Pubdate: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2007 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Authors: Paul Cherry and Max Harrold, The Gazette Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) COP-SHOOTER GETS BAIL 'Relieved, Saddened'; Judge Critical of Police Raid In a decision believed to be the first of its kind in Canada, a Quebec Superior Court judge has granted bail to a person accused of murdering a police officer. But in rendering his decision at the Montreal courthouse yesterday, Justice Jean-Guy Boilard noted the first-degree murder case against Basil Parasiris, 41, carries with it several exceptional circumstances. "I won't say it is weak," Boilard noted of the case, "but it is contestable." Parasiris has admitted he shot Laval Constable Daniel Tessier during a March 2 raid at his home on Rimouski Cres. in Brossard. But as Jacques Larochelle, one of Parasiris's defence lawyers, argued during the two-day hearing, Parasiris also claims he did not know Tessier was a police officer when he shot him three times with a .357 Magnum pistol. Constable Stephane Forbes was also wounded in the operation. The police were looking for cocaine, accounting records and cellphones as part of an investigation into an alleged drug ring operating out of Laval. At least five other people arrested that day have been charged with drug trafficking. When he learned he will soon be released on bail - perhaps as early as today - Parasiris looked skyward. He smiled, then his eyes turned red. His wife, Panagiota Gounis, who was wounded during the raid, let out a loud gasp when she heard the decision. Several of the many relatives who turned out in support of Parasiris began to cry. "The accused is happy. So is his family," said another defence lawyer, Frank Pappas. "Obviously this is not a time to rejoice. There has been the death of a person in this matter, which is Constable Tessier, as we all know. He will not be joining his family today or within the next couple of days. "(Parasiris) is relieved but he is also saddened and nobody is celebrating." Pappas said that in all the research he and Larochelle did to prepare for the bail hearing, they could not find a Canadian precedent in which a person accused of the first-degree murder of a police officer was released on bail. Boilard attached a series of conditions to Parasiris's release. They include a $200,000 bond guaranteed by Chrisa Parasiris, the accused's 37-year-old sister, and John Giorgoudes, a 47-year-old businessman related to him through marriage. Both offered their homes as guarantees that Parasiris will respect his conditions. He is also required to live at his sister's home in Brossard while awaiting trial, and he had to surrender his passport. Boilard also imposed a curfew requiring Parasiris to be home between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. While testifying before Boilard yesterday morning, Chrisa Parasiris described her brother as a family man, devoted to his two children. She said he never misses his son's football games or practices and always drove his 7-year-old daughter to Greek-language courses and piano lessons. "He loves children," she said. "He's an amazing person. A good heart." Giorgoudes, who owns an alarm monitoring company, described Parasiris's extended family as very close. "We're a strong family. We look out for each other," he told Boilard. "I think the whole family is united in saying that we will make sure Parasiris respects the conditions." An official with the Fraternite des policiers de Laval, which represents officers on work matters, declined to comment on Parasiris's being granted bail. Christine Beaulieu, spokes-person for the Quebec Federation of Municipal Police Officers, said it would be premature to comment. "We'll let justice take its course," Beaulieu said. The issue of Parasiris being a possible flight risk was not raised during the hearing. Crown prosecutor Joelle St. Germain instead argued Parasiris posed a potential threat to commit a dangerous crime if released. But Boilard said he found little evidence to support that. He noted the Laval police have yet to charge Parasiris with drug trafficking. St. Germain described him as someone living "within the subculture of drug trafficking." Parasiris admitted during an interrogation that he had been trafficking for three years to get out of financial trouble, St. Germain added. The prosecutor also emphasized the fact Parasiris had four loaded guns in different parts of his house, including three he bought illegally "off the street." She also argued Parasiris has given two versions to explain his frame of mind when the police smashed in his door after 5 a.m. on March 2. Statements he made shortly after he was informed that he was under arrest for killing a police officer suggest he was expecting to be the victim of an underworld settling of accounts. A nurse at the Charles LeMoyne Hospital overheard him say: "Last week someone tried to get me." Hours later, while being interrogated by Surete du Quebec investigators, he said he thought he was the victim of a home invasion. St. Germain argued that either way, Parasiris acted recklessly (which, if proved, can still produce a first-degree murder conviction in cases involving the deaths of police officers). She said he shot at Tessier and Forbes without trying to size up what kind of danger he might be in. According to evidence presented during the hearing, Tessier was shot as he approached the door to the master bedroom in Parasiris's house. St. Germain quoted a statement Parasiris gave to the police in which he said he "opened the door and saw a face" before he shot Tessier. He did not say he saw Tessier carrying a weapon. "Mr. Parasiris did not act like the good father of a family," she said. "A well-informed public doesn't want to live in a world where things are solved through the barrel of a gun." Boilard said he doubted the public's faith in the justice system will be jeopardized by his decision. He noted Parasiris appears to have a "few avenues" for a defence. He also criticized the aggressive force the Laval police used to carry out the search. It was Larochelle who raised several questions about why the Laval police were authorized to use what the police commonly refer to as a "dynamic entry" when they entered the home. Officers used a battering ram to force open the front door, and then nine armed officers stormed inside, yelling: "Police!" The police sometimes request permission for a "dynamic entry" search warrant when they believe a suspect might destroy evidence, knowing officers are on the doorstep. When executing regular search warrants, the police are required to knock and announce who they are. Larochelle cited jurisprudence in which judges have determined a "dynamic entry" should only be authorized in extreme cases and argued that the March 2 operation did not merit it. And during an exchange with prosecutor St. Germain, Boilard commented: "If I accept your reasoning, dynamic entries would be allowed in all cases." "Dynamic entry is a euphemism," Larochelle said of what happened on March 2. "It was more than dynamic. It was an extreme brutality." The raid was conducted just after 5 a.m., before sunrise. Evidence presented at the bail hearing indicates Parasiris fired first, striking Tessier three times. Three Laval officers responded by firing 14 bullets, but two of them shot into the bedroom door of Parasiris's 15-year-old son, mistakenly assuming the shots had come from behind it. Another officer was bumped by a retreating colleague and shot Tessier in the foot as he lay on the floor, probably already dead. She also shot Parasiris's wife in the arm. It all occurred within less than 30 seconds in a poorly lit hallway. Larochelle also noted that while the police knew a teenage boy lived in the home, they did not know Parasiris had a 7-year-old daughter. She was not injured, but the bullet that wounded Forbes went through his arm and travelled across her bedroom. A preliminary inquiry has been scheduled for August. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake