Christopher Robinson

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For the member of the Legislative Assembly for Upper Canada, see Christopher Robinson (1763-98).

Christopher Robinson (21 January 182831 October 1905) was a Canadian lawyer and prosecutor known for representing the Government of Canada in a number of high profile cases and international disputes. He twice represented the crown prosecution when Patrick John Whelan appealed his conviction for the murder of D'Arcy McGee and was the prosecuting attorney that prevailed in the trial of Louis Riel. In his later career, he represented crown interests in the Bering Sea Arbitration of 1893, and was selected by Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier to represent the Canadian position in a dispute with the United States regarding the boundaries of Alaska. Robinson declined a knighthood in 1894. He died in Toronto, Ontario on 31 October 1905.

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