A stain on our game

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Graham James was last seen in a courtroom in the summer of 2015.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 10/12/2020 (1379 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Graham James was last seen in a courtroom in the summer of 2015.

Appearing via video link from a Quebec prison, the disgraced junior hockey coach pleaded guilty in a Swift Current courtroom to sexual assault on one of his players during the early 1990s, and was sentenced to two additional years behind bars.

But that was not the end of the serial sex abuser’s saga; it was just one more chapter in his sordid life story.

Graham James arrives at court for sentencing in Winnipeg on March 20, 2012. (John Woods / The Canadian Press files)
Graham James arrives at court for sentencing in Winnipeg on March 20, 2012. (John Woods / The Canadian Press files)

While a significant number of the assaults occurred in Saskatchewan, where he coached both the Western Hockey League’s Moose Jaw Warriors and Swift Current Broncos, the James scandal has always been a Winnipeg story.

James worked his way up through the ranks here — in Winnipeg minor hockey, the Manitoba Junior Hockey League and the WHL’s Winnipeg Warriors.

It was with this backdrop that Free Press sports writer Jeff Hamilton began investigating James’ past, from his formative years growing up as an Air Force brat in St. James to his time as a substitute teacher in the St. James-Assiniboia School Division, and from his first foray into coaching minor hockey to his ultimate downfall.

Reporter Jeff Hamilton spoke to dozens of former players, childhood friends, educators and hockey colleagues and officials as part of this project. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)
Reporter Jeff Hamilton spoke to dozens of former players, childhood friends, educators and hockey colleagues and officials as part of this project. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Hamilton interviewed dozens of former players, childhood friends, educators and hockey colleagues and officials.

His investigation reveals an awkward teen who found confidence both in the classroom and at the rink, one that enabled him to embark on his trail of destructive criminal behaviour.

The investigation also paints a picture of complicity or, at the very least, wilful ignorance through all levels of the sport, which allowed James to abuse young players for years.

In total, James has been convicted of sexually assaulting five former players: Sheldon Kennedy, Theoren Fleury and Todd Holt have all publicly shared their ordeals; the identities of two others have been protected by publication bans.

Hamilton's investigation paints a picture of complicity -- or, at the very least, wilful ignorance -- through all levels of the sport, which allowed Graham James to abuse young players for years.
Hamilton's investigation paints a picture of complicity -- or, at the very least, wilful ignorance -- through all levels of the sport, which allowed Graham James to abuse young players for years.

However, police estimate the true number of victims is between 25 and 100.

While powerful institutions, such as the Catholic Church, and prominent individuals, including Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, have all had their moments of reckoning, there has been no equivalent to the #MeToo movement in hockey.

This Free Press investigation attempts to change that narrative by giving voice to victims and asking questions of those who knew or ought to have known what was happening on their watch.

 


 

Jay Macaulay was trying to crack the WHL Broncos’ lineup in 1988; instead he became one more of Graham James’ victims

Jay MacAulay at the Central Community Centre hockey rink in Brandon. (Tim Smith for the Winnipeg Free Press)

Posted:

It’s a warm late-August afternoon and Jay Macaulay is sitting in the empty lobby of Winnipeg’s train station fidgeting with a pen.He just finished putting a check mark in his day planner, indicating another successfully finished workshop he’s required to attend each week as part of his parole conditions.

Read full story

 


 

Former friends, teammates of Graham James recall odd behaviour, but nothing to portend depravity to come

Ice rink at 17 Wing  (John Woods / Winnipeg Free Press)

Posted:

It was midway through Sheldon Kennedy’s seventh NHL season, and the Calgary newspapers were calling for his head.After discovering Kennedy had collapsed into tears and was unable to suit up for the Calgary Flames’ April 8, 1996 game against the Edmonton Oilers, they published stories he had suffered a nervous breakdown.

Read full story

 


 

Graham James wasn't the only predator teaching at Silver Heights Collegiate

James (far right, back row) and Easton (far right, front row) played on a team from Silver Heights in 1977.

Posted:

IT’S an image that came to haunt Ivano Buccini.The longtime teacher at Silver Heights Collegiate recalled being impressed in the early 1980s after watching Graham James help a young hockey player with his homework in a classroom.

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Players describe an unravelling Broncos dressing room, reveal emotional scars decades later

Memorabilia in the basement at Todd Holt

Posted:

Graham James preyed on vulnerable, emotionally fragile boys desperate to play pro hockey; he manipulated them into believing he cared about them, so they would return the favour.

Read full story

 


 

Despite suspicion, the hockey community failed to protect the players Graham James was abusing

1978 St.James Canadians

Posted:

Despite opponents' homophobic taunts on the ice and suspicions off it, no one in Manitoba's or Western Canada's hockey community did anything to protect the young players Graham James was sexually abusing. Several decades later, most still won't talk about what they knew about the predator behind the bench.

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In the aftermath of Graham James, sports officials have long promised changes — but observers wonder where they are

A plaque at Innovation Credit Union iPlex in Swift Current commemorating the  Broncos

Posted:

Former junior hockey players' lawsuit, supporting affidavits detail unimaginable sexual, emotional abuse from veteran teammates in team-condoned hazing rituals; critics say resistant sport officials have long turned a blind eye to the rot in their organizations.

Read full story

 


 

To know better is to do better

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Sheldon Kennedy says abuse is not just a hockey issue; it’s a community issue, and we all must do better.

Posted:

After reading “A Stain on our Game” by Jeff Hamilton, I felt that I needed and wanted to share my views on the six-part article. I feel strongly that this story has critical teachings in it from which we all can learn.

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Where is the outrage?

A plaque at Innovation Credit Union iPlex in Swift Current commemorating the  Broncos

Posted:

For days now, I have been poring through the incredible work of Jeff Hamilton’s "A Stain on Our Game: The Life and Destructive Legacy of Graham James." This painful chronicle of the path of destruction left by convicted sex offender Graham James has left me wrestling with the same question that has been on my mind for the last 20 years:

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Jay Macaulay, whose life was shattered by predator Graham James, dies of overdose

Jay Macaulay in Brandon on October 2, 2020. (Tim Smith for the Winnipeg Free Press)

Posted:

Jay Macaulay's life was shattered by predator coach Graham James. After decades of silent, shame-filled torment, he told his story to a Free Press reporter who became a trusted friend.

Read full story

Jeff Hamilton

Jeff Hamilton
Multimedia producer

After a slew of injuries playing hockey that included breaks to the wrist, arm, and collar bone; a tear of the medial collateral ligament in both knees; as well as a collapsed lung, Jeff figured it was a good idea to take his interest in sports off the ice and in to the classroom.

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