Pubdate: Sat, 26 Jan 2002 Source: Daily News, The (CN NS) Copyright: 2002 The Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/halifax/dailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/179 Author: Rachel Boomer, The Daily News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) POLICE OFFICER'S POT BUST COULD COMPROMISE CASES - LAWYER Cases investigated by a Tantallon Mountie now charged with trafficking marijuana could come under question. Defence lawyers say the charge facing Const. Joseph Daniel Paul (Danny) Ryan may mean Ryan's credibility in court could be shaken, despite the fact that he is still presumed innocent of the crime. "It creates a bit of a practical problem for the Crown. It wouldn't probably want to be relying on his word at all," Halifax lawyer Duncan Beveridge said yesterday. Beveridge said pending cases may not be disrupted if other police officers can back up Ryan's testimony, and he added it's too early to predict whether the accusations against Ryan will have any effect. "If he was found guilty, obviously, it can have an impact. But what impact on any particular case depends on the circumstances." Ryan, a six-year officer, was arrested at the Cambridge Suites in Halifax on Wednesday and charged with trafficking marijuana. Mounties seized marijuana during the arrest, an amount Ryan's lawyer says is less than four kilograms. The 31-year-old officer is suspended with pay, pending an internal investigation. He will appear in court for election and plea in June. Ryan was half of the successful "Street Team," a plainclothes drug team that worked with information from other investigations and community sources to crack down on street-level drugs. He was about to move to Ottawa with his family when he was arrested. His transfer was cancelled shortly before the arrest, said RCMP spokesman Sgt. Wayne Noonan. Noonan couldn't say how many pending cases Ryan might have been involved in, but said most Mounties aren't transferred until most of their cases are closed. Defence lawyer Josh Arnold wouldn't speak specifically about Ryan, but said anytime a police officer is charged, the people they've arrested who are waiting for trial will always take notice. "I think it is logical for anyone involved with those cases to take another look at them," Arnold said. "I have certainly heard of cases that had to go away, because police officers were charged or convicted." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake