Pubdate: Sat, 18 Aug 2007 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2007, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Alan Cairns OFFICER SPARED JAIL WITH GUILTY PLEA BRAMPTON -- A Toronto Police officer who faces charges in the drug-squad scandal was yesterday spared jail in an Orangeville case after prosecutors dropped sex assault, beating, weapons and drugs charges as part of a plea deal. Ned Maodus, 44, was given a conditional sentence in the Orangeville case after pleading guilty to assault causing bodily harm, threatening and pointing a firearm. The guilty plea related to a series of March, 2002, allegations by an Orangeville woman, whose identity cannot be revealed because of a court-ordered publication ban. Accepting a joint submission from Crown Attorney Mary Ellen Cullen and defence lawyer Peter Brauti, Ontario Superior Court Justice Bruce Durno sentenced Mr. Maodus to one year of house arrest in Windsor, followed by one year of overnight curfew. For the first year of the sentence, Mr. Maodus can leave his Windsor home only to meet lawyers, attend court or police tribunals, go to counselling sessions, attend medical appointments for himself and his ailing mother, or go on a weekly shopping trip. In the second year, Mr. Maodus must be at his home between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. In submissions, Mr. Brauti noted that Mr. Maodus did not have any prior criminal convictions and had many police commendations. Mr. Maodus's actions, Mr. Brauti said, resulted from "serious mental-health issues" related to his work as a police officer. Mr. Brauti noted that Mr. Maodus had attended 528 counselling sessions with a psychologist in the past five years. Four counts of sexual assault and two of assault causing bodily harm were withdrawn. As anticipated, prosecutors also withdrew related drugs and weapons charges yesterday, on the strength of an earlier court ruling that evidence from a series of searches at Mr. Maodus's Orangeville home was inadmissible because his rights were violated. Among the inadmissible evidence are 3.5 grams of heroin, 45.5 grams of cocaine and four ecstasy tablets that police allege were found on Mr. Maodus's property. It was also alleged that Mr. Maodus had a prohibited Glock handgun, butterfly knives and brass knuckles and had carelessly stored a .357 Magnum revolver and a shotgun. The plea bargain suggests that prosecutors will face an uphill struggle in the trial of Mr. Maodus and five former drug squad cops on allegations that drugs and cash were stolen from drug suspects. Two weeks ago, Mr. Maodus was freed from pretrial detention custody in an unrelated assault trial in Windsor after an ex-girlfriend testified she falsely accused him of beating her. Mr. Maodus became the first Toronto Police officer to be suspended without pay in the spring after Marcia Polczynski, a 37-year-old Michigan nurse, told Windsor police that he had dropped on her body like a "cannonball," beat her, held a knife to her throat and threatened her. Leading up to that suspension, Mr. Maodus had been facing the drug-squad charges, both sex and assault charges and drugs and weapons charges in Orangeville, road rage allegations in London, assaulting a police officer in Windsor, perjury in Toronto, and soliciting a prostitute and breach of conditions in Toronto. All that remain are the drug-squad case, the soliciting charge and breach of conditions. As Mr. Maodus was sentenced yesterday, Ms. Polczynski looked on. Only weeks ago, she testified that she gave a false statement to Windsor police in March due to nightmares and flashbacks that stem from a disassociative and multiple personality disorder. She also said that she had invited Mr. Maodus to continue with their plans to have "a family." The trial judge likened her "spectacular" testimony to "a novel, or television series." Mr. Maodus and Ms. Polczynski left court yesterday hand in hand. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman