Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jun 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: Chris Doucette, Toronto Sun HEROIN CASE RIPPED 22-Month Wait for Trial THE RIGHTS of a former Toronto cop turned drug dealer were violated when he spent 22 months in jail awaiting trial on heroin trafficking charges, his lawyer told court yesterday. Charges against Abraham "Ace" Bailey should be stayed because of the almost two-year delay in getting to trial, lawyer Harry Doan said. Bailey was charged after 53 grams of heroin in baggies was allegedly found in his throat. By the time he came to trial that amount of heroin somehow had shrunk to three grams. The Crown has alleged that the discrepancy in weight was due to packaging and blood evaporation. It is hard to believe three grams of heroin could be mistaken for 53 grams because of packaging and blood, Bailey's former lawyer, William Gilmour, said. 'I Find It Inconceivable' "I find it inconceivable that a drug officer would be misrepresenting the size of an exhibit by 2,000%," Gilmour said outside court. "But the evil of the situation is that (Bailey) spent 22 months in pre-trial custody that he probably didn't need to serve as a result of the misrepresentation of the amount of drug." Bailey, 54, who served nearly two decades on the Toronto Police, was found guilty of trafficking heroin and cocaine in 2001 and was on day parole at the Keele Correctional Centre. He was two days from possible full parole when a random police search was held at the halfway house on June 18, 2002, Gilmour said. The accused suffered "a heart episode" during the search and remained unconscious for almost two weeks. At the time, paramedics allegedly removed two packets of heroin from his throat -- one of which reportedly burst. The trial resumes at Old City Hall next week. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake