Pubdate: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Ian Robertson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) COPS IN DRUG CASE TO BE NAMED Sun And Other Media Win High Court Decision To Unseal Warrants Canada's top court has quashed the Toronto police union's bid to prevent the media identifying three officers named in a controversial probe of cocaine use by members of a former drug squad. Sun Media and the CBC argued before the Supreme Court of Canada after the Toronto Police Association (TPA) appealed for the identities to be kept sealed. Media lawyer Iain MacKinnon said yesterday he has asked a Crown official to provide full copies of the warrants. Those documents were filed with a court in Toronto. The TPA sought the top court's leave to appeal an Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruling last year that permitted the names to be published. That decision was upheld in April by the Court of Appeal for Ontario. In its ruling released yesterday, the Supreme Court stated the seal protecting officer's names in the warrant "should be lifted." But MacKinnon said he does not expect the complete files to be released until at least next week, when the names can be published. Senior Toronto cops denied a cover-up after a two-year investigation into alleged corruption in the northwest field command drug squad led by RCMP Staff-Supt. John Neily. After a sting operation based on allegations by a police agent, the task force arrested only one officer, Det.-Const. Rob Kelly in late 2001. Two other officers resigned. Warrants used by the task force accused three other officers of sharing cocaine with Kelly and the police agent in a bar washroom. First charged with trafficking, Kelly pleaded guilty in 2003 to two counts of possessing cocaine after a plea bargain reached with federal prosecutors. Given a suspended sentence and ordered fired after a police disciplinary hearing, Kelly admitted using cocaine, providing it to the agent and placing horse race bets with him. He cited professional and personal trauma for his drug use and confusion between his real personality and that of his undercover character. Kelly, 42, declined comment to Sun Media this week. In his Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruling in August 2007, Mr. Justice Ian Nordheimer said the investigation was later turned over to the Toronto Police internal affairs department, but no other officers were ever charged or disciplined. None could be reached yesterday. Nordheimer wrote that two ex-investigators publicly claimed police bosses "covered up and/or refused to investigate cases of alleged corruption and criminal activity by Toronto Police officers that had been revealed by the RCMP-led Special Task Force. "The possibility that there has been such inaction is also unquestionably of significant public interest," his Superior Court decision says. "All proceedings involving the court process are intended to be open to the public." The TPA argued since officers whose names were removed from warrants were never charged, they should be considered innocent and retain their right to privacy. The union's lawyer told Nordheimer the three officers will not speak to the media if they are approached. Before sentencing, Kelly's lawyer sought leniency, appealing for his client to remain on the force, arguing his involvement with drugs resulted from his undercover work. The 17-year officer, with a long list of commendations including bravery, quit in mid-2006 and is now an agent with Meadowtowne Realty, a Mississauga brokerage operating with Royal LePage. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin