A tribute to Robin Bain

This is a Bryan Bruce production I approve of! The media release gives the background:

Bryan Bruce, the writer and director of the documentary THE CASE AGAINST ROBIN BAIN which screened as an INVESTIGATOR SPECIAL on TVNZ has posted a Youtube video tribute to the man whose reputation was attacked by his son’s defence team during David Bain’s second trial.

“I made it from photos and super 8 footage given to me by his brother Michael, and from interviews I had with friends and colleagues who knew Robin at the time of making my documentary,” Bruce explained.

“What emerges from the archival footage and the interviews is  the image of a kind and caring man – a very different picture of Robin to  the one painted of him at his son’s second trial.”

Bruce, a multi award-winning documentary maker whose most recent work INSIDE CHILD POVERTY screened on TV3 to critical acclaim, has a reputation for in-depth journalism. In his INVESTIGATOR SPECIAL he found no case could be made against Robin Bain that would justify the accusation that he murdered his family.

“You just have to follow the blood trail” Bruce said. “Whoever fought with wounded 14 year-old Stephen Bain in his bedroom that cold Dunedin morning in 1994 and strangled him to death, would have got that young man’s blood all over him. Robin did not have one drop of Stephen’s blood on his clothing when he was found lying next to a blood smeared rifle that did not have his fingerprints on it.”

“When Robin ‘s brother Michael first handed me a pile of mouldy VHS tapes back in 2010,  I seriously doubted we would be able to recover any of the images from them. But we did. And what clearly emerges is not only the story of a man who loved his wife and family, but images of his children who are obviously well cared for, loved and happy.”

“He was a man who with a dry sense of  humour, a dedicated teacher and a person who often put the needs of others before his own ” said Bruce

“As Joe Karam has seen fit to continue to further denigrate Robin in his recently released book TRIAL BY AMBUSH   I felt  it was important  the public ought have the benefit of what I learned about Robin Bain  in the course of my investigation – that he was a kind , gentle and much respected man” said Bruce.

 Bruce hopes that lawmakers will consider making changes to the defamation laws to give immediate  family members the ability to sue for defamation on behalf of their dead relatives.

“It is apparently OK in our country to speak ill of the dead. Currently you cannot sue someone who says vile things about your Mum or Dad, brother or sister after the have passed away. I think that’s wrong” said Bruce.

 “What happened at the Bain home in Every Street, on the 20th of June 1994 was terrible, but the on-going tragedy is that Robin , without a fair trial, continues to have  his reputation dragged through the mud of public speculation. I think most Kiwi’s in their heart know that’s not right” said Bruce.

The video below is the tribute to Robin Bain.

And there is also a tribute to Laniet Bain.

I’m glad Mr Bruce took the time to make these videos. The dead can not be resurrected, but their reputations can be. His work has done Robin and Laniet well.

By coincidence Martin van Beyen in The Press has just published his thoughts on Joe Karam’s new book. He attended all 58 days of the retrial, and has previously said he is “more than satisfied” that David Bain, not Robin Bain, was the killer.

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