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Not On Record Podcast

Not On Record Podcast

Criminal Defence Lawyer Joseph Neuberger and YouT…

Possibly Correct Media · Not On Record Podcast

217 episodesENExplicit

Show overview

Not On Record Podcast has been publishing since 2021, and across the 5 years since has built a catalogue of 217 episodes. That works out to roughly 140 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 31 min and 43 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. The publisher flags most episodes as explicit, so expect adult themes or strong language throughout. It is catalogued as a EN-language Education show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed earlier today, with 22 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2023, with 52 episodes published.

Episodes
217
Running
2021–2026 · 5y
Median length
37 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

Criminal Defence Lawyer Joseph Neuberger and YouTube personality, legal researcher and host of the UnTrue Crime podcast Diana Davison, sit down and discuss the aftermath of their case loads and what really goes on behind the scenes. A behind the scenes inside look into the real court room drama.

Latest Episodes

View all 217 episodes

EP#215 | She Read the Affidavit. Then Her Story Changed

Jun 8, 202630 min

EP#214 | Reliability vs Credibility

Jun 1, 202624 min

EP#213 | CAN WORDS BE ABUSE?

May 25, 202643 min

EP#212 | Can Dreams Convict?

May 18, 202641 min

EP#211 | AI CAN’T CROSS

May 11, 202645 min

EP#210 | NON-VERBAL CONSENT

May 4, 202626 min

EP#209 | When the Accuser Is the Stalker: Inside a Shocking Court Case

Apr 28, 202632 min

Not On Record REWIND | Can a Judge Truly Be Impartial?

Apr 20, 202635 min

EP#208 | She Recanted, Then Took It Back. Now What?

Apr 13, 202624 min

EP#207 | The Text Messages They Hid Until Trial

Apr 6, 202643 min

NOR 206

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Sponsored by EasyDNS Move your domain or web hosting to EasyDNS and support Not On Record: https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord Use promo code: notonrecord In Not On Record Episode 206, Joseph Neuberger and Diana Davison examine a disturbing case involving a false sexual assault threat against a prosecutor, and what it reveals about the justice system’s uneven treatment of false allegations, public mischief, extortion, credibility, and the real-world damage caused by wrongful accusations. This episode explores the legal and human consequences of false sexual assault claims, the difference between an acquittal and demonstrable factual innocence, and why so few complainants are ever prosecuted even where there is strong evidence of deceit. The discussion also looks at Crown discretion, victim impact, mental health court, intimidating a justice participant, and whether weak sentences undermine confidence in the administration of justice. Joseph and Diana also dig into a broader issue at the heart of many criminal defence cases: people do lie, sometimes for pressure, revenge, leverage, panic, or other ulterior motives. Ignoring that reality does not protect justice. It distorts it. This episode is essential viewing for anyone interested in criminal law in Canada, false accusations, sexual assault allegations, wrongful charges, due process, and the integrity of the courts. #NotOnRecord #FalseAllegations #CriminalDefence #SexualAssaultLaw #JusticeSystem

Mar 30, 202627 min

EP#205 | Bill C-16 EXPOSED: This New Law Could End Fair Trials

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Not On Record | EP#205 | Bill C-16 EXPOSED: This New Law Could End Fair Trials Sponsored by EasyDNS https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord In Not on Record Episode 205, criminal defence lawyer Joseph Neuberger and co-host Diana Davison take a deep dive into Bill C-16, the Protecting Victims Act, and explain why the proposed changes could have major consequences for Charter rights, sexual assault trials, domestic assault cases, Jordan delay applications, and the broader administration of justice in Canada. This episode breaks down how Parliament’s proposed amendments could reshape the handling of unreasonable delay, restrict the availability of stays of proceedings, and expand procedural burdens in sexual offence proceedings. The discussion explores the new 60-day notice requirements for section 276 applications, the changing rules around section 278 records, the growing role of complainant participation, and the practical problems these reforms may create for defence counsel, judges, and accused persons alike. Joseph and Diana also examine the proposed lack of parity between the defence and the Crown when introducing sexual history evidence, the implications of the Kinnamore decision, and why the new framework may trigger fresh constitutional litigation in Canadian courts. If you follow Canadian criminal law, false allegations, sexual assault law, criminal defence, court delay, Jordan applications, rape shield law, therapeutic records, or the erosion of due process in Canada, this episode is essential viewing. Website: http://www.NotOnRecordpodcast.com Sign up to our email list - http://eepurl.com/hw3g99 Social Media Links Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/NotonRecord Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/notonrecordpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notonrecordpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/notonrecord Telegram: https://t.me/NotOnRecord Minds: http://www.minds.com/notonrecord Audio Platforms Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4F2ssnX7ktfGH8OzH4QsuX Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/not-on-record-podcast/id1565405753 SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/notonrecord Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-842207 For more information on criminal law issues go to Neuberger & Partners LLP http://www.nrlawyers.com. Produced by Possibly Correct Media www.PossiblyCorrect.com

Mar 23, 202652 min

EP#204 | The Hidden Crisis of False Accusations

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Criminal Defence Lawyers Joseph Neuberger, Michael Bury, and YouTube personality, legal researcher and host of the UnTrue Crime podcast Diana Davison, sit down and discuss the aftermath of their trials and the emerging and alarming changes to our legal system. A behind the scenes inside look into real courtroom drama. Website: http://www.NotOnRecordpodcast.com Sign up to our email list - http://eepurl.com/hw3g99 Social Media Links Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/NotonRecord Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/notonrecordpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notonrecordpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/notonrecord Telegram: https://t.me/NotOnRecord Minds: http://www.minds.com/notonrecord Audio Platforms Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4F2ssnX7ktfGH8OzH4QsuX Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/not-on-record-podcast/id1565405753 SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/notonrecord Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-842207 For more information on criminal law issues go to Neuberger & Partners LLP http://www.nrlawyers.com. Produced by Possibly Correct Media www.PossiblyCorrect.com

Mar 16, 202656 min

EP#203 | Can You Trust Digital Evidence? Screenshots, Metadata & AI Fakes

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Sponsored by EasyDNS https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord In Episode 203 of Not on Record, Joseph Neuberger and Michael Bury are joined by Alain Filotto of Alpha Fox Forensics, a former RCMP forensic investigator and court-recognised expert in computer and mobile forensics, for a deep dive into digital evidence, phone extractions, metadata, screenshots, deleted messages, and the growing threat of AI-generated evidence in criminal cases. This episode explores how Cellebrite and other forensic tools are used to extract data from iPhones, Android devices, laptops, and cloud backups, why screenshots and exported chats are often unreliable, how deleted texts and app messages become harder to recover after roughly 30 days, and why chain of custody, verification, and original source data are becoming critical in sexual assault, criminal, and family court cases. The conversation also examines spoofed phone numbers, fake Instagram and text message generators, altered recordings, edited photos, wearable tech data, GPS tracking, and the access to justice problem created when challenging digital evidence requires costly experts and complex motions. If you want a practical discussion about digital forensics, metadata, authentication, AI manipulation, and the future of electronic evidence in Canadian criminal law, this is an essential episode. Short Description Former RCMP digital forensic expert Alain Filotto joins Not on Record to explain phone extractions, metadata, fake screenshots, deleted messages, and how AI is making digital evidence harder to trust in court. SEO Meta Description Former RCMP forensic expert Alain Filotto explains phone extractions, metadata, fake screenshots, deleted messages, and AI-manipulated digital evidence on Not on Record Episode 203. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 Intro and guest welcome 00:44 Alain Filotto’s RCMP and forensic background 03:58 How phone extractions actually work 08:19 Deleted messages, recovery limits, and the 30-day window 15:27 Metadata, interpretation, and hidden digital context 24:40 Why screenshots are weak evidence 29:59 AI, fake chats, edited recordings, and deepfake risks 45:01 Verification, chain of custody, and access to justice

Mar 9, 202650 min

EP#202 | The 7-Day Rule That Makes No Sense in Real Courtrooms

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EP#202 | The 7-Day Rule That Makes No Sense in Real Courtrooms Sponsored by EasyDNS https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord A year after the Supreme Court of Canada’s June 13, 2025 decision in **R. v. Kinamore (2025 SCC 19)**, the Not on Record crew checks the scoreboard: did Crown attorneys actually start bringing **voir dire** applications before leading **Crown-led sexual history evidence**, including **sexual inactivity**, **virginity**, and “lack of sexual interest” messaging? The Court said the screening process should *mirror* the **s. 276 Criminal Code** regime the defence is already forced to navigate, aiming for basic **parity** and fair notice so an accused can know the case to meet. In practice, the lawyers describe a system where the defence files applications months in advance, while the Crown often arrives late (or not at all), leaving defence counsel to “pre-bake” the Crown’s Kinamore issues into their own materials just to keep trials from derailing. They also get into the messy realities this decision was trying to fix: disclosure that contains sexual history references, whether a complainant can “waive” the process (spoiler: the Court says the application still has to happen), how credibility fights get boxed into absurd technicalities (yes, even arguing about “flirting”), and why timeline rules like “seven days” can be fantasy-land in real criminal litigation. **Not legal advice.** This episode is practical commentary on Canadian criminal procedure, evidence, and what Kinamore is changing (and not changing) in courtrooms. Key case referenced: R. v. Kinamore, 2025 SCC 19 (released June 13, 2025).

Mar 3, 202639 min

EP#201 | CCTV Exposes Sexual Assault Allegation

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EP#201 | CCTV Exposes Sexual Assault Allegation In Episode 201 of Not On Record, we break down a rare and powerful decision in an Ontario university assault case that resulted in a factually innocent ruling after a judge made explicit credibility findings trial-wide and used the word fabrication in her reasons. This false allegation case Ontario unfolded against the backdrop of a police investigation failure, where officers relied almost entirely on the complainant’s account and failed to secure critical CCTV evidence criminal trial footage that the defence ultimately obtained. We examine how the elimination of the preliminary inquiry eliminated Canada in sexual assault matters affected disclosure, how the pretrial motion sexual history regime required the defence to reveal its strategy in advance, and how that led to findings of tailored testimony sexual assault and collusion witness testimony between the complainant and a key witness. This criminal defence lawyer analysis explores the judge’s strong criticism of investigative shortcomings, the impact of disclosure imbalance, and what this fabrication finding judge means for sexual assault case law Canada. The episode also raises broader concerns about criminal justice fairness Canada, credibility assessments, and the structural pressures within modern sexual assault prosecutions in Ontario.

Feb 23, 202633 min

EP#200 | Lawyers & Linguini: Supreme Court to Rewrite Sexual Assault Law?

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Sponsored by EasyDNS https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord In this milestone 200th episode of Not On Record, we dive into a live issue before the Supreme Court of Canada: R v Belinski (SCC 42030) and the ongoing debate over mens rea in sexual assault cases. When the defence of honest but mistaken belief in communicated consent is unavailable, does the Crown still have to prove the accused knew of, was reckless to, or was willfully blind to the absence of consent? The Crown argues that recent jurisprudence, including *Morrison*, has muddied the waters. But is the law actually unclear? We unpack conflicting appellate approaches from Alberta, Ontario, and British Columbia, break down the knowledge element of sexual assault, and examine whether jury instructions are being overcomplicated. At stake is a foundational criminal law principle: the Crown must prove intent beyond a reasonable doubt. Is this confusion real—or manufactured? Episode 200 brings clarity, cake, and lamb shank.

Feb 16, 202635 min

EP#199 | From Guilty to Mistrial: The Power of Real Evidence in Court

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In this episode of Not On Record, we dig into a real-world nightmare scenario: a sexual assault conviction based largely on credibility, followed by a late-stage application to reopen the trial because video evidence exists that directly undermines the accepted narrative. We break down how “fresh evidence” works before sentencing, why judges can still have jurisdiction to reopen proceedings, and why **real-time evidence** (video, audio, messages) can outweigh after-the-fact memory claims and assumptions about what someone “would never” do. We also tackle a developing legal battleground: does a surreptitious recording change the nature of consent (sexual assault by fraud), or is it better addressed through voyeurism and related offences? Along the way, we connect the dots between the screening regime for private records, the Palmer fresh evidence framework, and the Supreme Court’s evolving approach to “conditions” around sexual activity including the ongoing fallout from Kirkpatrick / Hutchinson. Watch the related Supreme Court hearing (scheduled):Jordan Bilinski v. His Majesty the King (Alberta), SCC file 42030, set for February 9, 2026 at 9:30 a.m. (publication ban noted). Website: http://www.NotOnRecordpodcast.com Sign up to our email list - http://eepurl.com/hw3g99 Social Media Links Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/NotonRecord Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/notonrecordpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notonrecordpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/notonrecord Telegram: https://t.me/NotOnRecord Minds: http://www.minds.com/notonrecord Audio Platforms Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4F2ssnX7ktfGH8OzH4QsuX Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/not-on-record-podcast/id1565405753 SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/notonrecord Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-842207 For more information on criminal law issues go to Neuberger & Partners LLP http://www.nrlawyers.com. Produced by Possibly Correct Media www.PossiblyCorrect.com

Feb 9, 202635 min

NOR 198 | The Massage Therapist False Allegation

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Sponsored by EasyDNS https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord Two unusually messy files collide in one episode: a chiropractor accused during a routine treatment of an allegation so strange it practically dares common sense to enter the room, and a long-married couple whose financial dispute spirals into criminal charges and a three-day trial. The hosts walk through how these cases actually get resolved in the real world, why credibility isn’t just what’s said but how it’s said, and how the “paper trail” (texts, timing, behaviour, and courtroom discipline) can decide everything. Along the way: Crown pretrials, judicial pretrials, peace bonds, the professional fallout of being charged, and why sometimes the most powerful defence is simply letting the story collapse under its own weight.

Feb 2, 202637 min

EP#197 | Why “Lenient Sentences” Aren’t What You Think

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Sponsored by EasyDNS https://easydns.com/NotOnRecord Tonight, the crew breaks down **what sentencing actually is** (and when it happens), and why what looks “lenient” to the public can be the result of a very structured legal framework. They walk through the sentencing process after a **guilty plea vs. after a trial**, explain what it means when the **“facts are read in”** (and why the judge’s “are these facts substantially true?” question can derail a plea), and outline how Crown and defence approach sentencing with **aggravating vs. mitigating factors**, character reference letters, restitution, counselling, and case law. From there, they unpack **s.718 of the Criminal Code**: the purpose of sentencing, the six objectives (denunciation, deterrence, separation, rehabilitation, reparation, and restoration), and the **overriding principle of proportionality,** plus the additional principles like parity, totality, restraint/least restrictive sanctions, and individualized outcomes. The episode closes with a practical look at **ancillary orders** (DNA, weapons prohibitions, no-contact terms, victim fine surcharge) and why sentencing is never a simple “you did this, you get that” formula. ## **Short description** Why do “lenient” sentences happen? This episode explains the sentencing process, the goals in s.718, proportionality, aggravating/mitigating factors, joint submissions, and the extra orders judges can add. ## **SEO meta description (concise)** A practical breakdown of Canadian criminal sentencing: guilty plea vs trial, agreed facts, aggravating/mitigating factors, s.718 objectives, proportionality, parity/totality, joint submissions, and ancillary orders like DNA and prohibitions. ## **Hashtags** #CanadianLaw #CriminalLaw #Sentencing #CriminalCode #LegalPodcast #CourtProcess #Probation #Restitution #DefenceLawyer #CrownAttorney #JusticeSystem #LawAndOrder #TorontoLaw #NotOnRecord

Jan 26, 202649 min
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