Ottawa Citizen

Police allege accused’s life centred on quest for young boys

Man ran youth ministry, was foster parent

- CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD

The undercover police officers who work the web in search of child abusers and pornograph­ers are accustomed to being told lies.

As Toronto Police Sgt. Paul Krawczyk, one of the globe’s leading investigat­ors in the grim world of online child exploitati­on, says, in the chat rooms such men frequent, they often exaggerate their access to children, the number of boys or girls they “have,” or the amount of pornograph­y they have.

“A lot of the time, it’s bravado,” Krawczyk says.

And that’s where Donald (Donnie) Snook is alleged to be different.

“I never would have guessed all that stuff (could be) true,” Krawczyk told Postmedia News in a telephone interview this week. “I have never seen it.”

Snook is a 40-year-old Saint John, N.B., man who appears to have constructe­d his entire life around his sexual appetite.

Though he now faces eight charges — possessing and making child pornograph­y, including images of an unidentifi­ed boy who was under 14 at the time of the alleged abuse, and three counts of sexual touching — other alleged victims have since come forward to police, Postmedia has learned.

Additional charges are expected.

Snook was a popular city councillor, one of only two incumbents to be re-elected last spring, who rode to office on the strength of his community activism.

He was also the executive director of the Inner City Youth Ministry, a charity affiliated with the local Anglican church, which operates after-school clubs, a hot-lunch program called the Chicken Noodle Club for the students of three city schools, sends underprivi­leged youngsters to summer camps and runs swimming and hockey programs.

Even at city council, Snook was known for his constant advocacy on behalf of children and youth. Just one of his many motions, made two years ago, asked city staff to investigat­e mentorship and recreation­al opportunit­ies for vulnerable youth.

And, as one of four recently unsealed search warrants reveals, Snook was apparently also a longtime foster parent with the province.

The Jan. 18 warrant sought “the complete file of Donald Snook as foster parent,” “files of all foster children in Donald Snook’s care” and “all files of disclosure made by children pertaining to Donald Snook.”

A provincial court judge ordered the N.B. ministry of social developmen­t to hand over Snook’s records.

He was arrested Jan. 9 at his home, where RCMP broke down the door, due as an unsealed warrant puts it “to exigent circumstan­ces,” meaning Snook allegedly had a boy inside police believed “could be at risk”.

Earlier that day, while online with Sgt. Krawczyk and offering to “cam” (video camera) with a boy after school, the user alleged to be Snook told the officer “somon [someone] at door. s u latr?”

The someone was an undercover Saint John officer, who rang the doorbell at the precise moment the user reported hearing it.

By this point, Snook was under surveillan­ce, with a camera posted on a power pole giving a view of the front entrance of his house.

He resigned from council Jan. 17 and has been suspended from his $52,000-ayear position with the youth ministry.

Snook had been in Krawczyk’s sights for 22 months, “the longest I’ve ever been after someone online.”

The investigat­ion began in March of 2011, when Krawczyk first chatted with a user who said he lived in New Brunswick and who downloaded 48 files showing “prepubesce­nt males engaged in various sex acts with adult males.”

The user said he had access to three boys and gave their ages.

Krawcyzk contacted the Saint John force and officers tracked the Internet provider address to a Martha Avenue house. But when a search warrant was executed there two months later, officers found the residents to be a perfectly regular family, with no child pornograph­y on their password-protected wireless network.

“This meant an unknown person accessing the home network ... without the password was hacking into their Wi-Fi connection,” the warrants say.

The user then went silent for several months, but surfaced again in the fall of 2011, and contacted Krawczyk again.

Meantime, in a stellar example of the inter-jurisdicti­onal co-operation that is the norm in this sort of policing, Const. Gordon Redfurn, of the Saint John’s family protection unit and a child-pornograph­y expert, was involved, and by November last year, the RCMP’s specialist Internet Child Exploitati­on unit based in Fredericto­n were now the lead investigat­ors.

On Nov. 21, Snook and his Martha Avenue house were formally identified for the first time in the warrants.

ICE unit officers then even did tests near several Martha Avenue addresses, matching signal strengths with various laptops. The power-pole camera went up on Nov. 29, enabling the police to be sure that when Krawczyk was chatting with the user, Snook was in the house.

Chat logs contained in the warrants reveal the user alleged to be Snook as terrified of being found out (“I don’t ever want to be caught, as u can understand,” he said once) but unable to stop himself (“no pill on earth will control me honestly”), selfdelusi­onal (“I NEVER hurt,” he said of how he treated boys. ‘I treat them like gold … they are little princes”) and realistic (“I have … boys I’m grooming right now”).

But perhaps the most telling — and chilling — remark was this: “the hunt of my life,” he told Krawczyk last March 23 of his quest for boys. “God it’s a wonder I can do anything else.”

If the police are right, he didn’t.

 ??  ?? Donald Snook of Saint John, N.B., faces eight charges now and more may be laid.
Donald Snook of Saint John, N.B., faces eight charges now and more may be laid.
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