Canada

The wrong Laura Lynch: CBC journalist's photo mistakenly used in The Chicks singer's obituaries

On Christmas Eve, Vancouver journalist Laura Lynch woke up to messages from friends who had seen articles featuring her photo, name, and the announcement that she had died in a car crash. In fact, news outlets had mistakenly used her photo in obituaries for U.S. singer Laura Lynch.

Vancouver-based broadcaster has the same name as the U.S. country musician who died in a car crash Friday

Photos of two women, one singing with a cowboy hat on, and the other smiling.
Left: Laura Lynch, a founding member of the country band formerly known as the Dixie Chicks, who died in a car crash on Friday at age 65. Right: CBC journalist Laura Lynch, who is alive and well but had her image used by some U.S. media outlets in the singer's obituaries. (@thechicks/X; Gregg DeGuire/Getty Images)

Vancouver journalist Laura Lynch spent the morning of Christmas Eve fielding messages from friends who had seen articles featuring her photo, name, and the announcement that she had died in Texas on Friday. 

In fact, the CBC journalist shares her name with the founding member of U.S. country band The Chicks, formerly called the Dixie Chicks, whose tragic death in a car crash at age 65 was reported widely this weekend. 

But some coverage, including networks like Fox News and online news site The Daily Beast, used photos of Lynch, the CBC journalist and host of climate change solutions show What On Earth, instead. One person on X, formerly known as Twitter, even eulogized the journalist, prompting a correction from Lynch. 

"The main reaction I'm having to it is how it could be seen as disrespectful to her family," Lynch told CBC. "This just has the potential to compound their grief, so I feel terribly about that."

Obituary using a photo of the wrong Laura Lynch:
Screenshot of an article with the photo of a blonde woman.
A photo of Laura Lynch, the CBC journalist, mistakenly used in an obituary for U.S. singer Laura Lynch in online news site The Daily Beast. (Screenshot/The Daily Beast)

According to a CBC spokesperson, the company realized the journalist's image was being used early Sunday morning and has been asking publications to remove the image and issue corrections.

"We also reached out to image licensing sites to ask that photo descriptions of Laura on their platforms clearly identify her as a Canadian journalist," the spokesperson said in an email. "A number of outlets have since removed her images from their stories."

Screenshot of a tweet with two images.
A post on X, the platform once known as Twitter, eulogized the wrong Laura Lynch, who then commented to correct the user. (Screenshot/X )

The main photo being shared is one of Lynch, the journalist, attending a 2019 media gala in California. This was originally available for purchase on a stock photo site, Getty Images, without a disclosure in the caption about what Lynch does or where she works. The site has since added the word "journalist" to its caption of her image. 

"People are rushing to get things done but we're still supposed to check the facts," Lynch said. "Photos are powerful."

Laura Lynch, the musician who co-founded the popular country band in 1989, died in a head-on vehicle collision on a highway outside of El Paso on Friday, the Texas Department of Public Safety said in a statement.

Lynch left the band in 1995. A statement from The Chicks after her sudden death called Lynch a "bright light" who was "instrumental" to the group's early success.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Brishti Basu

Senior writer

Brishti Basu is a senior writer with CBCNews.ca. Before joining CBC, her in-depth coverage of health care, housing and sexual violence at Capital Daily was nominated for several national and provincial journalism awards. She was deputy editor at New Canadian Media and has been a freelance journalist for numerous publications including National Geographic, VICE, The Tyee, and The Narwhal. Send story tips to brishti.basu@cbc.ca.