Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jan 2012 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2012 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Peter Small, Courts Bureau PRISONER THOUGHT HE WAS 'GOING TO DIE' AMID TORONTO POLICE BEATING, TRIAL TOLD A former pot dealer says he felt pressured, as part of a plea bargain, into signing a document agreeing not to sue two police officers who brutally beat him in custody. Christopher Quigley testified at a cop corruption trial Tuesday that Toronto Central Field Command drug squad officers beat him so severely after they arrested him on April 30, 1998, that he thought he was going to die. "I was terrified," he told an Ontario Superior Court jury. "I was being pulverized." Quigley said he was kicked, punched and choked by drug squad officers Ned Maodus and Richard Benoit in a police interview room with the encouragement and participation of their boss, Det.-Sgt. John Schertzer. They kept angrily demanding where he kept his drugs and money, he testified. He was treated in hospital for his injuries, but the officers turned around and charged him with assault, as well as possessing marijuana and the proceeds of crime, he told an Ontario Superior Court jury Tuesday. "I was never told who I assaulted because I didn't assault anyone," Quigley told prosecutor John Pearson. But he agreed to a plea deal allowing him to plead guilty to simple marijuana possession and a $1,000 fine in return for the other charges being dropped, he told prosecutor John Pearson. His lawyer at the time, Bruce Olmsted, made it very clear to him it was the best deal he could get, he said. The lawyer told Quigley that police would not give back the possessions they had seized unless he took the deal, he said. They had trashed his Eglinton Ave. W. apartment and taken his $400 boots, a briefcase containing an $8,000 sapphire and other items, as well as $54,000 of his cash from his mother's bank safety deposit box, he said. So before he pleaded guilty he signed a document releasing the Toronto police force and any of its officers, including Benoit and Maodus, for any injuries he sustained at the time of his arrest. Schertzer, 54; Maodus, 48; Steve Correia, 44; Joseph Miched, 53; and Raymond Pollard, 47; collectively face 29 charges, laid in January 2004, including obstruction of justice, perjury, assault and extortion related to their work between 1997 and 2002. During one of three separate beatings, Quigley said, his head was smashed against a wall and he lost consciousness. "I was covered from head to toe in blood," he testified. "That's when I started throwing up blood. I was breathing up blood. I was choking on my own blood." He was finally taken to a cell in another part of the station, where another officer saw his bloodied state and immediately screamed for someone to call an ambulance. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.