
The Fifth Estate: Canada's Most Dangerous Investigations
How CBC's legendary documentary series exposes murders, missing persons, and police accountability across the country
Quick Facts
For more than 50 years, *The Fifth Estate* has established itself as Canada's premier investigative documentary series on CBC Television. With hosts Mark Kelley, Steven D'Souza, and Ioanna Roumeliotis leading current investigations, the program probes murders, police accountability, organized crime, and disappearances that have shocked Canadian communities.
## Exposing Canada's Deadliest Crimes
The series gained international attention with its 2020 investigation into the Nova Scotia mass shooting, one of Canada's deadliest events. Airing on November 24, 2020, the episode examined the 13-hour rampage that killed 22 victims and exposed critical failures in the RCMP response—particularly a delayed acknowledgment that the shooter, Gabriel Wortman, was operating in a police cruiser. The investigation demonstrated *The Fifth Estate*'s capacity to scrutinize institutional responses to tragedy.
More recently, the program has focused on Dawson Creek, British Columbia, where violent crime surged to three times the national average. A 2024 episode titled "Why are people vanishing in Dawson Creek, B.C.?" documented 11 missing or murdered persons over three years, questioning RCMP accountability. A follow-up episode in October 2025, "15 murders and counting in a small B.C. town," revealed that RCMP missed arrest deadlines and corrected earlier misinformation—demonstrating the series' commitment to fact-checking and accountability journalism.
## Organized Crime and Youth Exploitation
In January 2026, *The Fifth Estate* turned its lens to organized crime's targeting of vulnerable youth. The episode "How gangs lure Black boys to northern Ontario 'trap houses'" exposed a systematic pattern in which teenage boys—some as young as 14—from major cities are lured to northern Ontario locations like Thunder Bay to work in drug distribution operations. The investigation documented viral social media reports of disappearances and gave voice to parents seeking answers about their missing children.


