
with the Darcy Allen Shepherd case.
And after Scopeledi, Edward Greenspan defended Helmuth Buxbaum, the high-profile
millionaire nursing home operator in southwest Ontario who hired a hit man to kill his wife.
The murder of Bruce the Renz happened several years before those cases in 1978.
And at the time, Edward Greenspan had just defended wealthy real estate magnate Peter Demeter
in a high profile trial where he was convicted of arranging the murder of his wife.
And now, the 35-year-old lawyer was going to defend Gordon Allen charged with the first degree murder of his girlfriend's husband.
Edward Greenspan and Clayton Powell were working together to represent their respective clients, Gordon Allen and Laura Lee Lorenz. They got the couple out of jail on $100,000 bonds, on the condition that they not have any contact with each other in the months before the trial.
Then, the lawyers began to assemble a joint defense.
For Edward Greenspan, Top of Mind was establishing an alibi for Gordon Allen to combat the gas receipt. It was the most damning bit of evidence
the Crown had against him because it placed him in Toronto
during the approximate timeframe of the murder
and proved that he had lied to the police
about being in Irelia the whole day.
Gordon admitted the lie to his lawyer
but said he had a good explanation for it.
He actually had a date with a Toronto woman that same night.
Gordon portrayed himself as an active bachelor and explained that in the days before Bruce
Lorenzo's murder, he met a woman at a dance in Irelia.
He took her number and they made plans for a tentative coffee date in Toronto the following
Monday night, which happened to be the exact same
evening that Bruce Lorenz was killed and around
the same time.
Gordon said late that afternoon he drove down to
Toronto from Orillia, stopping at the gas station
in Downsview,
just off the 401 Highway in the northwest of Toronto.
After he put gas in his car, creating that gas receipt,
he called his date from a payphone at the hotel next to the gas station to confirm,
and to get her address to pick her up.
He said he made the call shortly before 6pm.
His date had forgotten about their tentative plans and couldn't make it.
So Gordon shrugged it off, drove back north to Orillia, and went to a local bar there.
Lawyer Edward Greenspan would contact this woman and hopefully get her to testify.
That would go a long way to corroborate Gordon's story and his alibi, although it didn't really
explain his choice to lie to the police about his whereabouts.
Gordon said he lied because he was scared that the police were railroading him.
He pointed out that they had proved it by
presenting him with that fake affidavit with Laura Lee's forged signature.
Although the fake affidavit was inadmissible in court, it hung over the entire proceedings.
In the meantime, Edward Greenspan learned that Gordon had lied about something else. During his
bail hearing he portrayed himself as a highly educated man who presumably could
be trusted out on bail. He specifically claimed to have an undergraduate degree
and an MBA when in reality he had neither. Gordon Allen had already been proven a liar and his trial hadn't even begun yet.
He was arrested again and remanded in jail, this time charged with perjury and attempting to pervert justice.
At a bail hearing, his lawyer Edward Greenspan argued that even former US president Jimmy Carter had once
exaggerated his own professional credentials. Carter had called himself a
nuclear physicist when in fact he had only studied nuclear engineering, a big
difference, and he was still the president of the United States. Gordon
Allen was eventually released on bail again.
But something was still bothering Edward Greenspan.
In his later book, Greenspan, The Case for the Defense, he would write,
quote,
Even while we were congratulating ourselves, I felt depressed and anxious
and I couldn't put my finger on it.
There was something going on, something I should have been able to anticipate,
but I couldn't and didn't. In retrospect, as I look back on those final days before the trial,
it seems to me that even while thinking that the prosecution must be desperate,
I didn't realize how desperate it was. I did not understand it, even when the day came. And with it, a totally unexpected turn of events.
Music
Music
Music
Just like we dive into the most gripping and thought provoking
cases from around Canada
to share with you, Audible is bringing literary fans of all genres their best of the year
list, a hand-picked collection of 2024's top listens.
And thanks to Audible and Acast Creative, we're here to share our favorite stories
with you.
Right now I'm back on a history and crime kick and Audible has me so spoiled for choice
that it's sometimes hard to decide what to listen to next.
But the editors at Audible know what's what because they're actual humans who listen
for a living, so I pay attention when their curated best of the year list comes out.
I've just started The Knowing by award winning and best selling Anishinaabe author Tanya Talaga.
It's a riveting, eye opening exploration of her own family's story and hardships they faced,
from residential schools to quote unquote Indian hospitals and the ripples felt across generations.
The knowing is heartfelt and personal, but also meticulously researched as it zooms out
to the dark history of the country we now call Canada.
After that, I'm excited to dive into a dark comedy thriller, Listen for the Lie, a novel
by Amy Tintera.
It's about a woman who returns to her hometown, despite everyone there still thinking she
killed her best friend years ago.
And get this, there's a true crime podcaster on her case, eager to dig up old secrets.
This trend of including fictional true crime podcasters as characters who are usually knuckleheads
is highly amusing, but
I'm always here for a smart thriller that flips the true crime obsession on its head.
Listen for the Lie looks like it's going to be packed with twists, tension and small
town drama.
Listen for the Lie, a novel by Amy Tenterra and The Knowing by Tonya Talaga are just two titles from Audible's best of the year list.
And I love that the Audible editors don't just focus on finding the best.
They're also looking for the best audio performance, the best listening experience.
And for me, that means entertainment and self-care when I'm walking my dogs,
doing household chores, gift wrapping,
or trying not to stuff up holiday baking.
And speaking of holidays,
you can actually gift someone an Audible membership
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So if you're looking for your next great story,
Audible's got you covered.
Visit audible.ca to explore these top lessons
and discover more.
Happy listening, audible.ca.
The new Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
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getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
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Compared to previous generation iPhone XS or later required, charge time and actual
results will vary. The morning of February 12th 1979, two days before the trial was scheduled to begin, Gordon
Allen arrived at the courthouse with his lawyer Edward Greenspan. They were on time for the pretrial hearing.
They were also the only ones there. No one from the co-defense showed up, not
Laura Lee or her lawyer Clayton Powell. The Crown prosecutor wasn't even there,
nor was anyone from the police investigation team.
Or was anyone from the police investigation team? Later that afternoon, Laura Lee's lawyer Clayton Powell finally arrived with the Crown
Prosecutor.
They entered the courtroom and walked right up to the bench with a single request that
the judge delay the trial for one day.
Then they left with no further explanation.
Edward Greenspan would write that he was panicked.
It was clear that some kind of deal was in the works between Laura Lee's lawyer and
the Crown, and his client Gordon Allen was likely being left out of it.
The deal was confirmed the following morning. Laurelis defense lawyer Powell, together with Crown Prosecutor Michael Lynch,
announced a plea deal.
There would be no joint defense with Gordon Allen.
Laurelis Lorenz had made a deal with the Crown Prosecutor.
She was prepared to plead guilty to the much, much lesser charge of accessory Laura Lee Lorenz had made a deal with the Crown Prosecutor.
She was prepared to plead guilty to the much, much lesser charge of accessory to murder after the fact.
The trial would still be going ahead as planned, but now it would just be Gordon Allen on trial for first degree murder,
and Laura Lee was now going to be testifying for the prosecution and her testimony was going
to be that Gordon Allen actually phoned her the night of the murder to confess to it.
This was brand new information that she did not tell the police or anyone else up until
now.
A bombshell would be an understatement.
In a later lecture Greenspan gave about this case the same year his book was published,
he recounted the shock when he read Laura Lee's statement, her guilty plea. Quote,
she claimed that on the evening of Bruce Lorenza's death, she received a phone call at home from
Gordon Allen who said, guess what? I just shot your husband. Oh my God, all that blood.
Laura Lee screamed in response to these words, according to her statement,
and was put in a state of shock, a shock so great that all her mind could do to deal with those words was to shove
the thought deep into her subconscious mind.
She claimed that from the instant she heard Gordon say this, she blanked it out.
According to Laura Lee, it was only before the commencement of her trial that a recollection
of those words was revived."
End quote.
Edward Greenspan went on to say that his team was so stunned
by this development that it took them a while
to wrap their heads around the implications
for the defense they had planned for Gordon Allen.
Was it even possible for Laura Lee to be so shocked
by an incriminating phone call that the memory was immediately buried,
only for it to later shake loose from her subconscious at a suspiciously convenient time?
Edward Greenspan explains this phenomenon in his book.
Quote,
How did the phone call emerge from her subconscious? Well, her lawyer Clayton Powell was to testify later that he could see that something was
troubling his client as he was preparing her to stand trial for first degree murder.
She had been having nightmares about the day of her husband's death, but they always stopped
at a certain point and then she could remember nothing.
Since Laura Lee couldn't tell her lawyer what was causing the turmoil in her psyche,
Clayton Powell arranged for her to be administered a sodium amytol or truth serum the morning of February 10th. Clay Powell realised that Laura Lee's renewed ability to communicate with her
subconscious might be of assistance in her legal difficulties. End of excerpt.
