Pubdate: Sat, 10 Feb 2007 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2007, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Tracy Mclaughlin, Special To Sun Media COKE ADDICT COP TURNS IN BADGE Barrie Officer Given Conditional Discharge After Pleading Guilty To Discreditable Conduct BARRIE -- A Barrie cop who got hooked on cocaine while walking the streets nightly policing the seedy underworld pleaded guilty to public mischief and handed in his badge yesterday. Const. Rodney Hackett, 32, was given a conditional discharge and two years probation, which means he will have no criminal record at the end of two years. Justice Glenn Krelove agreed to withdraw a second charge of theft in connection with money Hackett took from a civilian after he booked him in the police cells in 2002. The Crown agreed to drop the charges after Hackett said he would resign and plead guilty under the Police Act for discreditable conduct. In an agreed statement of facts, Crown attorney Ken Anthony said the charges stem from Dec. 3, 2002, when Hackett borrowed a pickup truck from another police officer, then smashed it into a hydro pole while he was "high" on his way to Washago to buy cocaine. Hackett had the truck towed away and told police it was stolen from a Tim Hortons in Barrie, but no sign of the truck showed up on video surveillance. Police located the smashed truck two years later at the home of a Muskoka man who bought it for parts. DOWNWARD SPIRAL OPP took over the investigation and when two officers knocked on Hackett's door, they found him stoned, court heard. In a letter Hackett wrote to the judge, read out by his lawyer Harry Black, the officer told how his life began to spiral downward after working with drug informants. "It was a life of high stress and violent crime ... I witnessed suicide, homicide, violent assaults and crimes of the most awful nature against children." He tried to get transferred, but he was refused, he claims. "I hit bottom." The Barrie Police Service sent Hackett to a drug rehab centre and he has kicked his habit. In his sentencing, Justice Krelove gave Hackett credit for pleading guilty and making a $1,500 donation to the Royal Victoria Hospital. "But you have brought shame to yourself and to the Barrie Police Service," the judge said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine