Pubdate: Thu, 24 Jun 2010 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Sam Pazzano PEEL COP GUILTY OF STEALING COCAINE BRAMPTON - A veteran Peel regional officer was found guilty Wednesday of possessing cocaine for trafficking that he stole from an RCMP drug sting operation known as Project Ocaper. Justice Casey Hill found Const. Sheldon Cook guilty of all charges, including possession of property stolen from a police investigation. Hill found that the 42-year-old cop, while on duty, stole what he believed to be cocaine and also pilfered 21 MP3 players from a police seizure of at least 465 units on an earlier occasion. The Peel officers came into possession of the contraband after a breakdown in a joint Mounties-Peruvian police operation. The police arranged for the purchase of 147 bricks of cocaine in Peru and replaced it with white flour. When the bogus shipment reached Lima airport, one brick was missing and 11 others had been replaced with concrete powder. Problems arose when the fake cocaine shipment, now hidden inside 88 boxes of mangoes, arrived at Toronto's Pearson International Airport on Nov. 16, 2005. Those packages ended up with Cook and two fellow Peel officers. Simultaneously, the RCMP's tracking devices hidden in the bricks ceased functioning. Two days later, when the tracking devices began working again, the RCMP found eight ripped-open bricks in a dumpster and 15 more in a Cambridge house that belonged to Cook. "Unaware that the 15 packages stolen on Nov. 16-17, 2005 contained only ersatz cocaine, as well as a GPS tracking device, Cook was caught when the RCMP unexpectedly traced the device's signals to Cook's home in Cambridge," Hill said in his ruling Wednesday as he summed up the Crown's case. Hill rejected Cook's account that two other officers "colluded to tailor their evidence and to frame Cook as alleged by the defence." Those officers were working together with Cook on the night the shipment was seized. "Sheldon Cook's account that he had possession of the 15 packages following the lawful orders of his superior officers is demonstrably unbelievable," Hill said. The prosecution argued that Cook believed the cocaine was real when he brought it home, but once he discovered it was fake he didn't have time to dispose of it before the RCMP raided his house. Cook insisted he was innocent and his lawyer Patrick Ducharme alleged the two other cops are the "true perpetrators." The other two cops were disciplined under the Police Services Act for their conduct during the initial seizure. But neither was charged criminally in this case. The judge will sentence Cook on Aug. 5. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D