Pubdate: Tue, 24 Sep 2002 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2002, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyitoronto.com/torsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Sam Pazzano JUDGE TOSSES CASE, COP SCANDAL GROWS Charges Dropped Because Of Crown Delays Trafficking charges against an alleged drug kingpin who has accused police of stealing more than $300,000 from a bank safety deposit box were stayed yesterday in a development linked to the widening drug squad scandal. Roman Paryniuk was charged with possessing almost $4 million in marijuana, hashish, LSD and ecstasy stemming from a March, 1999 bust but these charges were tossed after Justice Russell Juriansz ruled that Paryniuk, 39, had been deprived of his right to be tried within a reasonable time. His lawyer Edward Sapiano was denied information on the RCMP probe into drug squad officers. Sapiano has alleged in court documents there was a "long-standing pattern" of "theft by search warrant" by central field command drug squad. Paryniuk is the most notable accused of more than 150 cases where charges have been stayed or withdrawn because of the mushrooming probe into allegations of misconduct by the drug squad officers. The judge noted there was a delay of more than 41 months, and up to 18 months of "unjustified delay," which he blamed on both the Crown and court resources. But the Crown's delay was linked to a refusal to disclose information on criminal prosecution against a Toronto central drug squad officer. This is the latest development in the scandal facing Toronto's drug squad. A key witness against Paryniuk was Const. Mark Denton, who was cleared of a possession of hashish charge in February for having 145 grams in the undercover police van he was driving home in January, 2000. Denton gave a statement to the OPP that he believed the hash may have come from the Paryniuk bust nine months earlier. "My client has been completely vindicated and the delays were caused by the federal department of justice who treated, for the purpose of disclosure, civilians like my client differently than it does police," Sapiano said. Paryniuk still faces charges over a $153 million hash shipment seized in Halifax in 1995. Nine civil lawsuits named officers alleged to have been involved in either illegal acts or thefts of cash and valuables. None of the civil allegations have been proven in court. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth