Canadian True Crime - Bruce Lorenz [2]
Episode Date: November 29, 2024ONTARIO[Part 2 of 2 ] Lawyer Bruce Lorenz had been shot dead at Warden Subway Station in the east of Toronto, and the police believed they knew exactly who did it. The first degree murder trial reveal...ed many new truths… and dropped several bombshells.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 Terry O’Reilly of CBC Podcasts’ Under the Influence with Terry O’Reilly for voiceover, along with Barbara Cooper and Erik Krosby.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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This is the final part of a two-part series. Where we left off,
Laura Lee Lorenz and her on-off boyfriend Gordon Allen, both in their
early to mid-30s, had been charged with the first-degree murder of Laura Lee's
husband Bruce Lorenz. The 36-year-old lawyer's body had been found in his
Mustang one evening, parked at Warden Subway Station in the southeast corner of Toronto.
His legs were protruding out the driver's window.
Bruce Lorenz had been shot dead.
A single 22 calibre bullet was found behind his ear.
But the murder weapon was never recovered.
And although the police only recovered circumstantial
evidence against Laura Lee Lorenz and Gordon Allen, the Crown determined it was enough to
charge them both with first degree murder. But just days before their joint trial was about to
begin, Laura Lee took some truth serum and suddenly remembered that Gordon phoned her
the same night Bruce was murdered and confessed to it.
At the time, evidence recovered via truth serum
or sodium amytal still had credibility in Ontario courts,
and Laura Lee's lawyer Clayton Powell
used it to broker a plea deal.
Her first degree murder charge was dropped and she was permitted to plead guilty to the much lesser charge of accessory to murder after the fact.
In exchange, she agreed to be the crown's star witness at Gordon Allen's now solo trial for first degree murder. She would testify about receiving this phone call
and how she effectively helped Gordon get away with murder
by concealing it all that time.
Gordon Allen had retained fame
Canadian criminal defence lawyer, Edward Greenspan,
who was able to have a bunch of the Crown's
circumstantial evidence thrown out,
like the phone call where Laura Lee seemed to know that Bruce had been shot dead before the police
even knew it. In a conversation she had with Bruce's secretary the next day, where she asked if he'd
signed his new will yet, a will that made her beneficiary of his sizeable estate and
provided a motive for murder. They were key pieces of circumstantial evidence
against Laura Lee Lorenz, if her murder charge hadn't been dropped of course, but
none of it had anything to do with Gordon Allen. By the time his first degree
murder trial began in February 1979, the case
had already inspired a series of sensational headlines and people lined up around the block
for a seat in the courtroom.
The Crown's first witness was Laura Lee Lorenz herself, there to testify about helping her
ex-boyfriend Gordon Allen get away with the first degree murder of her husband, Bruce
Lorenz.
The star described her outfit that day, a sleek beige tailored dress.
The court heard that Laura Lee and Bruce the Renz were married in September 1967
and had been married for just over 10 years when he was murdered.
For the first several years of their marriage they tried for a baby,
but Laura Lee wasn't able to get pregnant.
Doctors wanted them both to undergo fertility testing, but Bruce refused.
Laura Lee described him as having a violent temper,
made worse by the stress of their fertility situation.
When they adopted their first son,
Laura Lee said Bruce had problems adjusting to the fact
that they couldn't have children of their own.
Five years later, they adopted their second son in July of 1975.
Laurely testified that Bruce was still struggling to adjust and seemed to have a particular issue
accepting this new baby as his own. It caused a lot of friction in the marriage. And as a lawyer,
Bruce was also working long hours at the time.
Laura Lee testified that shortly after that, she met Gordon Allen at a bar near the airport.
Why she was there isn't known, but he asked her to dance, they exchanged numbers, and Gordon began to phone her at home. She was very unhappy in her marriage by this point and within months
she and Gordon had embarked on what she described as an on-off relationship that led to her
leaving her husband Bruce for him. The court heard that Laura Lee and Gordon were together
for almost two years. They started up a new franchise business
and the boys called Gordon dad.
But when their business failed,
their relationship did too.
Laura Lee testified she returned to her husband
but continued to keep in contact with Gordon.
Not because they were still seeing each other though.
She said they still had loose ends to tie up
with the business and the bankruptcy
and Bruce was helping them with it all.
In addition, Gordon had grown close to the boys
and considered the youngest one to be his own.
Laura Lee described a point where she realized
that Gordon was still in love with her.
She had unspecified surgery about two
months before Bruce was murdered and Gordon visited her in hospital several
times as she recovered. She testified that quote,
Gordon knew I was very unhappy. He expressed a desire to get back together.
I was very confused. I had just undergone a serious operation."
Laura Lee then told her version of events from the day her husband was murdered.
The family had just arrived home from their two-week vacation to Florida
and Bruce was supposed to get an answer from his law firm about a promotion.
He called Laura Lee when he got the bad news.
The promotion wasn't happening.
She testified that she told him to get a drink after work.
And knowing that he wouldn't be home for dinner,
she invited a friend over instead.
Now it was time for Laura Lee to testify about the phone call, the call she had blocked from her memory right up until her own trial had been scheduled to start.
She told the jury that at 6.30 that night, she received a phone call at her home. The Toronto Star described how Laurelis eyes filled with tears as she pulled
tissues from her purse and told the jury quote,
I recognized the voice as being Gordon's. He sounded like he was huffing and puffing.
He said, how are you? I said fine. He said, guess what? I think I've just killed your husband.
I screamed into the phone. What
did you say? What did you do? And then he repeated, I think I've just killed your husband.
Oh God, Laura, all the blood.
Laura Lee continued,
To the best of my recollection, he said something about a lady staring at him. I said, I don't want to talk to you and hung up.
I didn't believe it had happened. I didn't want to believe I had received the call."
Her testimony implied that the phone call may have been made from a payphone.
This may have explained why it didn't appear on their phone records.
She said her dinner guest was in the bathroom
at the time the phone call came in.
Edward Greenspan cross-examined Laura Lee,
poking hard at the claim that she buried a murder confession
deep in her subconscious.
He rarely took his eyes off her, turning every once in a while
to the jury, saying,
Do you expect us to believe that?
Here's an excerpt of the cross-examination, edited for time.
And Gordon said, guess what, I think I just killed your husband, right?
That's correct.
And you screamed, what did you say, what did you do, right?
That's correct.
You screamed it, right?
Yes.
And your friend is the thickness of a doorway.
She must have come out when you screamed it and said, Laura, what's the matter?
No sir.
She didn't come out, did she?
No sir.
She didn't hear it, did she?
No sir.
I believe she walked into the room as I was hanging up, yes.
A coincidence, correct? What was the first thing you said to her?
I didn't say anything to her.
I believe I told her I was going upstairs to get the boys ready for bed.
You got a phone call,
guess what, I think I have killed your husband,
and you put it out of your mind, right?
I didn't want to believe I received it.
You want the jury to believe that?
Yes, sir, because it's the truth.
Then later you told a friend of yours that Gordon couldn't have done it,
that he had nothing to hide, right?
Yes, sir.
Where was the 630 call now?
It wasn't there. I don't know where it was. Somewhere in my mind.
Where in your mind? What part?
Subconscious.
You got a phone call from Gordon. Were you conscious when you heard it?
Yes, sir.
And was it in your conscious mind when you got off the phone?
I cannot say to you when it went from my conscious to my unconscious.
I'm having some difficulty, Mrs. Lorenz.
You testified earlier that you consciously lied to the police about that 630 call.
Were you hiding something in your subconscious
or hiding something in your conscious mind?
Knowing what I know today and looking back on the first time that I saw the police,
I lied to them, yes, because I didn't tell them about the 630 call.
Which you knew about?
Which I know about now.
You know about now?
Yes, sir.
So, if we carry this on, you told countless people that Gordon didn't do it, right?
Yes, sir.
You said to one of your friends that Gordon wouldn't hurt a fly.
Yes, sir.
But your subconscious knew better, right?
You could put it that way.
Well, no, you're putting it that way.
Yes, part of my mind knew better. Your conscious mind told another friend that there's no conceivable reason for Gordon killing Bruce, right?
Yes, sir.
Your subconscious mind told your priest that Gordon Allen could never do such a thing, right?
Yes, sir.
Your subconscious mind told your parents that Gordon Allen wasn't capable of murder, right?
That's correct. You told another friend that you didn't have capable of murder, right? That's correct.
You told another friend that you didn't have a clue about the death of your husband.
That's correct.
Right. That was your conscious mind that didn't have a clue.
Your subconscious mind knew it all along, right?
I wouldn't say I knew it all. It knew something that my conscious mind wasn't aware of.
Well, it knew enough to get you out of a first-degree murder charge, didn't it?
It knew the truth!
Edward Greenspan would write in his book that at the end of the cross-examination,
he could feel, quote,
the cold, thin blade of her fury stabbing me in the back.
A woman named Leanne, who identified herself as the friend that Laura Lee Lorenz invited
for dinner that night, testified that it was more of a demand than an invitation.
Leanne said the phone did ring at around 6.30, but she wasn't in the bathroom like Laura
Lee said.
She was in the kitchen having dinner with Laura Lee and her two children.
She testified that Laura Lee answered the phone and had a very quick conversation,
saying she would phone the caller back and then hung up.
She told Leanne that it was just a friend called Dawney that she'd been putting off.
that it was just a friend called Dawnie that she'd been putting off.
Leanne testified that Laura Lee had mentioned having a friend by that name earlier that evening, although she didn't know her.
Leanne told the jury that she did go to the bathroom, but it was a little later in the evening
after 7pm and she didn't remember hearing the phone ring during that time.
It was noted that the bathroom was right off the kitchen. Laura Lee had of course testified that she screamed into the
phone at Gordon, what did you say? What did you do? Leanne said she never heard any screaming that night and Laura Lee gave no indication
that she had received shocking news at that time, certainly not that her own husband had
been murdered.
Laura Lee then testified about the second phone call she received from Gordon three
hours later at 9.30.
The police knew about this call from the phone records,
unlike the 6.30 phone call, which Laurelian implied had been made from a payphone.
In this second call, she said Gordon asked her if there was any news. Quote,
I said, pardon? And he said, what's new? I said nothing. He asked if Bruce was home and I told him not now and he
said, tell Bruce I did all the paperwork he asked me for. He asked me to have him call when he got
home. I said he would if it wasn't too late and if it was he would call in the morning. On cross-examination, Laura Lee said she didn't bring up the 6.30 phone call or mention anything
about it to Gordon because she didn't want to think it had actually happened.
Quote,
I didn't want to believe it or accept it.
I was scared for my children and my family.
I didn't know what to do.
I was on a lot of medication and was very confused, very upset.
I didn't know what was going on at that point."
Her dinner guest, Leanne, testified about this phone call as well.
She said she was watching TV with Laura Lee and the kids after dinner
when the phone rang again, sometime after 9 p.m.
She assumed it was Gordon Allen on the other end. and the kids after dinner when the phone rang again, sometime after 9 p.m.
She assumed it was Gordon Allen on the other end.
She'd met him several times.
Quote, Laura's voice was different.
She spoke very quietly, very calmly for quite a while.
Later that evening, Leanne said she was in the kitchen
making a cup of tea when she heard
a knock at the door.
It was the police with the news that Laura Lee's husband, Bruce Lorenz, had died in
a tragic accident.
She heard Laura Lee say, I don't believe it.
The police officers who delivered that news testified that Laura Lee had behaved strangely that night.
She reportedly became hysterical at their mere arrival, but when they told her that her husband had died in an accident,
she strangely didn't seem to want police officers and what she thought was an appropriate way.
This testimony was likely related to Bruce Lorenz's brother Brian, a police officer himself who had told investigators he received a problematic phone call from Laura Lee that night.
As you'll remember from part one, although the police initially told Laura Lee that her husband had passed away in a tragic accident,
she phoned his brother Brian and told him that Bruce had been shot dead. If this was still a joint trial with Laura Lee
and Gordon facing first degree murder charges,
Bruce's brother likely would have testified
about that phone call.
But now it was just Gordon Allen on trial
and the phone call was inadmissible
because it had nothing to do with him.
