TOPIC: CBC NEWS INVESTIGATES

Go Public

Parents say Snapchat makes it easy for drug dealers to sell to their kids

An Ontario father says he’s struggling to keep his teen son away from drug dealers on popular messaging app Snapchat, and he's not alone. The social media platform's parent company, Snap Inc., is being sued by dozens of U.S. families who say the app's disappearing messages make it hard for parents to supervise their kids' online activity.
GO PUBLIC

Hyundai owners say the paint on their white cars is flaking off

Some drivers say the white paint of their Hyundais is peeling off in large chunks and that getting help from the automaker has been nearly impossible. It's not just happening here in Canada; drivers around the world have all reported the same problem with relatively new vehicles.
Marketplace

Hey, parents: Advertisers could be using mobile games to build profiles about your kids

A Marketplace investigation has pulled back the curtain on how some mobile games, which seem to attract children, use loopholes in rules protecting kids’ data — allowing marketers to build advertising profiles tailored to them, which can then be more effective at influencing their behaviour.

Who's hacking CRA accounts? How The Fifth Estate tracked down alleged imposters who duped the tax collector

Victims of identity theft across the country told CBC's The Fifth Estate that the Canada Revenue Agency wrongly blamed them for claiming bogus refunds. Our journalists set out to uncover the real scammers and where they've been spending taxpayers' money.

Call-centre crypto scammers unmasked as data leak exposes their schemes

The scam starts with fake articles featuring celebrities. Next comes a crypto ruse, and finally, the fraudsters impersonate the authorities. More than 32,000 people have fallen victim, but now the scammers themselves have been exposed.
ANALYSIS — FIFTH ESTATE

From old grievances to new allies: Trump's history with tariffs

U.S. President Donald Trump's aggressive views on trade and tariffs are in keeping with ideas he has expressed since the 1980s and now are buttressed by a cadre of allies and supporters who share his view.
THE FIFTH ESTATE

Authorities in India question suspect in Pearson gold heist following Fifth Estate investigation

Last week, The Fifth Estate revealed that a key suspect in the largest gold heist in Canadian history, Simran Preet Panesar, is living in northern India. Following the CBC investigation, officials with the Enforcement Directorate in India, which handles financial crimes, raided a residence and questioned Panesar.
THE FIFTH ESTATE

Inside the Pearson airport gold heist: Document alleges well-placed insider key to $20M theft

An investigation by CBC’s The Fifth Estate uncovered a key internal document that provides a minute-by-minute account of how authorities believe the 2023 gold heist at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport was planned and executed, alleging a highly organized group of individuals relied heavily on a well-placed insider.
THE FIFTH ESTATE

This divided small town is on the front line in a fight to control what Canadians read

An investigation by The Fifth Estate has found there is a shadow war in Canada against libraries and books. Its leading political actors, from small towns to large political parties, are linked to a broader grassroots movement.
CBC Investigates

This recruiter has allegedly scammed 'hundreds' of Filipino migrant workers. Some are now homeless

Recruiter Jeanett Moskito has been caught three dozen times for charging illegal fees and is accused of victimizing "hundreds" of Filipino migrant workers. But she has never been prosecuted, with a lawyer likening the penalties she’s received so far to "parking tickets."
Welcome to Canada

'I did not expect to be a slave': Amnesty International report exposes abuse of migrant workers

A new Amnesty International report criticizes the federal Temporary Foreign Worker Program for “systemic abuses” of predominantly racialized migrant workers from developing countries, which it calls an “intrinsic feature” of the policy that ties workers to specific employers.
The Fifth Estate

Why getting your pet's prescription filled at a pharmacy isn't an easy option in Canada

Some pharmacists across Canada are struggling to supply pet owners with medicines for pets as manufacturers, distributors and even vet regulators limit access to them, a joint CBC/Radio-Canada investigation has found.
CBC Investigates

Ottawa has done nothing to actually seize millions from Russian oligarch

Two years after the government declared it was taking the unprecedented step of moving to confiscate millions of dollars from a Russian oligarch, it has not actually begun the court process to forfeit the money, let alone to hand it over to Ukrainian reconstruction — and it may never happen.
Welcome to Canada

Welcome to Canada: CBC News launches new series looking into the immigrant experience

Welcome to Canada: CBC News launches new series looking into the immigrant experience
Welcome to Canada

Welcome to Canada: CBC News launches new series looking into the immigrant experience

Welcome to Canada: CBC News launches new series looking into the immigrant experience
Welcome to Canada

Is it worth immigrating to Canada? These newcomers say it comes at a cost

For decades, Canada was a top destination for immigrants, seen as a stable and safe place to live with a clear path to permanent residency. But now, many recent newcomers say it’s an expensive and often futile endeavour.
Welcome to Canada

Newcomers feel Canada accepts 'too many immigrants' without proper planning, CBC survey finds

A new CBC-commissioned survey has found that more than 80 per cent of newcomers to Canada feel the federal government accepts ‘too many immigrants’ without sufficient thought of where they will live and work. And while the majority now consider Canada home, two in five say they would consider leaving.
CBC Investigates

Online ads illegally sell jobs to temporary foreign workers

Two months after Ottawa cracked down on temporary foreign worker permits, a CBC/IJF investigation finds dozens of online ads still selling Labour Market Impact Assessment-approved jobs to migrants for up to $45,000 apiece.
FIFTH ESTATE

'We didn't sleep for 3 days': How a network of women watched over Rahaf Mohammed's escape to the West

When Rahaf Mohammed made her risky escape from Saudi Arabia in January, a network of young women were advising her and others in the same way they’ve helped each other flee repression at home.
Video

Polytechnique murderer Marc Lépine had her on his kill list. She never forgot the moment she found out

Two days after the École Polytechnique massacre, journalist Francine Pelletier learned she and 18 other women were on the gunman's hit list because it was published in the newspaper she worked for.
Marketplace

More and more places are asking for tips. Hidden cameras reveal who is and isn't getting them

Marketplace visited 100 businesses undercover to find out who’s asking for tips and where they end up. Data also shows employees across Canada have filed hundreds of complaints about "tip theft".
CBC Investigates

How Rumble went from a family-friendly Canadian startup to a megaphone for U.S. election deniers

Started in Toronto in 2013, Rumble was once mainly known as a site where you could find wholesome pet videos. But it changed radically after investments by pro-Trump financiers.
CBC Investigates

Sixteen caught crossing illegally into U.S. from Quebec in days before Trump tariff threat

On a late Saturday afternoon, two days before U.S. president-elect Donald Trump threatened tariffs on Canadian goods over migrants and fentanyl, the RCMP alerted U.S. Border Patrol about a group of people crossing illegally from Quebec into an area near Chateaugay, N.Y.
CBC Investigates

Toronto lawyer who stole client money for vacations, handbags and shoes is jailed for contempt

A disgraced real-estate lawyer who admitted to pilfering millions in client money to support her and her family's lavish lifestyle was handcuffed in a Toronto courtroom Friday and marched out by a constable to serve a 20-day sentence for contempt of court, as her husband and mother watched.
CBC Investigates

'We got completely played for suckers,' MP says of recent takeovers in Canadian forestry

Opposition MPs are aghast that after buying up two major Canadian companies, the foreign owner of one of Canada’s biggest forestry businesses is now also formally taking over an Indonesian-Chinese pulp and paper conglomerate from his family — a company he has long denied operating in tandem with.