'Code of Misconduct': Where to Watch Sébastien Trahan’s Documentary on the Canadian Hockey Team Scandal

Published 05/10/2026, 9:02 AM CDT

The story of the 2018 Team Canada junior hockey scandal has already made waves in the sports world, but a new documentary is going even further into the controversy. Filmmaker Sébastien Trahan’s Code of Misconduct revisits the allegations, the silence, and the unanswered questions that would not go away for years. As the trial continues to attract attention across Canada and beyond, the documentary promises to take a closer look at the culture, pressure, and power around one of hockey’s darkest chapters without going into the uncomfortable details. 

With renewed public focus on the case and its aftermath, the documentary has quickly become one of the most talked-about sports investigations in recent years and, in turn, has been just as relentlessly searched for. 

Where you can catch Code of Misconduct

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As the interest surrounding the 2018 Canadian Hockey team's scandal continues to grow, many viewers are now looking for where to watch the new documentary Code of Misconduct. The 2026 documentary about the team's assault scandal is now streaming in Canada on Super Channel Fuse and Super Channel On Demand as of May 10, 2026. It is also available on the Super Channel Amazon Prime Video channel. The documentary is, however, not available to watch via networks or streaming in the US. 

It premiered for the first time at the 2026 Hot Docs Festival on April 26, 2026, and on Super Channel Fuse on May 8, 2026. Sébastien Trahan directed the documentary, which he co-wrote with Laurel Baker. Annie Bourdeau and Alex Feldman produced it. 

The sports-culture documentary was then edited by Olivier Gilbert and Philippe Gariépy. Laurence Turcotte-Fraser was the cinematographer, and Raphaëlle Huysmans, Philippe Lamarre, Pablo Salzman, Michael Kronish, and Rick Westhead were executive producers. 

It also stars journalist Westhead and explores the team's assault scandal, toxic locker room culture, and allegations of cover-ups. The story centers around the Canadian World Junior hockey team. It also shows the case of 2025 when Westhead acted as a witness, as five former players went on trial, and the national pastime of Canada came into the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. 

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Behind the headlines and courtroom proceedings lies a case that sparked years of outrage, investigations, and difficult questions about accountability in Canadian hockey.

Inside the Canadian Hockey Team's 2018 scandal

For the unversed, in June 2018, a woman was allegedly s******* assaulted by several members of Canada’s gold-medal-winning junior hockey team. The case stayed mostly off the public radar until reports surfaced in 2022 that the management had settled a lawsuit with the complainant. Police announced charges relating to the investigation, and several NHL players connected to the 2018 team were later suspended from their club’s lineup. Since then, the case has grown into one of the biggest controversies in Canadian sports history and has raised questions about the way institutions deal with allegations and the culture around elite junior hockey.

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Following this, on July 24, 2025, a judge in Ontario acquitted the defenders. It followed an eight-week trial. Later, Justice Maria Carroccia acquitted Michael McLeod, Carter Hart, Alex Formenton, Cal Foote, and Dillon Dube, ruling that the accused had failed to prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt and the complainant’s evidence was neither credible nor reliable.

Due to these reasons, Code of Misconduct has moved beyond just being a documentary about a high-profile case. The film revisits the allegations and the investigation, trying to examine how one controversy changed everything. The film has already been a hit for its theme and the enduring legacy of the scandal on Canadian hockey, with Rick Westhead front and center in the story. 

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What do you think about Code of Misconduct and the wider conversation surrounding Hockey Canada? Let us know in the comments.

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Bias Sinha

42 articles

Bias Sinha is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, where she dives into Hollywood and all things celebrity culture with a sharp, timely lens. Previously, she covered pop culture and wrote on NBA for The Times of India. With a double Master’s degree in English and Education, and over 7 years of experience across creative writing, editing, proofreading, and academic content, she blends structure with storytelling ease.

Edited By: Adiba Nizami

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