Lawyer - 2 officers convicted should not be sent to prison
Posted: Nov 6th, 2012, 1:07 pm
Two officers convicted in Toronto’s police corruption trial have exemplary police records and should not be sent to prison, their lawyers argue.
Peter Small
Courts Bureau
Drug squad, police corruption trial, Toronto police, John Schertzer, Steven Correia, Raymond Pollard, Joseph Miched, Ned Maodus
The former boss of an elite Toronto drug squad with an “exemplary” service record should be spared a jail sentence for attempting to obstruct justice, his lawyer says.
Retired Det.-Sgt. John Schertzer and four former cohorts were convicted of doctoring their notes to falsely claim they had a warrant when they searched a heroin dealer’s apartment in 1998.
But it was not for corrupt reasons, but for a good investigative motive, said his lawyer, Alan Gold on Tuesday.
It was “a one-off transgression in an otherwise exemplary career,” Gold told Ontario Superior Court Justice Gladys Pardu at the five defendants’ sentencing hearing. “His performance records are impeccable.”
Gold said prison for the former police officer would expose him to harm from gang-affiliated inmates. The lawyer suggested a sentence not requiring jail, ranging from a discharge to a suspended sentence. If jail is imposed, it should be for a short period, he added.
Schertzer headed the elite Team 3 of the Central Field Command drug squad in the late 1990s, which laid hundreds of charges but became a lightning rod for criticism from defence lawyers. Many of their cases were dropped by the Crown when they came under investigation.
In this case, the prosecution has asked for four years in prison for Schertzer, and three years for his former subordinates, Joseph Miched, 54; Raymond Pollard, 48; Steven Correia, 45; and Ned Maodus, 49.
In June, a jury convicted all five of attempting to obstruct justice, after a five-month trial.
Correia, Pollard and Maodus were additionally found guilty of perjury for lying about the search of the drug dealer’s apartment at a preliminary hearing. Several of the officers were acquitted on other charges, including extortion, theft and assault.
Gold listed several mitigating factors in sentencing Schertzer. He is now the primary caregiver for his two daughters, 14 and 16, while running a restaurant with more than 12 employees, Gold said.
“Innocent bystanders” such as his wife, homicide Det. Joyce Schertzer, have been negatively affected, Gold said, quoting from her letter filed in court: “I was considered collateral damage.”
Correia’s lawyer, Harry Black, argued that his client — the only offender still a police officer — would be fired if sentenced to even one day in prison.
To jail Correia for three years, as the Crown suggests, would be “cruel and utterly uncalled for and utterly without precedent in this country,” Black said. He called for a suspended sentence and community service.
He asked the judge to consider the “punishment already endured” by his client. He has borne the stigma of the charges and unnecessarily harsh reporting conditions since the charges were laid in 2004, Black said.
The sentencing hearing continues.
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/crime/a ... yers-argue
Peter Small
Courts Bureau
Drug squad, police corruption trial, Toronto police, John Schertzer, Steven Correia, Raymond Pollard, Joseph Miched, Ned Maodus
The former boss of an elite Toronto drug squad with an “exemplary” service record should be spared a jail sentence for attempting to obstruct justice, his lawyer says.
Retired Det.-Sgt. John Schertzer and four former cohorts were convicted of doctoring their notes to falsely claim they had a warrant when they searched a heroin dealer’s apartment in 1998.
But it was not for corrupt reasons, but for a good investigative motive, said his lawyer, Alan Gold on Tuesday.
It was “a one-off transgression in an otherwise exemplary career,” Gold told Ontario Superior Court Justice Gladys Pardu at the five defendants’ sentencing hearing. “His performance records are impeccable.”
Gold said prison for the former police officer would expose him to harm from gang-affiliated inmates. The lawyer suggested a sentence not requiring jail, ranging from a discharge to a suspended sentence. If jail is imposed, it should be for a short period, he added.
Schertzer headed the elite Team 3 of the Central Field Command drug squad in the late 1990s, which laid hundreds of charges but became a lightning rod for criticism from defence lawyers. Many of their cases were dropped by the Crown when they came under investigation.
In this case, the prosecution has asked for four years in prison for Schertzer, and three years for his former subordinates, Joseph Miched, 54; Raymond Pollard, 48; Steven Correia, 45; and Ned Maodus, 49.
In June, a jury convicted all five of attempting to obstruct justice, after a five-month trial.
Correia, Pollard and Maodus were additionally found guilty of perjury for lying about the search of the drug dealer’s apartment at a preliminary hearing. Several of the officers were acquitted on other charges, including extortion, theft and assault.
Gold listed several mitigating factors in sentencing Schertzer. He is now the primary caregiver for his two daughters, 14 and 16, while running a restaurant with more than 12 employees, Gold said.
“Innocent bystanders” such as his wife, homicide Det. Joyce Schertzer, have been negatively affected, Gold said, quoting from her letter filed in court: “I was considered collateral damage.”
Correia’s lawyer, Harry Black, argued that his client — the only offender still a police officer — would be fired if sentenced to even one day in prison.
To jail Correia for three years, as the Crown suggests, would be “cruel and utterly uncalled for and utterly without precedent in this country,” Black said. He called for a suspended sentence and community service.
He asked the judge to consider the “punishment already endured” by his client. He has borne the stigma of the charges and unnecessarily harsh reporting conditions since the charges were laid in 2004, Black said.
The sentencing hearing continues.
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/crime/a ... yers-argue