Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/TorontoSun/home.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Alan Cairns SILENCE GETS COP CHARGED Tribunal Tied To Drug Squad Scandal A Toronto police officer faces an internal misconduct charge for refusing to answer questions about the alleged beating of a suspected drug dealer. Jaroslaw Cieslik, 35, is charged under the Police Services Act with failing to provide a statement to an RCMP-led internal affairs task force which designated him a "witness officer" in the alleged drug squad beating of Christopher Quigley. The corruption probe has so far singled out 10 former drug cops. Staff-Sgt. John Schertzer and detectives Steve Correia, Joseph Miched, Raymond Pollard, Rick Benoit and Ned Maodus collectively face 40 criminal charges in the scandal, while four other officers are named as unindicted co-conspirators. CIVIL LAWSUIT Several of those charges relate to Quigley. Quigley alleges in a civil lawsuit that he was beaten by Schertzer's team after his gunpoint arrest April 30, 1998. In a statement of claim, Quigley alleges that after he confessed to having drugs, Schertzer accused him of being a grower and punched him in "the face and stomach." It is alleged that Quigley's head hit a wall and he "blacked out." Quigley alleges that after he regained consciousness, Schertzer was joined by Benoit and Maodus and they beat him so fiercely he "feared they were trying to kill him." DENY WRONGDOING Quigley alleges after the beating he needed to be taken by ambulance to Sunnybrook hospital. Police later ransacked Quigley's home and took money from a safety deposit box, Quigley alleges. Allegations in a statement of claim have not been proven in court and in a statement of defence filed last January, the six officers acknowledge the arrest, but deny any wrongdoing. In a Police Services Act hearing notice, internal affairs officers allege that Cieslik was ordered to answer questions about the incident after he was summoned to the RCMP-led task force's rented office at 951 Wilson Ave. in September 2003. Chief Julian Fantino, who initiated the RCMP-led task force three years ago, said in January that internal charges were pending. Cieslik appears at an internal tribunal April 28. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin