Pubdate: Tue, 30 Sep 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Christie Blatchford THE 'TURMOIL' OF LIFE AS A DRUG-DEALING GANGSTER So pervasive is the cult of victimhood in Canadian society that yesterday in Ontario Superior Court, an acknowledged drug-dealing gangster who three summers ago gunned down another man in a crowded public square in downtown Toronto earnestly testified about all "I was going through" that night and described himself as "traumatized." Ajine Stewart, who admits killing Dwayne Taylor but is claiming self-defence, was testifying on his own behalf at his second-degree murder trial. In the early hours of July 31, 2005, at Dundas Square on a Caribana festival weekend with locals and tourists on the streets by the thousands, Mr. Stewart twice fired a .30-calibre Smith & Wesson at Mr. Taylor, his first shot hitting an advertising sign, the second hitting Mr. Taylor square in the chest. It was not his gun, Mr. Stewart said, but one he had regular access to, rather as people now share the use of a vehicle through a car service - a sort of GunShare, if you like. If he was fuzzy on the details, Mr. Stewart said at one point, it was because "I was still in shock. I was going through a lot. I was scared." One brave Toronto Police officer had tackled him; others were trying to subdue him. "I was traumatized," he said. "I'd just fired a gun, I was threatened with being tasered." On another occasion, Mr. Stewart said, in a delicious malapropism which echoed earlier testimony from police that he seemed very calm after the shooting, "My heart was going a mile an hour. I was scared, I was terrified. It was the worst night of my life. I was going through so much. There was so much drama." The defence theory, Mr. Stewart's lawyer, Jeff Milligan, told the jury in his opening statement, is that his client had availed himself of the legal right to use deadly force in order to protect his life. Mr. Milligan said that Mr. Taylor was himself a "very violent, dangerous young man" who once "threatened his father-in-law with a sawed-off shotgun" and threatened a female police officer when he was apprehended "trying to take cocaine into a courthouse." The issue for the jurors to decide, Mr. Milligan said, is "who was most likely to be the aggressor" that morning. However, it may be an uphill road: The shooting was captured on police surveillance cameras - Mr. Stewart and the muzzle flash from his borrowed gun are plainly visible on videotape and still photographs viewed by the jurors - and as prosecutor Paul McDermott reminded them yesterday, there was "no other gun, no shell casings, no other bullets" found at the scene. "I suggest that the reason," Mr. McDermott said, "is because you were the only one with a gun, you're the only one who fired or had a gun." Where Mr. Stewart's testimony was enlightening was on the gangster lifestyle. The Jamaican-born man, who came to Mississauga as a child, dropped out of school in Grade 10 to move in with his then-girlfriend, who had a baby by him, a boy now 7. He started selling marijuana and moved onto cocaine and crack "because I wasn't making enough money," started acquiring a criminal record and, about the age of 19, joined the Crisis Crips, a local branch of the notorious gang. Asked to explain what the Crips are, Mr. Stewart offered, helpfully, that "they're different from the Bloods," another infamous gang. Asked what the "Crisis" meant, he said this was a reference to "the turmoils in life, the problems you go through." At some point, he moved in with another woman who had given birth to his daughter, now 4, and began carrying a knife - then, some months before the shooting, the gun. Despite pressure from his mother and the mothers of his children to go straight, and a brief stint working in a factory, he always chose the drug dealer's life - even selling while he was on bail, and under curfew, for a domestic-assault charge that was later withdrawn. It was in fact at this time, while he was living with his mother, also his surety, that he met Mr. Taylor. He was a Crip too, Mr. Stewart said, albeit from a different unit, and a drug dealer, and according to him, they struck up such a friendship that Mr. Taylor let him sell to his customer base while he was on bail. Mr. Stewart's thanks, for this inexplicable generosity, was to steal Mr. Taylor's customers when the charge was dropped and he could return home. While he agreed with Mr. McDermott that some of his contemporaries stayed in school and worked at real jobs, Mr. Stewart nonetheless blamed his poor choices on "where I was living and the people around me." "You chose another life because it paid better?" Mr. McDermott asked. "Yes," said Mr. Stewart. "A lot better?" "Yeah," said Mr. Stewart. He went to Dundas Square only because he was looking for women. "I love women," he said, "especially from the States." He took the .38, fully loaded, because, he said, the Caribana celebration attracts lots of gang members, like him, many of whom are armed, like him, and he knew that gunfights could break out. He said he saw Mr. Taylor, who called him over and told him he owed him money. He tried to get Mr. Taylor alone, away from his friends, but he wouldn't go; instead, "He was giving me bad looks, looking at me up and down." He demanded his money. "I told him to fuck off," Mr. Stewart said. "He said he was going to kill me." Mr. Taylor allegedly reached for his waistband, so Mr. Stewart reached for his. He couldn't bow down to Mr. Taylor in public, or run or holler for police because "My career [as a gangster] would have been scattered." So he shot, in that square packed with people. "As I said," he told Mr. McDermott shortly before he left the witness box, "I went through a lot that night." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake