Canadian acquitted in shooting death of policeman!
MONTREAL, Quebec, Canada - June 14,
2008 -Awakened before dawn by police officers who battered down the door to his
home, Basil Parasiris said he acted in self-defense when he shot at a stranger
at his bedroom door.
A jury agreed yesterday, acquitting
the Montreal-area businessman of first-degree murder in the shooting death of
Constable Daniel Tessier.
The verdict was the latest slap in
this case for the Laval police. The trial had revealed that the force's search
warrant relied on dubious evidence and didn't allow a night-time raid; that
officers didn't properly check whether Mr. Parasiris owned guns; and that they
fired by mistake into a child's bedroom.
The jurors agreed with Mr.
Parasiris's defense that he thought he was the victim of a home invasion.
Jurors weren't even told that the
judge, Mr. Justice Guy Cournoyer of Quebec Superior Court, had invalidated the
search warrant the officers were using.
Mr. Parasiris was targeted in a
police probe into cocaine trafficking. But Judge Cournoyer ruled that the
police failed to prove he had drugs in his home and weren't justified in using
force to enter.
The court was told that police
didn't know Mr. Parasiris had a registered gun. The officers didn't check his
name in the firearms registry, only the address. However, he had failed to
report that he had moved.
About 5 a.m. on March 2, 2007, nine
Laval officers used a battering ram to enter Mr. Parasiris's home in the
Montreal suburb of Brossard.
Constable Serge Lauzon, the first
officer to enter the house, headed for the wrong bedroom, so it was Constable
Tessier who went to the master bedroom.
Awakened by the noise, Mr.
Parasiris grabbed a Ruger .357 magnum revolver, one of three guns he kept in
his closet.
He testified that he fired after
seeing "this big man all dressed in black and a white face" at the
door.
Three shots hit Constable Tessier,
killing him. The last shot struck another constable in the arm.
Jurors heard that Constable Lauzon
and Constable François Leblanc mistakenly thought the shots had come from a
door in front of them, so they fired 10 shots at the bedroom of Mr. Parasiris's
15-year-old son.
While backing up, Constable Lauzon
bumped into Detective-Sergeant Nathalie Allard as she fired at the master bedroom.
One of her shots struck Constable
Tessier as he lay dying; another wounded Mr. Parasiris' wife, Penny Gounis, in
an arm.
There were also questions about
Constable Tessier's appearance. He was dressed in black and the word
"police" on his bulletproof vest was obscured by a flap, the jury was
told.
The Crown said the slain officer wore a baseball cap
with a police logo on it. But the defense noted that the ambulance drivers
didn't see that cap. Instead, a black toque was found at the scene.