This is an eye-hot podcast, guaranteed human.
It's that time to put on your jersey and wave your flag, whoever you root for.
Why do I wash the world up? That's like asking me, why do I breed? And it's beautiful. The guys are young and cute and fit. It's not PSA game, it's your culture.
I think watching it was my dad. It's a connecting force.
βFrom Futuro Studios, I'm Fernanda Chavari and this is American Football.β
I show about soccer culture in the US and its underdog roots.
Listen to American football on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. There was no anything inside those eyes, they turned black. It scared the hell out of me. Evil wake up, I'm the one that saw the murder, take place by cream at end of tipo. Anthony DiPipo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said I'm not guilty, I'll take it to the grave. Listen to the devil's quarre in the bone valley feed on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
βRadio app search, joy 101, and listen now.β
Joy 101 with HotaCopy is presented by CVS. Everyone sees me as a football player, but before anything else, I'm human. Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions, ever since I was born. This isn't a normal podcast, everything here is spontaneous, real and genuine. Just honest, conversations about what it means to be alive.
I'm going to have you in the kitchen to learn this and listen to learning to be human or Ihar Radio, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, listener, I just wanted to give you a heads up that this episode includes discussions of assault and sexual assault. Though we don't go into any specific details. But there are nice things in it too, like a group of strangers who came together to reclaim their stories. This episode is too triggering for you, though, just skip it.
There are plenty more episodes for you to dive into on the feed. Look after yourselves.
βI remember laying in my bed and staring out the window.β
And I was watching a man wash the windows of a high rise across the street. It's April 2021. Ameral Andrews, who's a civil servant in Ottawa, Canada, has just hit an all-time low. And so she's doing that thing that movie characters do, where they lay back and watch the world just move on without them. And I remember laying in bed feeling miserable and like trapped.
And so desperately sad. Ameral is a survivor of assault. And it took her a really long time, like years, to get the language and understanding that what happened to her was wrong and that it's criminal. But after her attacker was convicted in 2021, she wanted to share her story. But there was a problem.
I found that there was a publication ban in restriction on my ability to speak, and that I could also be prosecuted for just attributing my own experience. Essentially gagged against my own will. She, the victim, was not able to talk about her story, not to the press, not on Twitter. She couldn't even text her friends about it. She couldn't even email her therapist. If she spoke about it, she could, according to Canadian law, face a criminal conviction and a fine.
Which is how Marl finds herself here, alone in her experience, staring out th...
But even in that moment, I told myself, remember what this feels like, because one day you will be able to do something with this feeling.
βOh, she does something about it, all right.β
I'm Anna Sinfield, and from the teams at Novel and I Heart Podcasts. This is the girlfriend Spotlight, where we tell stories of women winning. Today, Marl breaks the ban. When Marl Andrews was 18, she was assaulted by her driving instructor. Seven years later, in 2020, the case finally went to court, and her attacker pleaded guilty.
βAt that point, Marl thought the case was over, wrapped up and behind her, but it was actually just the beginning.β
It turns out that the crown attorney showed up and asked the judge to put a publication ban on my identity.
Essentially, meaning that I, Marl Andrews should never be allowed to speak of what happened or the criminal case for which he pled guilty.
And I should be permanently silenced, and even once I die, no one should ever be allowed to say in the same sentence. Marl Andrews was assaulted by Ziya Shah when she was his student in driving school. Okay, so there's this law in Canada, it's part of the Canadian criminal code, and it's called a publication ban. You'll also find versions of it in Australia and other places, but what it says is that a victim of a sexual offense is granted anonymity. That no one is allowed to publicly name the victim in the media or any other place.
And that makes sense, right? It seems like a good thing, but here's the kicker. The ban applies to everyone, including the victim themselves, which makes it illegal for them to publicly share their own names or stories even if they wanted to. Only 21 a woman in Ontario was actually convicted of reaching her own publication ban. She had emailed a transcript of a court ruling to her family and friends, and for that she was ordered to pay a $2,000 fine. This fine wasn't for exposing someone else's identity, but for speaking about her own experience.
I had no idea about this law before I spoke to Morrell, and nor did she, until she came across it in her own case.
It's not a mandatory ban. It's just a standard procedure that Crown attorneys would go through on the first appearance in court.
They would ask for the publication ban as a standard practice to protect the identity of the victim. It originally came to be Canadian criminal code section 486.4 back in the 80s, and at that time, you know, society, culture was different. Parliament's original intention was to provide a protection for women, for victims who were having to face the reality that if they went and reported their crimes and those crimes ended up in a trial that that's public information.
βAnd that their identities could be published in the news, and I think we have a better appreciation today that people should have the ability to choose.β
How they deal with their cases, how they pursue healing, and for some people healing might be a little more public, and have a name attached to it. Okay, so it's one of those kind of accidental laws that ends up actually holding victims back. Exactly. So if you want like a technical summary of what the law intended, it was to say that anyone is prevented from publishing broadcasting, transmitting any information that could identify the victim in the case. And it was permanent forever, even when a victim dies, that publication band still remained in place.
I mean, I can't imagine how frustrating it must have been to have a policy that's meant to protect you, but it sounds like in this case is really being used to protect the offender.
That's what it felt like.
That was exactly like you say intended to protect me.
The irony of this law was showing its face. Something that was meant to protect victims and encourage reporting of crimes was being twisted to silent survivors.
βIt was just never something that I wanted. I didn't feel ashamed, you know, I had a commentary that I felt was important about what it is like to go through the legal system as a victim.β
I was told by the court that I was not allowed to speak about my experience and just being a young woman and, you know, reporting harm, the story kind of crew legs of its own, and I felt compelled to tell people about what happened.
It felt important to just have my immediate friends and family witness, but once I encountered the issue of the publication ban, that's when I knew.
It was bigger than me and that there was something more that I wanted to talk about. Murrell felt she had to try and get this ban lifted, but it was mid-pandemic when it was difficult to access any legal support clinics or legal help organizations in person. She came across dead end off the dead end.
βI was really alone. It's a very lonely journey. So there were really no resources. I went online. I tried to find any article or guide or resource about this, and I remember laying in my bed and staring out the window.β
And I was watching a man wash the windows of a high rise across the street, and I remember laying in bed feeling miserable and like trapped and so desperately sad.
But even in that moment, I told myself, remember what this feels like, because one day you will be able to do something with this feeling. She asked the judge in her case, but was told the case was closed. She even started combing through the criminal code of Canada herself, trying to find any information on how to challenge the ban, but to know a veil, alone again, naturally. It was pretty clear that no one wanted to help me. That my case was over, and I just was not a priority because people were busy. So the last avenue that I felt was available to me was the media.
So one day I decided to email a journalist from the Toronto Star, and she agreed to tell my story, and I had to be anonymous. I couldn't be named or photographed for the piece, but the Toronto Star published an article about my struggle and how silly it was that I was being essentially gagged against my own will. Once the article hit the front pages of the Toronto Star, it was impossible to ignore. The crown attorneys who read it immediately recognized Morales Anger, even though her name wasn't mentioned.
They arranged for a judge to have a look at her ban, and as a courtesy, they let the offenders attorney know too. He wrote back and said that he actually opposed the application, and his client felt that I should not be allowed to have my publication ban removed. So that required us to go back to court, and I essentially had to beg a judge to remove my publication ban. Ultimately, she agreed that I should be allowed to publicly speak about what happened to me, and my publication ban was removed in May 2021.
βI mean, that was a long battle to get to that point. How did you feel when the ban was lifted for the first time?β
I bought a bottle of my way champagne, and me and my roommate, my best friend, we pop the champagne, we celebrated because it felt like a long journey, but it was a celebration. It was a victory because I felt like I had won, and the system had acquiesced essentially to my demand and refusal to be silenced. Now, this is where the quiet win, the lifting of the publication ban and the popping of the champagne bottle, starts to build into something louder.
Morrell logs on to Twitter and just lets it rip.
Listener, Morrell's got the mic now, and she's killing it.
βImmediately, people were retweeting it and liking it, and I had so many replies to the thread, people who I knew, people who were strangers reached out in my direct messages and said, "Wait, I have a publication ban to how did you remove yours?"β
I talked to you, like there were hundreds, hundreds of messages, and it felt like again reaffirmation that this was bigger than me.
It was extremely powerful and very, very moving to read every single message.
The day that I had my publication ban removed, the Toronto Star wrote a follow-up story. I could finally be named, my photograph could appear on the front page of the newspaper, and one of the things they asked me was, "What comes next?" And right away, I knew that the answer was, this section of the criminal code needs to be changed, and I'm going to do something about it. After the break, Morrell does something about it. They trained down in the pit.
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βIn the moment, it felt like it was going on forever.β
I didn't think I was going to live. I was terrified. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me.
That was your first murder case.
Yes, sure. Fear to say this was the biggest case here, career. Yes, sir. Right, but murder of a child is probably more challenging. The battles against.
I would think so. People wake up. I'm the one that saw the murder. "Take place by crevents and the Pippo."
Anthony DiPippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced
to the maximum. "I said I'm not guilty, I'll take it to the grave." Listen to the devil's quarry on the Ihard radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the devil's quarry at free with exclusive content, subscribe to Love of For Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
"I love the sounds, the buzzing from the stadium, the chanting from the fans, the announcers calling the place, soccer, football, it's home."
β"Why do I wash the world cup?" "That's what I ask me, why do I breed?"β
"I inherited that fandom from my mom." "I like watching it with my dad." "It's a connecting force." From Futuro Studios, I'm Fernanda Chavari, and this is American Football. I show about soccer culture in the U.S. and it's underdog roots.
We go beyond the game to the people and the stories that make it great." "A super game is festival, it's not just a game, it's your culture." "I took an elbow to my head, which cracked my skull." "It is an American game." "The Brazilians don't like hearing that, though."
"Are they the only ones I don't like?" "I actually don't like anybody like that." As we get ready for the men's world cup this summer, listen to American Football as part of the Michael Thudapardcast Network, available on the Ihard radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
"Hey, I'm Hoda Kattby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kattby, together. We're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people." Like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges, "I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer." And that was more difficult.
There's a lot of people who understand post-parnaid depression. I was not prepared for post-parnaid anxiety.
"Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kattby on the Ihard radio app, Apple podcasts, o...
you get your podcasts."
"Everyone sees me as a football player, but before anything else, I'm a human."
"Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions, everything I was born."
β"And I still have so many questions where do we come from, what happens after that?β
How do you deal with cancelation, instant or messy, to alien success? What is love? Real Madrid or Baza, from everyday an ordinary to the deep and extra ordinary. This isn't a normal product. Everything here is spontaneous, real and genuine. This podcast is like a deep talk with your closest friends. Where we're going to ability, comes out on speed as a series, end up on the table,
and goals and lessons are still there." "You're going to study that in one order, perfect, you're supposed to." "Pen, I'm going to work, I'm going to work, I'm going to teach you." "We are here to connect." "You're going to study to learn this, and together with Ica Radio, we're going to
βmake the ordinary extraordinary, stay close."β
"It is true." "Listen to learning to be human or Ica Radio, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast." Taking on the entire criminal code by yourself is no small feat. Amaril had already been through a lot with her own case. The emotional toll, the chaos, she was completely burnt out, understandably.
So she decided to take a year out. She moved to Vancouver on the west coast of Canada and stayed in cozy log cabins with her friends in those beautiful British Columbia forests. She hiked the mountains and enjoyed her favorite comfort food of edamame beans at sushi restaurants. And then, one day. "I woke up and I said, alright, I feel ready, and so I sat down and I wrote a long email
to every single parliamentarian in Canada. We have 338 members of parliament right now." And I explained to them, what had happened to me, how the law needed to change, and I gave them recommendations of what they should do, and I waited. I wasn't sure if anyone would have responded. And then, I got an email from one conservative member of parliament named Karen Vecchio.
And she said, "Hi, would you come and testify and talk about all your experiences having a publication ban and trying to have it removed?" And I said, "Yes." This wasn't just Morales' fight. There were so many women all across Canada who'd come head to head with publication bands of their own.
And I reached out to all the women who had messaged me on Twitter.
βAnd I said, "Listen, do you want to work together? I think we can change the law."β
And these amazing women from all across Canada said, "Yes." From Nova Scotia to Ontario to British Columbia. Like many of them responded and just said, "Let me know what you need. Let's freaking do it." And that was how the journey to actually change the law started. And I get really emotional because these women, I hold in such high regard.
And the fact that they would respond to this crazy request for help from a stranger who they never met
and who maybe they had only contacted once or twice online. But that they were willing to do what was possible to change a lot and stop other people from going through the same pain that they had been through. It just makes me emotional and I will be grateful for them forever. Because it meant that I didn't have to do it alone. And that lonely journey that I talked about when you have a publication ban, when you're navigating the legal system.
And this wasn't going to be that it was going to be a bunch of us working together. Yeah, and I mean, we know on this show perhaps more than any, the power of when a woman puts out an experience that they've previously felt like they have to stash them about and they put it out into the world
and how amazing it can be for other women to receive that.
Exactly. So Kelly was one of the people from the very start who put her hand up and said, "Hellia, let me know what you need.
I'm going to do it.
That first October in 2022 to be with me when I testified in front of the Justice Committee because she didn't want me to be alone.
βAnd also because, you know, she wanted to be there. There's also Brandy who is from Ontario.β
And Brandy did the same thing. So Brandy drove hours and hours up to Ottawa and sat beside Kelly who was sat behind me in the committee. And they just held hands and made sure that I didn't have to be there alone.
Never met them in my life, but they both came out. That's amazing.
And it was a really nice day. There was a breeze and I had printed out this huge binder for myself of my five-minute statement. All of my facts. I was so prepared in case any question came to me. I felt like I had spent years preparing for this moment. My sister, Bree, and my mom also came and they sat behind me. And I just felt like with Kelly and Brandy and my mom and my sister and like all the stories that people had gifted to me and shared like I was ready. So how did the testimony go? Great. Like it was amazing. I'm a public servant. I come from a government background.
So I had a familiarity of how the system worked when it came to things like committee meetings.
βI did cry in my statement. The part where at one point I talked about telling myself to remember what it felt like to have a publication man on my name that I didn't want.β
And I talked about the promise that I made in my victim impact statement where I said, you know, to other people who have not been able to report or who have not been believed or who face too many barriers in the system to be taken seriously.
I will promise that I will do what I can to fix it. And that part always made me cry and every single member of parliament on that committee was supportive.
Morrell was no longer alone. She had her mum and her sister sitting behind her, but also Kelly and Brandy and the support of so many other women who had her back. They were her squad coming together to fight this injustice. And with their support she finally got the Canadian Parliament to pay attention. After the break, one woman's fight against the system becomes a national movement. Malveline, instant oil change presents wisdom from the road. Summer means wide open spaces in a whole lot of extra miles.
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These texture trained to help spot issues early and give you a run easy. Malveline, instant oil change. Strange wisely. In the moment it felt like it was going on forever. I didn't think I was going to live. I was terrified. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me.
That was your first murder case.
It's fair to say this was the biggest case of your career. It's bad as it gets. People wake up and the woman saw the murder, paid place by crevents and the people. Anthony DiPipo showed no signs of remorse appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said I'm not guilty, I'll take it to the grave.
Listen to the devil's quarry on the Ihard radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the devil's quarry add free with exclusive content. Subscribe to Love of For Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I love the sounds, the buzzing from the stadium, the chanting from the fans, the announcers calling the place, soccer, football, it's home.
Why do I watch the world cup?
That's like asking me, why do I breed?
I inherited that fandom from my mom.
I think watching it with my dad. It's a connecting force.
βFrom Futuro Studios, I'm Fernando Chavari and this is American Football.β
I show about soccer culture in the U.S. and it's under dog roots. We go beyond the game to the people and the stories that make it great. A soccer game is a festival, it's not just a game. It's your culture. I took an elbow to my head, which cracked my skull.
It isn't American game. The Brazilian's don't like hearing that though. Are they the only ones I don't like? Actually, nobody likes that. As we get ready for the men's world cup this summer,
listen to American Football as part of the Michael Thudapodcast network. Available on the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Hoda Katt, the host of the podcast.
Joy 101 with Hoda Kattby. Together, we're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people. Like when actress Olivia Mann shared how she overcame fierce health challenges, I've gone to breast cancer and it helped my mother to breast cancer. And that was more difficult.
βThere's a lot of people who understand post-partner's question.β
I was not prepared for post-partnering society. Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kattby on the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Hoda Kattby, the host of the podcast. I'm Hoda Kattby, the host of the podcast. Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems.
Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems. Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems. Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions. Ever since I was born. And I still have so many questions.
Where do we come from? What happens after that? How do you deal with cancellation? Is there an ormese to alien success? What is love?
Real Madrid or BarΓ§a? From everyday an ordinary to the deep and extraordinary. His is an enormous pot. Everything here is spontaneous, real, and genuine. This pot cast is like a deep talk with your closest friends.
Where we will really think comes out on speed as he hears his endop on the table. And goals and lessons are good. We're going to study that in an ordinary perfect way. We're going to work on our own. We're going to work on our own.
We are here to connect. Hey Chichani, a fabulous study to learn this. And together with Ica Radio. We're going to make the ordinary extraordinary. Stay close.
It is a carac. Wow. Listen to learning to be human or Ica Radio. Apple podcasts. Or wherever you get your podcasts.
[Music] Morelle's personal testimony in Parliament had got the Canadian government to review publication bands. But to make a case for actually changing this law, she and the other women joining her campaign
had to prove that they had public support. Morelle and Kelly and Brandi and so many other women united under the banner, My Voice, My Choice. And each one brought their own unique skills to the team. One handled the website.
Another took care of media outreach. And someone else ran their social media channels. As for Morelle, she used her civil servant experience of navigating government bureaucracies to steer the ship. They testified in Parliament again,
started a national petition and spoke to as many journalists as they could. I was already starting to work with the Minister of Justice. I'm the Attorney General of Canada and his staff in particular to see what we might be able to do around the law. To just continue the momentum, to continue to put the issue in front of people
and to see the recommendations come to life on paper in a bill. And then suddenly some of the biggest publications in Canada are writing stories about you and putting you on the front page. And politicians are reading the stories. Like you're able to say, here's our track record.
Like take us seriously. We have over 5,000 people sign our petition to the government to change the law. This was just like such a big effort. And it involves more than just the names of people
who I mentioned or the people immediately in the group.
Like there are many, many more thousands of people whose names we will probably never encounter
who were part of the effort and sending emails in signing the petition and getting stories out. And I will be so thankful that people felt like it resonated with them and that they wanted to help in even a small way.
βAnd so that brings me on to the most important bit, I guess,β
which is when you heard the results. I was in my house when I got a call from one of the staffers
In the Minister of Justice's office.
And he said to me, can you be an Ottawa tomorrow
βfor a press conference with the minister to announce the bill?β
And I almost fell off of my chair because I live in British Columbia. We're like a five hour flight away from Ottawa. And at this point, it was like 12 noon. But I just dropped everything. And I booked a red eye flight.
And I had a, again, a small bottle of moe in my fridge. And I knew that the bill was coming. But I didn't know when. And it was a surprise. I didn't have a lot of time to prepare.
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βIt's that time to put on your jersey and wave your flag.β
Whoever you root for. Why do I wash the world up? That's like asking me, why do I breed? It's beautiful. The guys are young and cute and fit.
It's not just a game. It's your culture. I think watching it was my dad. It's a connecting force. From Fooduro Studios, I'm Fernando Chavari
and this is American Football. I show about soccer culture in the U.S. and it's underdog roots. Listen to American Football on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me. People wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder. Take place by cream at end of Pippo. Anthony DiPippo showed no signs of remorse. Appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grave.
βListen to the devil's quarre in the bone valley feedβ
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Joy is essential and it's also elusive.
But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey
Toward a more joyful existence.
Joy 101.
βIt's a new podcast hosted by me, How to Copy.β
If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy,
tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on air chats. Open your free iHeart Radio app search, Joy 101, and listen now.
βJoy 101 with How to Copy is presented by CVS.β
Everyone sees me as a football player.
But before anything else, I'm human. Every single day, I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions, ever since I was born. This isn't a normal podcast.
βEverything here is spontaneous, real and genuine.β
Just honest, conversations about what it means to be alive. I'm having a Chichari torrendes and listen to learning to be human on iHeart Radio, Apple podcast or whatever you get your podcast. Hi listeners, I'm Michelle, host of the Kingdom of Fraud podcast.
It's the story of a devote polygamous from Utah, a fearsome Armenian businessman in L.A.
and they are one billion dollar fraud conspiracy.
I'm excited to share the story with you. And want to let you know that you can get access to all episodes of Kingdom of Fraud 100% ad-free when an iHeart True Prime Plus subscription. Available exclusively on Apple podcasts.
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