Because the trial was scheduled to begin on Wednesday February 14th, Greenspan
described Laura Lee's agreement as a
sweetheart deal, an unexpected Valentine's Day gift for her ex-lover. He
added quote, Laura Lee was no longer a co-accused but a witness for the
prosecution. I could have cheerfully punched her lawyer Clay Powell in the
nose.
Before we get to Gordon Allen's first degree murder trial, a little history lesson about sodium amytal.
This was the drug administered to Laura Lee Lorenz,
which she said caused her to remember
Gordon Allen's confession.
She claimed shock had buried this memory in her
subconscious and the drug had loosened it. Sodium amytal was invented in the 1920s
to be used primarily as a sedative but it was so effective the drug became a
popular tool for psychologists and psychiatrists. It seemed to relax
patients who normally had a hard time
talking about anything deep or traumatic. But it was during World War II when the substance
earned its nickname, Truth Serum. It seemed to help soldiers returning from war who were suffering
from PTSD or shell shock as it was known at the time.
Sodium amytal allowed them to recall a traumatic event
and then process and move on from it.
Soon this truth serum drug became a fixture
in criminal investigations.
Imagine a substance that could elicit confessions from criminals.
During the Cold War, movies like The Manchurian Candidate gave the drug a powerful mystique.
The film imagined a world where captured soldiers were brainwashed using a truth serum type
drug, turning them into political assassins.
Their killer identity remained dormant in their subconscious
until deployed by a special code word or symbol.
But by the 1960s and 70s,
experts began to question truth serum's reliability.
New studies popped up that seemed to prove
the drug wasn't unleashing the truth at all.
It just made people more susceptible to suggestion.
But at the time the Bruce Lorenz case was making its way through the court system, the
drug sodium amytal still had credibility in Ontario courts.
Laura Lee's recovered memory story reset the entire trial.
Now that she had turned on her former partner Gordon Allen, she pleaded guilty to the much
lesser charge of accessory to murder after the fact, and her charge of first degree murder
was dropped.
The Crown was asserting that although Laura Lee might not have
helped to plan and execute the murder, she was active in helping the person
believed to be the real murderer, Gordon Allen, try to get away with it. This whole
turn of events upended everything and it brought on a migraine headache that
Edward Greenspan said stayed with him
throughout the epic 10-week trial. At first glance, this is the kind of plea deal that could doom an
ordinary defence. Former lovers both claiming innocence, one now turning on the other.
But Edward Greenspan was no ordinary defense lawyer.
When the reality of the new situation had sunk in, he concocted a new strategy to defend
Gordon Allen on the fly.
In Greenspan, the case for the defense, he wrote,
I thought, what if the jurors didn't believe her testimony?
What if the jurors retained a reasonable doubt, not only
about the extent of Laura Lee's own involvement, but about her entire story? What if they concluded
she might have invented it simply to save her own skin? She was at risk of going to
prison for life, and she wanted to get out of it.
Then Greenspan made a couple of brilliant moves.
First, he cited a recent Supreme Court of Canada decision that held a person could not
be guilty of accessory to a crime if the principal hadn't yet been found guilty.
He argued that no one had been convicted of murder, not yet. So to what crime
was Laura Lee Lorenz an accessory after the fact? None. The judge agreed. Laura Lee's guilty plea
would only stand if Gordon Allen were tried and convicted of first degree murder.
were tried and convicted of first degree murder.
But Edward Greenspan realized something else that was profoundly important.
Now that Laura Lee was no longer co-accused of murder,
her case was entirely different from Gordon Allen's.
Greenspan could argue that the evidence against her
that had nothing to do with Gordon Allen could be tossed.
And some of it was evidence that was potentially the most damning. Like that phone call, the one
Laura Lee allegedly made to her brother-in-law where she told him Bruce had been shot dead
before the police even knew it. If she and Gordon were still being tried together
for first degree murder,
this would have been admissible as evidence.
But whatever Bruce's brother claimed
laurally said to him during that phone call
had nothing to do with Gordon Allen.
He wasn't even mentioned.
Therefore, this evidence was now inadmissible.
It had also been alleged that Bruce's brother mentioned that their father had loaned Bruce a 22 caliber gun, and that gun was missing. This was relevant because Bruce had a 22 caliber bullet lodged in his head, and no firearm had ever been recovered as the murder weapon. Perhaps the gun that Bruce's father loaned him had also been used to murder him.