Laura Lee testified that Gordon called her the next day to check in.
She said that by this point she had well and truly buried his first 6.30 phone call
deep in her subconscious and blanked out his confession.
The court heard that after the murder, a series of seven telephone conversations between Laura Lee Lorenz and Gordon Allen were intercepted by police, where they often spoke about the need to be careful.
Guess what?
What?
I love you.
Yeah.
Getting a lot of heat?
Pardon?
Are you getting a lot of heat? Pardon? Are you getting a lot of heat?
Oh, uh, yeah.
Is anyone concerned why you haven't gotten in touch?
I can't say very much. You know.
Your parents?
Yeah.
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.
In one call just before they were arrested,
Gordon was heard telling Laura Lee
that he didn't think she should say anything over the phone.
She agreed and mentioned something about receiving weird phone calls
and how she felt like she was
being followed. She said someone had told her their phones were tapped. While circumstantial,
these conversations implied that Laura Lee and Gordon had something to hide. An innocent person
isn't usually worried about being careful in case the police are listening,
but Laura Lee was not the one on trial here.
In the witness box, Laura Lee confirmed that she was trying to stop Gordon from talking,
but not because the police were listening. She said she just didn't want to talk about
Bruce, because quote, I didn't want to believe he'd called me the night
of Bruce's death. If he had started to talk about it, it would mean it was true.
During the initial search of Gordon's home, police found a remote control device. He told them he was
using it to operate a model boat he was making for
Laura Lee's kids. The Crown argued that it was actually meant to detonate an explosive,
that Gordon had intended to build a bomb, put it in Bruce Lorenz's car and kill him
that way. The Crown called an expert witness the head of the Montreal Bomb Squad,
who testified that these remotes were commonly used by biker gangs and organised crime.
The Crown insisted on a demonstration, so the expert witness lugged an electronic device into
the courtroom to show how the remote control could be used to set off a bomb.
When he pressed the button, nothing happened. to show how the remote control could be used to set off a bomb.
When he pressed the button, nothing happened.
He checked the wiring and tried again.
Nothing.
This was supposed to be a bombshell moment, but the moment merely bombed.
And even if it had worked, it didn't prove that Gordon Allen had anything to do with the murder of Bruce Lorenz.
As part of the testimony of two investigators, the jury heard that two separate sources told
police that Bruce Lorenz had feared for his life since July of 1977 because of quote, his involvement in real estate frauds.
This was eight months before he was actually murdered.
It suggested someone else may have had a motive to kill Bruce Lorenz, but there was no emphasis
put on it, no further details provided and no confirmation that it was anything more
than hearsay.
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It cannot be overstated how much trouble
Gordon Allen was in at the beginning of the trial.
If he was still in love with Laura Lee Lorenz,
he certainly had a motive to murder the husband she left him to reunite with.
Gordon's own sister had testified that he was very upset when he and Laura Lee broke up
and she moved back in with Bruce. The defense would be presenting witnesses to try and counter this. There was
also the money motive. The stress of Gordon and Laura Lee's business failure and bankruptcy
led to their breakup, putting them in a dire financial position, and Bruce Lorenz had money,
a life insurance policy and a sizeable estate. But despite these potential motives,
Edward Greenspan believed his client
when he said he was innocent.
That gas receipt found in Gordon's home in Orillia
that put him in the north of Toronto
during the timeframe of the murder
was the most damning evidence against him.
And the fact that he originally told police he was in Irelia all day,
almost two hours drive north of Toronto, was proof of his dishonesty.
Edward Greenspan's defence was designed to counter these points.
It hinged almost entirely on proving Gordon Allen's actual whereabouts the day of the murder.
Gordon Allen took to the witness box and told the jury that he was in Toronto on business when he
first met Laura Lee Lorenz at the bar near the airport. He knew she was married with two young
sons but thought she and Bruce were already separated when they met.
When the separation was official, Bruce Lorenz moved out of the family home,
Gordon moved in, and he and Laura Lee started their furniture refurbishment franchise.
He testified that despite everything that had happened, Bruce agreed to be their
company lawyer and would join them
for dinner once a week. Gordon said he and Bruce had a good relationship and
were even in discussions about a potential business opportunity together.
Gordon testified that when the franchise business failed, followed by his
relationship with Laura Lee, he was heartbroken.
When she moved in with her mother, he moved back to Arillia,
but continued to visit with Laura Lee and the boys, who he said called him dad.
He insisted that by the time Laura Lee and Bruce reconciled just a few months later,
he was no longer in love with her. He'd gotten over it.
On cross-examination, the Crown prosecutor suggested
that Gordon was in love with Laura Lee at the time,
so much so that he was motivated
to murder her husband, Bruce.
The court heard that in the months
before Bruce Lorenza's murder,
when he and Laura Lee had supposedly reconciled,
she and Gordon had sex.
Surely that meant they were still in love.
Gordon admitted that he and Laura Lee did have sex, twice, but those were mistakes,
he said, and he was ashamed.
The sex just happened.
The Crown asked Gordon if he told Laura Lee he loved her
when he slept with her. He replied, I don't think so. The Crown's case was that Gordon Allen lied
to the police when he told them he was an Irelia all day. And he may have gotten away with that lie had investigators not found that gas receipt
that proved he was at a Toronto gas station late that afternoon in a north west Toronto
neighbourhood called Downsview. But Toronto is a sprawling city and Bruce the Renz was murdered
in the south east corner across town in a diagonal direction.
So the Crown had to prove that Gordon had the means to travel across town, murder Bruce the
Wrens at Warden Station after 6.30pm and then get back north to Arillia by 8pm. It was a very tight
time frame. In the witness box, Gordon Allen owned up to the fact that throughout this whole process,
he had told a number of lies.
But now he was going to set the record straight about that gas receipt.
Gordon admitted that he was in Toronto that day because he had a date with a woman named
Irene. He drove down from Arillia later that afternoon
and stopped for gas just off the 401 Highway at Keele Street.
Gordon testified that after he filled up his car,
he went to the payphone at the hotel next to the gas station
to call Irene and confirm their date,
but unfortunately she wasn't able to make it.
He estimated he made this phone call shortly before 6 p.m.
From the start, Gordon's date Irene
was reluctant to testify.
She told his lawyer Edward Greenspan
that she and her boyfriend had briefly broken up
when she met
Gordon Allen, but they got back together shortly afterwards and were now married.
Irene didn't want to be caught up in all of this, but she also didn't want to send
a potentially innocent man to jail, so she agreed to testify.
Irene told the jury that she met Gordon at a dance
and they got talking about the fact that she lived and worked in Toronto.
He told her there was a possibility he'd be coming back in a few days for business
and asked if she'd be interested in going for coffee that evening.
She said yes and gave him her phone number. The date they were going to be meeting was Monday,
March 20th, 1978. It just happened to be the same day Bruce Lorenz was killed and around
the same time frame. But Irene said she forgot about their tentative date. She testified that she arrived home that day at about 5.45 p.m. and Gordon
called her five minutes later at about 5.50. This was consistent with Gordon's own testimony.
And Irene said she was certain about the time because her parents watched a specific TV
show each night that ended right at 6 and the phone rang during the show's last segment.
Irene told the jury that she didn't notice anything unusual about Gordon's voice or
general demeanor when he called.
Gordon Allen testified that the reason he lied to police about his trip to Toronto was
because he was a suspect only three days after Bruce Lorenz was murdered,
and he felt police had already determined his guilt.
He worried that they would contact Irene and try to get her to change her story.
The elephant in the room was that fake affidavit
presented to him by the police
with Laura Lee's forged signature,
claiming he was obsessed with her
and had made death threats against her.
It wasn't admissible as evidence in this trial,
but it would come up later on.
Gordon might have lied to the police
about his Toronto date, but the Crown asked what reason he might have lied to the police about his Toronto date, but the Crown asked what
reason he might have for also lying to his family and friends about it.
He acknowledged that he didn't tell them where he was, but denied anything sinister.
Besides, he said, why would he kill Bruce Lorenz?
He wasn't in love with Laura Lee anymore and had given up hope that they'd ever get
back together.
Gordon testified that after the phone call with Irene, he just decided to turn back and
drive 120 kilometres north back to Orillia.
He said he arrived home at about 7.15 or 7.30 and then went to a local bar after that.
Several people at that bar who knew Gordon testified that they saw him there and he seemed
totally normal. He didn't appear to be nervous or upset. While they couldn't be certain of the
exact time, they indicated they saw him there as early as 8pm.
One of those witnesses also testified that when he first gave this information to the
police they told him to forget about it, that Bruce the Renz had been murdered that morning
so knowing where Gordon Allen was that night was not relevant. This obviously wasn't the case.
Bruce the Renz was murdered after 6.30 p.m.
and it only served to provide even more evidence
that the police had tunnel vision for Gordon as a suspect.
These witnesses at the bar in Orillia also noted
that Gordon was wearing the same chocolate brown corduroy military-style jacket
he always wore. That jacket had been seized by police during the searches of Gordon Allen's home
and the court heard testimony that there were some spots on it that looked like blood and the jacket
had a small rip in one area where a patch had been torn off.
Police administered something called a phenolphthalein test on the spots,
which confirmed the presence of blood. But Gordon Allen's defence lawyer,
Edward Greenspan, had done his research. He unearthed an important fact about phenolphthalein from a medical journal.
This test only detected the presence of one chemical found in blood.
But it's the same chemical that can also be found in milk,
tears, saliva, fruit juice, and in ketchup and mustard.
Greenspan was able to get the Crown's forensic experts
to admit this on the stand.
He would write, quote, I told the jury that if my jacket had been tested after eating a Big Mac,
I'd have ended up in the same prisoner's dock as Gordon Allen.
The other issue with this chocolate brown corduroy jacket is that multiple witnesses at Warden station at around the
time of the murder had testified that the man spotted with Bruce the Wrens was wearing a tan
or camel colored overcoat or trench coat. It was dark outside that night but this coat did not
resemble the brown military jacket with the stains that may or may not have been
blood. And of course those witnesses weren't able to positively identify that man as being Gordon
Allen. There was also the matter of Bruce Lorenz's co-worker who walked with him to Osgoode subway station after work. At trial, she testified that Bruce walked off
to say hello to a guy wearing a camel-colored coat
who was talking on a payphone inside the station,
and they got on the train together heading north.
She said the man had freckles, hair with a red tinge,
and was shorter and heavier than Bruce Lorenz. Although
she acknowledged that almost everyone was shorter than Bruce. He was a very tall, slim man of 6 foot 5.
When the Crown Prosecutor asked the co-worker if the man she saw at Osgoode Station that day was
in the courtroom, she looked at Gordon Allen and said,
well, the gentleman has changed his hair color again.
I can just say that he looks like him.
Gordon Allen fit the physical profile compared to Bruce Lorenz,
but his hair was more brown than red.
Gordon testified that in summer,
when his hair was bleached by the sun it
did take on a slight red tinge but when the trial was taking place it was winter
so it looked brown. The Crown accused him of dying his hair after the murder.
Laura Lee had also testified that she thought he looked slightly different now
but Gordon said his hair was the same color this winter as it was the previous winter,
which is when Bruce the Wrens was murdered, brown.
Gordon's lawyer Edward Greenspan offered up a lock of his client's hair for testing for the presence of hair dye,
but the crown declined.
A fairly baffling decision given their accusation.
And there was something else.
Greenspan argued that police had subjected
Bruce Lorenz' coworker to an improper identification
process from the start.
A proper and fair lineup would have included
one photo of Gordon Allen as the suspect,
along with photos of other people that fit the description.
But the police showed her five black and white photos, all of Gordon Allen.
More evidence of the police's tunnel vision.
Now this co-worker only saw Bruce and his companion travel north on the train. To get home,
Bruce had to switch lines at the junction and take another train east to Warden subway station.
And another of his co-workers had testimony about this. He spotted Bruce at that junction with a companion and saw them switch lines to the eastbound train.
He testified that the companion fit the same description as the other co-workers testimony
and he couldn't positively identify Gordon Allen as being that companion, but he couldn't eliminate him either.
but he couldn't eliminate him either. The Crown's theory was that Gordon Allen was in love with Laura Lee Lorenz and that motivated him to kill her husband Bruce. Edward Greenspan called a number
of witnesses for the defense, who revealed that Laura Lee wasn't the only woman in Gordon Allen's life at the time. He had girlfriends, a few of them.
There was Irene, the woman he met at that dance.
Then there was a widow named Carol Anne, who knew Gordon was seeing Laura Lee.
Carol Anne testified that they too had a date planned the night of the murder, but Gordon
failed to call her. When Gordon was asked about this and
why he didn't call Carol Anne when Irene said she'd forgotten about the date, he said he hadn't thought about it.
Then there was a woman named Mary Jane who also claimed to be dating Gordon around the time of
the murder. She testified that he hosted a small party at his home in Arillia which happened to be dating Gordon around the time of the murder. She testified that he hosted a small party at his home
in Arillia, which happened to be the same day
of Bruce Lorenz's funeral.
As you'll recall, the police wiretaps
had picked up a conversation between Laura Lee and Gordon
where they agreed it would be bad optics
for him to attend the funeral.
But Mary Jane's testimony may or may not have done Gordon Allen any favours.
She told the jury that while they were cleaning up after the party,
she spotted a gun on his bookshelf and heard Gordon tell his roommate
that he needed to get rid of it because it was similar to the gun that Bruce Lorenz
was shot with and they would be coming to surround the place.
Mary Jane testified that she believed Gordon was talking about the police.
She asked him if the gun was loaded or not and he said it wasn't.
She testified that he then got a copy of the Toronto Star newspaper. He quote,
showed me an article about the killing of a lawyer and asked me if I knew him. I said no,
and he said it was his girlfriend's ex. I asked him if he killed the guy and he said no. I told
him he should sit down and take a look at where he was on March 20th when Lorenz was killed.
He said he had a good alibi and that he hoped they couldn't break.
During cross-examination, defense lawyer Edward Greenspan asked Mary Jane if she had been afraid of Gordon Allen that night.
She said no, because he told her the gun wasn't loaded.
And besides, she thought the gun talk was all bluster, that Gordon was kidding.
She said he had a great sense of humor.
So why didn't she call the police anyway, Greenspan asked.
Mary Jane said she didn't know enough about the Bruce Lorenz case to weigh in at the time.
It was only a few months later when she heard on the radio
that Gordon had been arrested for murder
that she realized the potential significance
of that conversation.
During the Crown prosecution's cross-examination
of Gordon Allen, several bombshells were dropped to confront him, some previously unreported in the press.
One of them was the fact that when Gordon and Laura Lee were living together, Bruce Lorenz had filed for divorce, and he specifically named Gordon Allen in the filing.
The divorce didn't go through, of course, and within two years, Laura Lee had broken up with Gordon
and reunited with her husband.
The Crown asked Gordon if he was aware
that Bruce had specified if Laura Lee left him again
and Gordon was involved,
she would get no money from his sizable estate.
Gordon told the jury he was aware of it and that's why he accepted it was over with Laura Lee and moved on.
The Crown asked Gordon about the phone records that showed he and Laura Lee had spoken more than 130 times in the
two months leading up to the murder.
During the Lorenz family's vacation in Florida, she called Gordon at his home in
Arillia 11 times and Bruce was murdered the day after they arrived back to Toronto.
In addition, the wiretaps showed that Gordon and Laura Lee continued to talk for weeks
afterwards.
The Crown suggested to him that it was an awful lot of communication for two people
who claimed not to be in a romantic relationship.
Gordon said that most of their calls had to do with tying up loose ends from their dissolved
business and working out their finances after the bankruptcy.
Otherwise he was just being a good friend checking in on her.
This line of questioning suggested that Laura Lee and Gordon were hiding the fact that they
were having an affair again.
If Bruce found out, it would lead to a divorce and Laura
Lee would get nothing from his estate. The implication was that murdering Bruce was one
way Gordon and Laura Lee could have their cake and eat it too. But again, Gordon Allen
was the only one on trial here.
There was still the matter of the phone call,
the one Gordon allegedly made to Laura Lee
at around 6.30 the night of the murder,
the one where she claimed he told her
he'd shot her husband.
Laura Lee's so-called sweetheart deal
hinged entirely on her recovered memory
of that particular call.
Gordon told the jury that Laura Lee lied about that call.
He stated he did not call her then and certainly did not confess to killing her husband.
He confirmed that he did call her three hours later at 9.30, but said it was about some business paperwork.
The Crown pointed out that in one of the wiretaps just a few days after Bruce's murder,
Gordon was heard telling Laura Lee that he loved her. So was it love or business?
Gordon said that was the first time he'd said that to her in months. And quote, I didn't love her in that sense.
She knew it wasn't the romantic kind of love.
The Crown suggested that all these phone calls
were just the sign of a desperate man
trying to keep tabs on a murder investigation.
Gordon said that he was just concerned for Laura Lee.
The Crown then asked him why he seemed to be making plans to skip town
once the police started to close in on him as a suspect.
He said that wasn't true, he was just looking at other job opportunities outside Arillia.
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
Tulega 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.
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And speaking of holidays, you can actually gift someone an Audible membership or an Audible
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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.
Crown Prosecutor Michael Lynch laid out the Crown's theory of what happened on Monday, March 20th, 1978,
the day that Bruce Lorenz was murdered.
And Gordon Allen's defence lawyer Edward Greenspan pushed back at every step of the way.
The court heard that Bruce Lorenz phoned his wife Laura Lee from his law office that morning to tell her his firm had decided not to give him a promotion.
She encouraged her husband to have a drink after work and then called a friend and invited her to dinner.
The Crown suggested that this was perhaps to establish her own alibi.
Turns out, Bruce decided not to get that drink. He left the office with a co-worker and headed
for Osgoode subway station in downtown Toronto. When they got there, he saw a man with reddish
hair wearing a camel-colored coat talking on a payphone. He went to say hello and the two men then boarded the train together.
The crown alleged that this man was Gordon Allen.
Their theory was that Gordon did not call his date Irene from the hotel
payphone next to the gas station in Downsview as he testified,
nor did he turn around and drive back north to Orillia.
Instead, the Crown's theory was that Gordon put gas in his car at Downsview,
then travelled south to Osgood Station, downtown, to use the payphone there,
knowing that Bruce the Renz would, knowing that Bruce Lorenz would soon
enter that station after work. He joined Bruce on the train travelling north a few
stops to the junction where they were seen by another co-worker switching to
the eastbound train out to Warden station. Or that was the Crown's theory
anyway. Edward Greenspan would remind the jury that neither
of those co-workers were able to positively identify Bruce Lorenz's companion as Gordon Allen.
And neither were the witnesses who saw the two men walking in the parking lot at Warden Station towards Bruce's Mustang. They put the time of this at about 6.30pm,
give or take. Another group of witnesses said that around 6.40pm they saw a man in a tan coloured
coat leaning into the passenger side of that Mustang and assumed he was trying to help a drunk friend sleep it off.
These witnesses weren't able to positively identify that man as Gordon Allen either.
But the Crown's theory was that it was Gordon.
He'd just shot Bruce Lorenz in the head and was frantically trying to position his
lanky body inside his Mustang, reclining in the driver's seat.
How Bruce's legs ended up protruding out the window remained a mystery.
Now we get to the infamous 6.30 p.m.
phone call that Laura Lee Lorenz claimed she received from Gordon Allen that night.
The call she said she blocked from her memory
only to remember it a few days before she was due
to go on trial for first degree murder.
The Crown's theory was that Gordon Allen
shot Bruce Lorenz, then used a payphone at Warden Station
to call Laura Lee at home and tell her about the murder.
Gordon then jumped back on the subway downtown to retrieve his car from wherever he left
it and then he drove north to Arillia where he was seen at a bar as early as 8pm.
The crowd reminded the jury about the testimony of a police officer who recreated that route to prove it was
possible. That officer had testified he left Arillia at 3.30pm, drove 120 kilometres south on
the 401 highway, exiting in the Downsview neighbourhood in north-west Toronto. After
purchasing gas there, the officer was able to travel a further 16 kilometres downtown
to be at the Osgoode subway station by 5.35pm.
He then caught the subway north to the junction, then switched to the eastbound line arriving
at Warden station at about 6.15pm. The officer allowed about 25 minutes there to kill Bruce the Renz
and left the scene at 6.41.
He had testified he was able to make it almost 140 kilometres north to Arillia
arriving by 8.10pm to be seen at the local bar.
The Crown told the jury this recreation proved their theory was possible.
But Gordon's lawyer Edward Greenspan argued that the timing didn't work out at all.
He pointed to one thing that blew the Crown's theory out of the water.
The gas receipt.
The one that placed Gordon Allen at that gas station in Downsview
at 5.45pm at the earliest and 7.10pm at the latest.
Gordon had testified that after he put gas in his car,
he called Irene from the payphone at the hotel next door.
She confirmed the time as being about 5.50pm,
which meant Gordon must have put gas in his car at 5.45pm,
the earliest possible time in that 90-minute window.
But 5.45 was also the time that the Crown alleged
Gordon was on the payphone at Osgoode Station, 16 kilometres south.
Edward Greenspan argued that for the Crown's theory to be true,
Gordon would have had to travel between those locations in less than five minutes.
It was impossible.
But of course, that only provided an explanation for the beginning of that 90 minute window
of time for the gas purchase.
Greenspan told the jury that no matter what time Gordon purchased gas during that window,
the timing did not work.
If he filled up his car closer to the end of that window, which was 7.10pm, he would have had to speed at 150km
an hour the entire way back to Arillia to be seen at the bar at around 8pm.
And if Gordon purchased gas at any other time in that window, that meant he couldn't have
also been the man who took a 35-minute subway ride with Bruce Lorenz,
killed him in the car park, positioned his body in the car,
phoned Laura Lee Lorenz from a payphone,
then jumped back on the subway for the return journey.
And about that police officer's testimony that he left Warden station at 6.41pm and was able to make it almost 140 kilometres
north to Orillia in just 90 minutes. If the entire journey was by car, this would typically
take about two hours, so it clearly relied on the police officer speeding on the highway,
an extremely tight timeline already.
But because the Crown's theory was that after killing Bruce Lorenz,
Gordon caught the subway back downtown to pick up his car,
then he drove north to Orillia, this made that timeline even tighter.
The theory relied on there being no delays on any of the trains, no waiting on platforms,
and for him to have sped the entire drive back to Arillia with absolutely no traffic delays.
The Crown had also alleged that Gordon called Laura Lee from a payphone to confess to the murder
before jumping back on the subway for the return journey.
But Laura Lee claimed she received that phone call
from him at 6.30 p.m., which is the same time
that witnesses saw Bruce and the man in the camel coat
walking to his car.
Perhaps Laura Lee was off with her timing,
but even if she received the phone call closer to 6.45pm,
which better fit with witness testimony about Bruce
and the man in the parking lot,
that meant Gordon would not have been able to leave the scene
by 6.41, like the officer did.
And this made it even less likely
that he would have been able to make it back to Arillia in time to be seen at the local bar.
In Edward Greenspan's fiery closing arguments, he pointed out to the jury that it was a bloody crime scene,
with a lot of blood both inside and outside the Mustang. The Crown's timeline was already extremely tight. There
was no time for cleaning up. Yet the jury was being asked to believe that Gordon Allen
murdered Bruce Lorenz, called Laura Lee from the payphone, then jumped straight on the
subway, likely dripping with blood, as Edward Greenspan put it, and no one noticed.
The defence lawyer reminded the jury that the so-called blood found on
Gordon's chocolate brown military jacket hadn't actually been tested and confirmed
as blood. And even if it were, multiple witnesses said the man seen with Bruce
Larens at the payphone at Osgoode Station was wearing a light or tan coloured coat.
So too was the man seen further up at the junction with Bruce, then walking in the car park at Warden Station and leaning into his Mustang.
Greenspan claimed the police and the Crown had such tunnel vision for Gordon Allen that they ignored all kinds of evidence.
There was a green car seen speeding away from the scene of the crime that was never located.
Gordon Allen drove a silver Mazda.
And of course, those fraudulent mortgage deals that Bruce the Wrens may have been involved in.
But the bulk of his closing arguments focused on that critical 6.30pm phone call. Edward Greenspan
argued the only way the killer could have called anyone at 6.30pm is if he quote carried a phone
in his shoe. And out of all the circumstantial evidence presented at trial,
this phone call where Gordon allegedly confessed to murdering Bruce the Renz was the only thing
that even suggested he was implicated in the murder, according to the defense. And it all
hinged on Laura Lee's weird recovered memory.
Edward Greenspan had a theory on that too.
In his opinion, the 630 call never happened.
He suggested to the jury that just before
Laura Lee's trial was supposed to begin,
the reality of her situation sunk in,
that at age 33, she stood to lose both her own freedom and
years with her children. Quote, convicted of first-degree murder she'd be sentenced
to life in imprisonment. She'd be 58 when she got out. Her fur coat would sit in
cold storage for a long time. What was the one thing she could do to take herself out of a first
degree murder charge? She had to point the finger at someone. She had to do what the police were
demanding all along. They even gave her a script prepared a forged affidavit, a lie known by the
police to be a lie to show to Gordon Allen.
That affidavit with Laura Lee's forged signature stated that Gordon was obsessed with her
and when she asked him to back off,
he made death threats against her and the children.
It was a ruse the police concocted
to make Gordon think that Laura Lee had turned on him,
hoping he would do the same. And at the time, Laura Lee had turned on him, hoping he would do the same.
And at the time, Laura Lee had no knowledge
of that affidavit.
But Greenspan told the jury that months later
at a preliminary hearing,
she saw a copy of that affidavit.
His theory was that it inadvertently formed the foundation
of her new story, which was that she was over
the relationship with Gordon,
but he was still in love with her.
And that gave him motive to kill her husband.
Edward Greenspan speculated that Laura Lee
would have realized she had a choice.
She could either be an accused at trial or a witness. Quote,
Faced with a trial two days away and told by a lawyer that she might be convicted despite her
innocence, she did the only thing Laura Lee Lorenz is capable of doing in those circumstances.
She lied. She tried to sink the man she'd sworn for a year was innocent
to save herself. That's why she did it. It's that simple and that terrifying.
The jury heard that even if they believed all the Crown witnesses except Laura Lee Lorenz,
if they didn't believe that the 6.30 phone call happened the way she said,
then they couldn't return a guilty verdict for Gordon Allen.
In Crown prosecutor Michael Lynch's closing arguments, he described Gordon
Allen as a grasping, vicious, vindictive coward, adding,
quote, the accused wanted Laura Lee and the children
more than anything else in his entire life.
His time with Laura Lee Lorenz
had been the best in his life.
One thing stood in the way, Bruce Lorenz.
The Crown Prosecutor referred to a long list
of what he described as unfortunate coincidences.
Of course, they were pieces of circumstantial evidence.
There were the phone records that showed Gordon Allen and Laura Lee he loved her and asked her if she was getting any heat.
How she told him to be careful.
These were all just unfortunate coincidences, the Crown Prosecutor said sarcastically.
So too was the fact that Gordon and Laura Lee had financial issues when their relationship broke down.
That Laura Lee was beneficiary of a $75,000 insurance policy on her husband's life.
And believed she was the primary beneficiary of his will.
It was just a coincidence that Gordon lied to the police as well as his own friends and family about being an arrelia all day when the gas receipt proved otherwise.
So too was the fact that the murder weapon had never been recovered yet a
similar gun to the one that fired the 22 caliber bullet into Bruce Lorenz's
head was allegedly seen at Gordon's home. The Crown stated there were just
too many instances of these unfortunate coincidences and when added together they all pointed to Gordon
Allen's guilt. And about Laura Lee and that phone call quote, We are not so naive as to think Laura Lee is not more involved than she's prepared to admit.
It would be difficult to admit to your friends and relatives that you helped a killer.
While she is not a person to be admired by any means,
I suggest to you that she is telling the truth about the phone call.
telling the truth about the phone call.
Before the jury retired to deliberate, the judge told them that it was an all or nothing verdict.
They had to find Gordon Allen guilty of first degree murder
or not guilty at all.
The judge reminded the jury that although Gordon Allen had told
considerable lies,
there was no direct evidence linking him to the murder. And just like Edward Greenspan,
the judge said he also found Laura Lee's recovered memory about the 6.30 phone call to be quote,
astounding. The judge also pointed out that Laura Lee had the benefit of seeing something else before she remembered that phone call.
The brief, prepared by the Crown, about the gas receipt that placed Gordon Allen at the gas station in Downsview, sometime between 5.45 and 7.10 p.m. The judge told the jury that it was only after Laura Lee read the brief that she
suddenly remembered that 6.30 p.m. phone call right in the middle of that window of time.
As the jury deliberated Edward Greenspan was extremely confident He would write that based on the evidence, the only way the
jury could have found Gordon Allen guilty was on some stubborn speculation that he must
have killed Laura Lee Lorenz somehow, even if it wasn't the way that the Crown suggested
it. But quote, no lawyer, no matter how confident, ever really knows what a jury will do.
The jury deliberated for three and a half days and found 37-year-old Gordon Allen not
guilty of first degree murder.
The Toronto Star reported that he grabbed his head with shaky hands and collapsed in
his seat with relief.
He said, I can live again.
I never once doubted that our justice would arrive at the truth,
but this will stay with me for the rest of my life.
The Crown later announced that it had found no grounds that would merit an appeal.
It was over.
Well, almost. There was still the matter of Gordon Allen
lying about his education at that bail hearing. He pleaded guilty to perjury, but even those
charges were eventually thrown out. As for Laura Lee Lorenz, remember before the trial
started Edward Greenspan successfully argued that no one had been convicted of murder yet.
So how could Laura Lee plead guilty to being an accessory after the fact?
The judge had agreed that Laura Lee's guilty plea would be set aside until after Gordon Allen's murder trial.
And now that he'd been acquitted, it was cancelled.
Both she and Gordon were free.
Laura Lee told the Toronto Star,
I know a lot of things have been said about me,
but I have no comment.
She promised she would speak out at a later date.
Later that year, she sued for a share of Bruce Lorenza's $200,000 estate.
He had cut her out of his will after she first left him for Gordon Allen and added
her back into it after they reconciled.
He never did sign that updated will, but Laura Lee won that fight too, settling for $175,000
to be split between her and the children.
And remember Staff Sergeant Stevenson and McLean, the police officers who created the
false affidavit signed with Laura Lee's forged signature, hoping it would inspire a confession
from Gordon. They were eventually charged with that very crime and another trial was held.
During that trial, the former lovers crossed paths for the first time in months. They did not
say a word to each other. Laura Lee had only agreed to testify if nothing she said could be used against her in a court of law.
She testified that although she did not sign that affidavit, she would have signed it if the officers had asked her to.
Clearly, there was no love lost between the former lovers.
Gordon Allen remained defiant.
On the stand he called the affidavit absurd, ridiculous and preposterous.
As for the two police officers, the court heard that police are permitted to employ
quote, dirty tricks to trap suspects. It's a routine practice they're taught during training and often rewarded in court.
One expert testified that if they had simply forged Laura Lee's signature on a plain old statement,
things might be different.
But forging a signature on a legal affidavit is a crime, regardless of the intentions.
That said, even the office's own lawyers have been toldidavit is a crime, regardless of the intentions.
That said, even the office's own lawyers argued that if the false affidavit had resulted
in a confession from Gordon Allen, they wouldn't be on trial, they'd be heroes.
So why were they charged and tried for something police do all the time?
In Edward Greenspan's opinion, they were made the scapegoats in a failed conviction.
In the end, the officers were found guilty of creating the false affidavit, the only
convictions related to the murder of Bruce Lorenz.
Instead of jail time or criminal records,
the officers were given absolute discharges
and could no longer be police officers.
The Toronto Star called the Bruce Lorenz murder case
Canada's version of double indemnity
after the 40s noir film about a gorgeous femme fatale who conspires with her lover to kill her husband.
This case also solidified Edward Greenspan's reputation as the lawyer you need when you're accused of murder.
In later years, he occasionally reflected on his client Gordon Allen.
He occasionally reflected on his client Gordon Allen. He told a crowd of 500 lawyers that Gordon looked guilty of cold-blooded murder when he first took him on as a client.
Quote, give is that in our system every man is innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
The question of doubt is not determined in the newspaper or by public broadcast.
Nobody is legally guilty until guilt is imposed by the court.
Edward Greenspan always maintained that he believed Gordon Allen was innocent. But Bruce the Renz was obviously killed that night and Laura Lee had an alibi.
She was at home with her children and a dinner guest.
So if Gordon didn't kill Bruce the Renz, then who did?
Greenspan was happy to speculate as part
of his 1987 book, Greenspanpan the Case for the Defense. He wrote there was no
evidence apart from vague hearsay that Bruce the Renz had any business dealings or personal conflicts
that might have motivated someone to murder him. Quote, it was also a fact that after the first
48 hours the police made no effort to investigate Bruce's life,
except in relation to Gordon and Laura Lee. The investigators may have started with an open mind,
but they closed it very quickly. In my opinion, they closed it as soon as they heard Bruce's
co-worker say that the man she saw on the subway must be Gordon Allen.
From that point on, the investigation concentrated on nothing but gathering
evidence against Laura Lee and Gordon by hook or by crook.
Other possibilities were simply not explored, but it would be rash to conclude
that they did not exist.
Greenspan wrote about evidence that there
were muggers operating at that parking lot. Maybe it was quote, some crazy kid
armed and strung out on drugs who might have decided to take a chance but fled
when he was spotted by passers-by which explained why there was no evidence that Bruce Lorenz had been robbed.
Greenspan wrote that such things have happened before. And finally, he noted that the murder
seemed to be a gangland-style assassination, a single bullet behind the ear with no weapon
ever found and no fingerprints or any other physical evidence connected with the
killer and there was that green car speeding away from the parking lot. Greenspan wrote that hired
assassins have been known to kill the wrong victim by mistake. Quote, hit men are not very smart and they frequently put bombs in the wrong car or torch the wrong garage.
The murder of Bruce Lorenz has never been solved.
And although his wife Laura Lee promised to speak out at a later date, she never did.
at a later date, she never did.
A search of the news archives in the decades after the trial
show that there was never any new information
put on the public record about either Laura Leela Renz
or Gordon Allen.
The case remains a mystery.
Thanks for listening. If you happen to know anyone related to this case, please respect their privacy.
Special thanks to Barbara Cooper who played Laura Lee Lorenz and Canadians probably recognise
the voice of Terry O'Reilly who played Edward Greenspan during the cross examination. Terry hosts the award-winning CBC radio show Under the
Influence. His Apostrophe podcast network produces other great shows too like We
Regret to Inform You, the Rejection podcast. A fascinating look at successful
people who overcame debilitating career rejection.
Stay tuned to hear a promo for that in just a minute.
This series has been pieced together from the extensive news archives of the Toronto Star,
excerpts of a lecture delivered by Edward Greenspan, a Case for the Defense,
co-written by George Jonas. 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 our Facebook and Instagram pages to see photos and clippings.
Lisa Gabriel researched and wrote this series.
Our senior producer is Lindsay Aldridge and Carol Weinberg is our script consultant.
Our audio editor is Eric Crosby, who also provided the voice of Gordon Allen in part 1.
Additional research and writing, narration and sound design was by me,
and the theme songs were composed by We Talk of Dreams.
I'll be back soon with another Canadian true crime episode.
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 Hailey 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, artists, athletes, and even astronauts. We extract the insights and separate shame from rejection
one story at a time.
We regret to inform you the Rejection Podcast.
Find us wherever you like to listen.
Life never seems to slow down, but with Google Pixel powered by Gemini,
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Google gifted me a Google Pixel 9, and to summon Gemini I just hold the power button,
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Can you look into my Gmail and give me the details for
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I just realized I forgot to get the cake.
Where can I get one near the restaurant?
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Honestly, I'd need hours to cover everything Gemini
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