Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 2004 Source: Plain Dealer, The (OH) Copyright: 2004 The Plain Dealer Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/342 Website: http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/ Author: Stephen Hudak, Plain Dealer Reporter DRUG SUSPECTS COMPLAIN POLICE KEPT WOMAN CUFFED, NAKED Brunswick Hills Township - A former police constable's son and his fiancee want a judge to free them from drug charges, citing what they call "outrageous police conduct." Steven DePaolo, 45, said police cracked his tooth and forced his girlfriend, Ann Grunder, 34, to stand handcuffed and naked among male officers who broke open his father's door at 5:30 a.m. April 13 in search of them. DePaolo and Grunder are charged with trafficking in crack cocaine, charges punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of two years in prison. Police dispute the couple's account of their arrest, detailed in an unusual legal motion to be argued this morning in Medina County Common Pleas Court. "Everything was done right," said Brunswick Hills Township Police Chief Robert J. Osiecki. "If it was to be done again, I think they would do it the same way." DePaolo's lawyer Elizabeth Kelley said police did not need to break into the home before dawn to find DePaolo - because he was on home arrest. "Everything about this incident is outrageous," she said. Grunder said she was naked for 10 to 20 minutes and asked three times to get dressed before a male officer put pants and a button-up shirt on her. "I was totally embarrassed," she said. Her lawyer David Gedrock described officers as "gawking voyeurs" who enjoyed a panoramic view of the nude woman because of mirrors in the room. Police said Grunder was handcuffed and naked for no more than two minutes while officers scanned the room for guns, a routine precaution. "From what I hear, she wasn't too enjoyable to look at," Osiecki said. Told of Osiecki's remark, Grunder said, "Obviously they looked, then, because they had an opinion about what they saw and they talked about it." Brunswick Sgt. Larry Pringle, who directed the Combined Emergency Response Team, a SWAT-like tactical unit, said police acted professionally. "I didn't see anything indecent in the officers' behavior," he said. Osiecki said he chose to use the tactical team because the Medina County Drug Task Force which investigated DePaolo suspected he would be armed. Andrew DePaolo, 77, who served as Brunswick Township constable from 1956 to 1966, said he demanded - and got - an apology from the township police, and the drug task force paid $2,200 to repair his front door. "They should have handled this some other way," he said. But Osiecki said DePaolo misinterepreted the apology. "He wasn't aware his kid was selling dope. The guy was sitting here almost in tears in my office," Osiecki said. "I tried to be consoling a little bit." Daniel FitzPatrick, who teaches police classes at Kent State University, said Grunder should have been allowed to dress herself. "Every effort should be made to protect the dignity of the people you are arresting," he said. "If the scene is secure, remove her handcuffs. She obviously didn't have a weapon." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake