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Investigates

116 episodes - English - Latest episode: 26 days ago -

APTN Investigates is the first Indigenous investigative news program in Canada, offering viewers hard-hitting reports and stories.

Produced by award-winning journalists, APTN Investigates is committed to seeking the truth for our people.

Society & Culture News Politics investigates indigenous news reports
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Episodes

Retrospective: Bullet-Proof Journalism

March 29, 2019 20:19 - 29 minutes - 41.5 MB

Dennis Ward saw it coming. The pipeline, the build-up of tension at Standing Rock in North Dakota, which became an eight-month long stand-off. He convinced the APTN news room to go south-side for what has turned out to be one of the most important stories in US-Indigenous relations this century. We talk about his pre-APTN career, to his coverage of Standing Rock, including news gathering while being pepper sprayed, and dodging rubber bullets.

Retrospective: Exposing corruption and misspending in Indian country

March 23, 2019 17:39

Melissa Ridgen has exposed corruption and misspending in Indian country. We dive into what she has discovered about accountability, and some of the key stories Investigates has broken over the last 10 years…. Plus we talk about bunnies.

Retrospective: “My fingers just know where to go”

March 16, 2019 23:17 - 26 minutes - 37.1 MB

Trina Roache has worked at APTN – off and on – since 2001. After returning from an “extended” four-year mat leave in 2013, she saw that the equipment had changed and evolved. But the Mi’kmaq video journalist wanted that big old Sony camera she was accustomed to using earlier in her career. “I still have that camera,” she told Karyn Pugliese during her interview for APTN Investigates – a Retrospective, talking about her History Decolonized documentary. “My fingers just know where to go.” ...

Retrospective: “Hey! I can do more!”

February 09, 2019 17:15 - 24 minutes - 34.8 MB

According to APTN Investigates journalist Josh Grummet, the most important thing anyone can do in life is listen. So that’s why his Twitter handle is @joshlistens! Another intriguing mystery solved during this conversation with Executive News Director Karyn Pugliese. He’s the right-hand man to producers on Investigates. A journalist, shooter, editor and creative tour de force with a hand in every episode including his own, Priceless.

Retrospective: They messed up the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement and fleeced survivors

February 01, 2019 21:01 - 18 minutes - 27.1 MB

Kathleen Martens knows this. She’s proved time and again that government did not fairly compensate survivors and some lawyers fleeced them. She’s broken stories, held those in power accountable, some lawyers were disbarred as a result of her exposés. Her documentary “Truth? Or Reconciliation” was another deep dive winning the 2017 Canadian Association of Journalists award in the Open Broadcast Feature category with one judge calling it a “perfect” documentary.

Retrospective: Busking Journalism with Holly Moore

January 25, 2019 22:44 - 24 minutes - 34.4 MB

Holly Moore was a fine arts student, a dancer and a street performer. Naturally, the next step in her career was to join CBC’s elite investigative unit. Not so obvious? We talk about how she got from A to B to APTN Today, she is the producer of APTN Investigates, and recently won the Amnesty International Award for Human Right reporting for her work on “The Cure was worse” delving into stories of starvation, isolation, loss of culture and even medical experimentation at Canada’s tuberculos...

Retrospective: Nothing good ever came from staring out the window

January 18, 2019 17:00 - 29 minutes - 41.3 MB

Melissa Ridgen has moved from APTN Investigates to host the APTN talk show InFocus. She’s brought her direct style of inquiry and her predilection for getting to the bottom of things in a Frank way. Not everybody likes that. We’ll talk to her about how she handles haters. Also, how staring out a window led Ridgen to investigate a good news story, but then it all went wrong.

Retrospective: Vulnerable people, what’s the harm of a little journalism?

January 11, 2019 17:00 - 24 minutes - 34.9 MB

Veteran reporter Kathleen Marten’s takes us behind the scenes. Matty is non-verbal, suffers from serious disabilities and just aged out of foster care. His foster family wants to keep caring for him, but the state is cutting them off. It’s the kind of noble story reporters want to tell. However, you can’t just bulldoze your way in. Marten’s talks about trying to strike the balance between getting the images and story a television journalist needs, and while trying not to exploit or harm th...

Retrospective: From local print to TV - Covering it all in the world in journalism

November 23, 2018 22:00 - 32 minutes - 45.5 MB

Kathleen Martens has done it all, from covering agricultural stories for a small-town paper in rural Manitoba to taking on the complexities of the federal bureaucracy, not to mention just about the entire legal profession. First in local print and then in long form TV investigations for a national audience and now on the APTN National News web site, there’s not much Kathleen Martens hasn’t done in the world of journalism. And by bringing a handful of national awards to APTN Investigates, the...

Retrospective: Prospering in media the hard way

November 16, 2018 21:50 - 25 minutes - 36.7 MB

It’s been a unique journey for APTN Vancouver Video Journalist Tina House. She learned how to be in the right place at the right time from her Metis leader father. She picked up the skills she needed to survive and prosper in media the hard way, waiting tables along the way. Then during the very first season of APTN Investigates, Tina House was awarded the Amnesty International Human Rights Journalism Award for a story about a missing and then murdered relative. Karyn Pugliese and Tina Hou...

Retrospective: Child labour in the newsroom.

November 09, 2018 21:22 - 22 minutes - 32.7 MB

Francine Compton’s father made her transcribe interviews as a child, then encouraged her to study broadcast, telling her one day Indigenous people would have their own TV network. She was still a teenager when she was put in charge of APTN’s studio crew. She’s since worked as a reporter, producer and is now part of APTN’s management team. We talk about this plus her Investigates story on fracking, before fracking was a thing.

Retrospective: Single Moms, Lies and Videotape

November 03, 2018 17:05 - 23 minutes - 33.5 MB

It became clear early on at APTN that the majority of reporters it was hiring were single moms. Melissa Ridgen talks about balancing motherhood and journalism. As well this episode dives into Ridgen's investigation into the scandal surrounding the Manitoba Association Of Native Firefighters' (MANFF's) apparent disregard for its duty to care for flood victims, not to mention taxpayer dollars. We talk about why it's important to investigate these stories, despite the fear that it may perpetu...

Retrospective: A shoebox full of documents sealed with duct tape

October 26, 2018 18:02 - 26 minutes - 37.9 MB

Kenneth Jackson, a former Ottawa Sun crime reporter trying his hand as a freelancer, got the box. In it were documents with politicians' names, someone who had a personal connection to the prime minister and a mass of information about First Nations water. Jackson put the box in the trunk of his car and drove to the Ottawa home of his best friend, a reporter named Jorge Barrera who had been working at APTN as a web reporter. That launched one of the most widely reported investigations into...

Retrospective: “I didn’t think that could happen in Canada.”

October 19, 2018 17:29 - 19 minutes - 28.7 MB

Todd Lamirande had been at APTN for only a year when he transferred to BC to open the Vancouver bureau – located in his one bedroom apartment. Shortly thereafter, the police illegally seized his car and his tapes. It was a precarious start, but so began an 18-year career at APTN, and Lamirande – who never wanted to work in television –began his ascent, becoming one of the best known on air personalities at APTN. Lamirande also tells how he unravelled the mystery behind the missing Bell of ...

Retrospective: Through the Looking Glass

October 12, 2018 16:44 - 27 minutes - 39.1 MB

For a long time Paul Barnsley was the only investigative journalist on the Native beat, and today he remains one of the most respected journalists among Indigenous people in Canada. In Through the Looking Glass he talks about his career and offers wisdom from his own experience to non-Aboriginal reporters breaking in on the beat. It’s part of a series of interviews celebrating the 10th anniversary of APTN investigates. Please help people find it, by leaving a rating or comment.

Retrospective: The story that saved lives

October 04, 2018 20:28 - 22 minutes - 32.4 MB

Award-winning Cheryl McKenzie, known as the face of APTN for more than a decade speaks about her career, a breakthrough story that saved dozens of lives, and the of launch Investigative journalism by Indigenous peoples – a first in the world. It’s part of a series of interviews celebrating the 10th anniversary of APTN investigates. Please help people find it, by leaving a rating or comment.