Bit of an addendum to my previous post. Christie can be found on Wikipeida at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug_Christie_(lawyer)
Wikipedia gives a list of some of his clients which included:
Ernst Zündel, holocaust denier
Terry Long, former leader of the Aryan Nations in Canada;
Malcolm Ross, a teacher fired for anti-Semitic activity;
three alleged leaders of the Ku Klux Klan in Manitoba;
Rudy Stanko of the World Church of the Creator;
Tony McAleer, charged with broadcasting hate speech over the phone and online;
John Ross Taylor of the Western Guard Party and Aryan Nations;
Imre Finta, alleged to be a Nazi war criminal and collaborator
Doug Collins, newspaper columnist brought before the British Columbia Human Rights Commission for antisemitic and racist comments;
Paul Fromm, head of the far-right "Citizens for Foreign Aid Reform" and "Canadians for Freedom of Expression", and participant in neo-Nazi and racist gatherings, who was fired from his job as a teacher for his political activity;
Lady Jane Birdwood, British follower of Oswald Mosley and distributor of hate propaganda;
Wolfgang Droege of the Heritage Front;
David Ahenakew, who acknowledged making antisemitic comments in a 2002 interview with the Saskatoon StarPhoenix
Jack Klundert, a Windsor optometrist who does not believe the Constitution of Canada grants the Federal Government the power to collect income tax
Hate speach and human-rights enthusiasts used to go nuts over his defense of these types but they were entitled to legal representation and Christie was willing to take on the job, unlike many lawyers who feared sullying their reputations. Not many of his clients had much money and he didn't get rich by representing them. The Law Society of British Columbia noted, when they found him guilty of professional misconduct, that he was only making about $50,000 a year (not a lot in Vancouver-Victoria) and so cut him a deal on penalties.