Pubdate: Mon, 30 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 BANK WORKER'S RECOLLECTION CLASHES WITH POLICE TALLY OF SEIZED MONEY Drug squad officers emptied =93many, many=94 hundred-dollar bills from a safety deposit box belonging a drug dealer's mother, but later reported seizing not a single one, a police corruption trial has heard. Dean Menchions, 39, a CIBC employee, testified that two long-haired plainclothes police officers arrived at his Avenue Rd. branch on the morning of May 1, 1998, to examine a safety deposit box. He accompanied the officers, one of whom identified himself as Correia, to the vault, he testified Monday. Menchions said he later learned the box belonged to Greeba Quigley, mother of Christopher Quigley, a drug dealer. One of the officers unlocked the box and shook its contents into a large clear plastic bag held by the other officer, Menchions said. Menchions said he saw =93many, many, many hundred-dollar bills, hundreds of hundred-dollar bills,=94 falling into the bag. I was surprised at how many bills could fit in such a small box,=94 he told prosecutor Milan Rupic. The jury has been told they will hear that when then-Det. John Schertzer =AD the other officer at the bank =AD prepared a property receipt for the seized money, he did not report any hundred-dollar bills. Instead he said the box contained 22 thousand dollar bills and 17 fifty-dollar bills, for a total of $22,850. Christopher Quigley, 46, testified earlier this month that police viciously assaulted him after arresting him on April 30, 1998, and on the following day seized $54,000 of his cash from his mother's safety deposit box, later returning only the $22,850. Emily Beaton, one of Schertzer's lawyers, suggested to Menchions that he was mistaken about the denominations, and that he thought he saw hundred-dollar bills because he believes drug dealers prefer them. No,=94 Menchions replied. Menchions was testifying at the Ontario Superior Court trial of Schertzer, 54; Steven Correia, 44; Ned Maodus, 48; Raymond Pollard, 47; and Joseph Miched, 53. The former Central Field Command drug squad officers collectively face 29 charges, including attempting to obstruct justice, perjury, assault and extortion, between 1997 and 2002. In earlier testimony Monday, Greeba Quigley, Christopher's mother, agreed that her son, for several years, had misled her into believing police had not returned any of the money they seized from her safety deposit box. The trial continues Tuesday. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom