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a dogleg in the Red River

a memoir

In 1967, two young girls were nestled in their home set in a dogleg of the Red River, north of the Forks. They lived under the watchful eye of their grandparents, while their parents ran a busy barbershop in Winnipeg.  They couldn't know the river would foreshadow the twists and turbulence to come, while their mother, who was adopted at birth, takes them along in her quest for identity.

When you talk about credibility of a witness it's motive, motive, motive. I suggest to you that you are left with uncontroverted evidence...at an age when consent is not an issue. And there is no motive, none at all suggested by the evidence as to why anyone would put themselves through the kind of emotional pain that is involved...which could just be put under a carpet and forgotten about. It could be, except for the mental health of those involved. 

Robert D. McIntosh, Crown Council, closing statement in the Supreme Court of British Columbia before the Honourable Justice Meiklam and jury on October 16, 1995

McIntosh

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a dogleg in the Red River

©2023 by Dawn & Angela Hinze

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