Pubdate: Wed, 13 Apr 2005 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2005 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Patricia Brooks Arenburg Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) DRUG-DEALING COP TO BE PAROLED Mountie Will Have Served One-Sixth Of 4-Year Term A former RCMP officer and convicted drug dealer will get out of prison after only eight months behind bars. Joseph Daniel (Danny) Ryan, 33, formerly with the Tantallon plainclothes street team, was approved last week for accelerated day parole to begin May 22. "The board is satisfied that there are no reasonable grounds to believe that, if released, you are likely to commit an offence involving violence before the expiration date of your sentence," the National Parole Board report states. Mr. Ryan was sentenced Aug. 30, 2004, to four years in prison for marijuana trafficking and breach of trust. He appealed the sentence four days later and was released on bail. Mr. Ryan lost the appeal Sept. 27 and was sent to prison. Mr. Ryan was awaiting a transfer to Ottawa to work with as a member of the prime minister's security detail when a source in custody labelled him a "dirty cop." A respected RCMP officer, Mr. Ryan had received the Commanding Officers' Award of Excellence in January 2000 in recognition of outstanding work as a member of the Tantallon street team. In one year, he and his partner seized drugs worth more than $3 million. But the source told police that Mr. Ryan gave him drugs to sell, and that the officer received money from the sale. The man wore a wire for police and recorded his conversations with Mr. Ryan, which led RCMP to conduct an undercover sting against one of their own. On Jan. 23, 2002, investigators placed 1.8 kilograms of wrapped marijuana at a location off Highway 333 in Seabright, and RCMP officers waited nearby. The source told Mr. Ryan where the drugs were and met with him in the former officer's unmarked police car. On the tape, Mr. Ryan said he wanted $3,000 to $5,000 from the sale of the marijuana. RCMP caught the officer on video removing the drugs, which he gave to the source to sell. The source gave the marijuana to another officer after Mr. Ryan had driven away. Fellow officers arrested Mr. Ryan outside Cambridge Suites in Halifax and charged him with trafficking marijuana and breach of trust. He moved with his family to Aylmer, Que., in 2002, but in a letter to the Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge presiding over his case, Mr. Ryan's wife wrote that a psychologist believed Mr. Ryan was suicidal. The parole report said that he had been diagnosed with a "depressive disorder in partial remission." "You expressed sincere remorse for your behaviour and the shame you placed on your family and the RCMP," the parole report later states. A regional spokesman for the parole board said releasing Mr. Ryan is standard parole procedure and has nothing to do with his history in law enforcement. "The board members are bound by the criteria in the law, which states if there are no reasonable grounds to believe that he's going to commit a violent offence, then they must direct his day parole," Brian Chase said Tuesday. This stipulation is applied to first-time federal offenders who are serving time for non-violent offences, Mr. Chase said. "It's a very specific piece of legislation that's geared toward looking at violence in these cases," he said. Mr. Ryan will leave for an undisclosed halfway house next month under accelerated day parole. Under the rules for accelerated review, he had to serve one-sixth of his sentence to be eligible for early consideration. The board also approved his release on full parole, pending the successful completion of day parole. Mr. Ryan's eligibility date for full parole of Jan. 21, 2006, remains the same despite the accelerated review. He will remain on parole until his sentence expires. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom