"Not Guilty" The Trial of Gerald Regan by Stephen Kimber (1999), HC, dust jacket
The public was shocked when reports began to circulate that Gerald Regan, a former premier of Nova Scotia and federal cabinet minister, had committed dozens of sexual assaults on teenage girls and young women over a period of decades. Charges were laid and a major trial took place in 1998.
The book is powerful in its contrast of public life and private sordidness. Kimber shows how the authorities hoped through the prosecution of the sexual assault charges to restore their reputation after previous scandals.
What happened? How could a man who "everyone knew" should be watched around women workers and acquaintances be let off on such serious charges?