Pubdate: Sat, 29 Apr 2006 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2006 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Brian Hutchinson, National Post DRUG DEALER SAYS ASSAULTS WERE DIVINE INSPIRATION VANCOUVER - A Bible-toting drug dealer who filmed himself attacking his customers and who claimed the violent assaults were staged to spread the gospel will be sentenced next week in B.C. Supreme Court, four months after beating a related allegation of directing a criminal organization. On Thursday, a jury found Anthony (Big Tony) Terezakis guilty of 11 counts of assault and assault with a weapon. The burly 46-year-old, who pleaded guilty to trafficking cocaine and heroin at the outset of his trial, insisted that he had acted on religious impulse while punishing drug users inside two skid row hotels near Vancouver's notorious Downtown Eastside. Yesterday, one of two Crown prosecutors involved in the trial called it "the weirdest I have ever seen and probably the weirdest ever tried in a Vancouver courtroom." To convict, the Crown relied almost exclusively on 12 hours of video footage. It depicts a deranged looking Terezakis bursting into dilapidated hotel rooms and berating drug users for various transgressions, including the purchase of "product" from other sources. The footage also shows Terezakis kicking his trembling victims, hitting them with his fists and with a small wooden club, and then shouting religious slogans, such as "Praise Lord." The videos were shot in 2002 with help from Terezakis's teenage son, and were discovered a year later by the accused's estranged wife. She handed them to police in October, 2003, two months after the trafficking charges were laid. Terezakis testified in his own defence. He told a jury earlier this month that the video footage was meant to impart Christian values and to depict life in Vancouver's poorest neighbourhood. He also said he hoped to market the footage under the title "Bible Thumpers." None of the assault victims testified for the Crown. Two appeared as witnesses for the defence. They claimed that they had merely been acting in front of the video camera, and swore that the beatings they received and those they were instructed to help arrange were not real. Members of the jury did not buy it, and found Terezakis guilty of assault. However, jurors could not come to agreement on one charge of unlawful confinement. The Crown stayed that charge on Thursday. Terezakis escaped further sanction when a new section of the Criminal Code under which he had also been charged --which makes it illegal for a member of a criminal organization to instruct someone else to commit an offence -- was ruled unconstitutional by the judge presiding over his trial. In December, Madame Justice Heather Holmes called parts of Section 467.13 of the Criminal Code "vague" and "essentially undefined." Terezakis thus became the first in Canada to successfully challenge the new section, which is aimed at beating back organized crime. B.C.'s department of justice has appealed the ruling; in March, Saskatchewan's Court of Queen's Bench found the same section dealing with organized crime to be valid. Terezakis is expected to appear again in court next Thursday for sentencing. Crown prosecutors say they will ask Justice Holmes to send him to prison for "a substantial amount of time." Terezakis had already spent three years in custody leading up to his trial. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek