Terry Milewski

Assignments have included Ottawa, Calgary, Jerusalem, Europe, the Middle East, South America and the United States.

His father was a Polish medical student who fled Warsaw to serve with the 7th Armoured Division in North Africa.

He moved to Canada, where he worked first in a sawmill and then at radio stations in Williams Lake and Nanaimo, British Columbia.

[5] Milewski's investigations of Chretien's possible connections to the RCMP attack on peaceful protesters at the summit were persistent, and the controversy eventually compelled Solicitor General Andy Scott to resign his cabinet post.

[7][8] The documentary remains unaltered on the CBC website and, in 2015, the WSO unconditionally abandoned "any and all claims" made in its lawsuit.

After the motion of non-confidence had passed by the House of Commons, at the press conference Milewski accused Michael Ignatieff of not being forthcoming about forming a coalition with the other opposition parties should the ruling Conservatives not win a majority, saying "Surely this coalition monkey is going to stay on your back every day of the campaign?

[9] In a speech by Glenn Greenwald in Ottawa on 25 October 2014, which was broadcast by C-SPAN, Greenwald and journalist Jesse Brown alleged that Terry Milewski, as a CBC News senior correspondent was responsible for a major CBC resistance into reporting the facts about global surveillance, object of the documents provided by Edward Snowden.

[10] In response, Milewski challenged Brown and Greenwald to square their allegations with his actual published critiques of government policy on mass surveillance.

[13] Terry Milewski, along with his colleague, Kim Bolan, have received death threats and targeting from Sikh separatists.