But again, this had nothing to do with Gordon Allen.
This evidence was also now inadmissible.
So too was the phone call Bruce Lorenza's secretary alleged Laura Lee made to the law office the day after the murder, where she asked if Bruce had signed the will and sounded distressed when she learned he hadn't.
This was also inadmissible in Gordon Allen's trial. Initially, Edward Greenspan had been blindsided by Laura Lee's new deal and what it meant
for his client Gordon Allen.
But in just a day or two, he had used the situation to his advantage and succeeded in
having the best bits of evidence thrown out.
A seat at the trial for Gordon Allen was a coveted spot. Attendees lined up for hours,
the line stretching down the hall and outside the courthouse, with many having followed
the story for almost a year. The drama was pitched so high, an article in the Toronto
Star described the proceedings as a cross between a Charles Dickens novel and The Edge of Night, a popular TV soap at the time.
It also detailed the amateur citizen detectives who attended the trial. city's downtown courtrooms, it is the best show in town. Housewives, students, the retired and
unemployed, they find the courtroom the ultimate in live theatre. At the front of the crowd,
a woman who could pass for Dickens, Madame Lafarge comes to life, leaning against the wall,
knitting and talking, talking and knitting. Yes, I love murder trials, she confesses.
Rapes too.
Court workers call the old man standing next to her
the referee.
He shows up every day for murder trials
wearing a torn black and white NHL referee sweater.
And he likes to stand outside the courtroom
and make pronouncements on who is guilty and why.
Up and down the line everyone is playing Colombo.
Did the lover kill the husband?
Did the wife help?
Yes.
No.
Why?
Years later they all launched their own True Crime podcasts.
I kid of course, but it certainly shows the lengths that true crime fanatics have always gone to get their stories.
They wanted to see all the sensational characters they'd read about in the newspaper on the witness stand.
Laura Leela Renz would be testifying for the Crown about receiving that 6.30 phone call from Gordon Ellen and how she became an
accessory to murder after the fact by not telling anyone about it for so long.
She would face a grilling by Gordon Ellen's lawyer Edward Greenspan. And
Gordon would also be testifying in his own defense that he had nothing to do
with the murder of Bruce Lorenz.
He'd be explaining why he told so many lies to the police and others.
At the centre of it all was that gas receipt that proved Gordon wasn't in Arillier all
day like he said.
He eventually admitted he did drive down to Toronto later that afternoon to meet a woman for a date that ended up not happening.
Did Edward Greenspan manage to locate that woman? And if so, would she corroborate his story?
That's where we'll leave it for part one.
Thanks for listening.
If you happen to know anyone related to this case, please respect their privacy.
Part two will be released to all in a week.
And if you're subscribed to our premium feed on Amazon Music included with Prime, Apple
Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast, it's available right now.
Special thanks to our audio editor Eric Crosby who provided the voice of Gordon
Allen. Laura Lee Lorenz was voiced by Barbara Cooper. In part 2 we have a
Canadian celebrity playing Edward Greenspan in the courtroom. For the full
list of resources we relied on to put together this
series and anything else you want to know about the podcast, visit CanadianTrueCrime.ca
and follow us on the Canadian True Crime Facebook and Instagram pages to see photos and clippings.
This series was researched and written by Lisa Gabriel. Our senior producer is Lindsay Eldridge and Carol
Weinberg is our script consultant. Additional research and writing, narration and sound design
was by me, audio editing was by Eric Crosby and the theme songs were composed by We Talk of Dreams.
I'll be back soon with part two. See you then.
soon with Part 2. See you then. Stephen King's manuscript for Carrie was rejected by 30 publishers before selling a million
copies in its first year. Lisa Kudrow was told she wasn't gorgeous enough for television
before becoming the highest-paid actress on TV. And Canadian hockey great Hayley
Wickenheiser was told hockey was for boys before winning seven world championships and four
Olympic gold medals.
Chances are, every person you admire has been wounded by rejection. On We Regret to Inform
You, the Rejection podcast, we walk you through the incredible journeys of actors, authors,
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We regret to inform you, the Rejection podcast. Find us wherever you like to listen.
Projection Podcast. Find us wherever you like to listen.
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The new Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist.
And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch,
getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
Introducing the all new Apple Watch Series 10,
now available for the first time
in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generation,
iPhone XS or later required,
charge time and actual results will vary.
Based on Charles Yu's award-winning book, Interior Chinatown follows the story of Willis Wu, to vary.