Toronto Star

A top cop or a crook, jury must decide

Defence lawyer says Hamilton drug officer ‘thrown under the bus’

- BETSY POWELL COURTS BUREAU

A Toronto jury hearing closing arguments Wednesday was presented with two starkly different portraits of a Hamilton Police Service officer facing corruption charges.

Defence lawyer Greg Lafontaine urged jurors to acquit Craig Ruthowsky, calling him a hard-working, crime-busting cop who has been “thrown under the bus” by a manipulati­ve cocaine dealer who made up a bogus pay-for-protection scheme to avoid being outed as his confidenti­al informant.

Lafontaine cited examples of what he called the drug dealer’s “fantastica­l evidence,” during his lengthy time in the witness box, such as when he suggested Ruthowsky volunteere­d to import drugs from Jamaica or was planning a home invasion.

“Give him credit for his imaginatio­n,” he said of the dealer, whose identity is protected under a publicatio­n ban.

If anything, Ruthowsky, 44, should be “commended” for his actions, not on trial for bribery, obstruct justice, breach of trust, traffickin­g and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence, Lafontaine said.

Prosecutor John Pollard told the jury that Ruthowsky’s conduct was “an attack on the rule of law ... one in which he decided who would be policed and who would be allowed to continue to offend, and the entirety of it was for profit.”

The officer’s “churning, endless informant program created a perfect circumstan­ce for corruption. There were no notes, no reports, no registrati­on,” Pollard said. He was so effective at getting drugs and guns off the street, “no one above him (was) asking why, or checking on his work, or ensuring that anything was verified and real.”

So in 2011, “when money becomes a bit of a problem for the Ruthowsky family,” the officer jumped at the dealer’s offer of bribe money so he could run his drug operation without police interferen­ce, Pollard said.

And as disreputab­le as he may be, the cocaine trafficker “presented as a compelling, truthful witness” whose narrative “makes sense,” he said.

Pollard asked the jury to find Ruthowsky guilty on all five counts in order to hold him to account “and deny him the exceptiona­l position before the law he created for himself.”

Superior Court Justice Robert Clark is scheduled to deliver his instructio­ns to jurors Monday before they retire to deliberate.

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