Pubdate: Sat, 14 Jun 2008 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2008 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Paul Cherry, The Gazette PARASIRIS 'RELIEVED' UPON LEARNING HIS FATE Not Guilty of First-Degree Murder. the Accused's Wife Gasps on Hearing Verdict; Widow of Slain Officer Isn't In Courtroom The nervous look on Basil Parasiris's face changed little when he learned a jury had found him not guilty of first-degree murder in the killing of a Laval police officer. Parasiris appeared to be in disbelief, trying to make sure he had heard the right words from the foreman of the jury that had deliberated his fate for four days. Parasiris's wife, Penny Gounis, and his relatives were more emotional. "Oh my God!" Gounis gasped on hearing her husband had been acquitted. Before the verdict, she had been shaking as she sat on the edge of her seat with her hands clutched together, resting on her lap. Parasiris's sister Chrisa wept, and his brother Nick, who had been present for most of the three-week trial, was visibly relieved. Parasiris took small steps out of the prisoner's dock where he had stood to hear the verdict, and he hugged Dominique Shoofey, one of his defence lawyers. After that, his wife and relatives rushed to him in the courtroom and embraced him. Parasiris then quickly exited the courtroom in Longueuil and left without making any comments. "He is relieved and satisfied by the decision of the jury," Shoofey said. "It was a difficult case for everyone. At this moment, we won't make any official comment. At this time, it would not be prudent to comment." Crown prosecutor Joelle St. Germain said it appeared the jury believed that Parasiris acted in self-defence when he killed Laval police Constable Daniel Tessier last year. She said that a committee of prosecutors will review the case to see if the Crown will appeal. The Crown has 30 days to appeal the verdict. Parasiris, a 42-year-old businessman, testified that he believed he, his wife and two children were about to be the victims of a violent home invasion when he shot Tessier outside his bedroom in a darkened hallway. Shortly after 5 a.m. on March 2, 2007, Tessier, a 42-year-old father of two, was the second of nine Laval police officers who stormed into Parasiris's home after smashing in the house's front door with a small battering ram. The raid was part of an investigation of five drug traffickers selling cocaine in Laval. The Laval police morality drug squad suspected Parasiris was supplying the dealers with cocaine, and they were hoping to find a large quantity of the drug in the home. Because of their suspicions, they obtained a search warrant allowing them to make a so-called "dynamic entry." Such warrants are designed to catch suspects off guard, so no evidence can be destroyed. The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled they should be used only in exceptional circumstances. Before the jury began hearing evidence, the trial judge, Justice Guy Cournoyer, ruled the warrant was a violation of the Charter right that protects Canadians against abusive search and seizure and that evidence seized in its execution was inadmissable. In his decision, Cournoyer also criticized the Laval police because they had no evidence they would have found a large quantity of drugs in the home. Parasiris was not charged with drug trafficking after the raid. The jury wasn't told about the warrant or why the Laval police were in Parasiris's home. The six men and six women on the jury didn't hear that the police found less than one gram of cocaine, nearly two grams of marijuana, 13 cellphones and four pagers inside the home. They also found eight pages of what one investigator described as possibly being the accounts of drug trafficking. Parasiris admitted during an interrogation he had been involved in drug trafficking for three years to get out of financial trouble. The jury never heard this evidence. The Crown's case had several weak points that likely created enough reasonable doubt for the jury to acquit. Defence lawyer Jacques Larochelle continually focused the jury's attention on a police baseball cap that was recovered as evidence at Charles LeMoyne Hospital, where Tessier was declared dead. The cap had the word "police" on the front with the Laval police crest, which would have helped to identify Tessier as a police officer during the raid. None of the witnesses said they saw him wearing it. The cap issue was a key part of the trial because Tessier apparently forgot to make sure that the word "police" was visible on the front of the bulletproof vest he wore during the raid. During his closing arguments to the jury, Larochelle wondered aloud: "So where did that cap come from?" He stopped short of accusing anyone of planting evidence at the hospital. Larochelle suggested instead that Tessier was wearing a black tuque found in a bedroom where two of his fellow officers tried to resuscitate him. No other officer involved in the raid claimed the tuque as his or her own. Even though the tuque probably belonged to Tessier, it was not sent to be analyzed for bloodstains or gunpowder burns. Because of this, Larochelle said, the Crown's case lacked integrity. In a telling moment - and one when the jury was absent - prosecutor St. Germain argued Larochelle had no right to make such allegations. But Cournoyer held up a photo of the room where the tuque was found and said he also wondered why the Crown didn't send it to be analyzed. He said Larochelle's allegations "seem to be fair game." During the raid, five officers headed up a stairway to the second floor of the home, where the bedrooms were. Tessier headed for the master bedroom and was shot by Parasiris as he neared the door. Parasiris and his wife both testified they had no idea it was the police who had broken into their home. Both said they didn't hear officers shout "Police!" until after Tessier had been shot. Perhaps the best evidence to support Parasiris's claim he feared he and his family were under attack was that he admitted soiling himself during the raid. Parasiris testified he opened his bedroom door, came face to face with Tessier and fired his revolver when he saw Tessier's hand was pointing toward him. Parasiris fired four shots, striking Tessier three times. The fourth shot struck Constable Stephane Forbes, who was about to open the door to the bedroom of Parasiris's 7-year-old daughter, Stephanie. On hearing the shots, three officers returned fire. Det.-Sgt. Nathalie Allard fired four shots toward Parasiris, but struck his wife in the right arm and Tessier in the foot. Constables Serge Lauzon and Francois Leblanc, who was in charge of the investigation, mistook the source of the shots and fired five rounds each toward the bedroom of Parasiris's 15-year-old son, George. Cournoyer acquitted Parasiris on Tuesday of three charges related to Forbes, who was struck in the left arm by a bullet. Defence lawyer Larochelle had pointed out the Crown had presented no evidence that Parasiris meant to shoot Forbes. Tessier's widow, Dominique Lapointe, left the courtroom shortly after Cournoyer announced he was acquitting Parasiris of those three charges. She appeared upset and did not return to the courthouse to await the jury's verdict. Parasiris still faces eight charges related to four loaded firearms he kept in his house, including the Ruger .357 magnum revolver he used to shoot Tessier. Parasiris had a licence for the revolver, but not for the address at which he kept it. He did not have licences for the other three firearms and is charged with improperly storing all three. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake