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Ruthowsky says he flipped major Hamilton coke dealer into police informant

A Hamilton cop who is facing a host of corruption charges says he wasn't being paid off by a drug dealer at all instead, he flipped that same dealer after an arrest to become part of his huge stable of confidential informants.

Det. Const. Craig Ruthowsky of Hamilton police faces charges of bribery and cocaine trafficking

Det. Const. Craig Ruthowsky, left, leaves a courthouse in Toronto with his lawyer, Greg Lafontaine. Ruthowsky testified for the second day at the corruption trial into his conduct on Thursday. (Adam Carter/CBC)

A Hamilton cop who is facing a host of corruption charges says he wasn't being paid off by a drug dealer at all instead, heflipped that same dealer after an arrest to become partof his huge stable of confidential informants.

Suspended Hamilton police officerCraig Ruthowskyreturned to the witness box in a Toronto courtroom Thursday, as the trial into his misconduct allegations continues.

The 44-year-oldis accused of selling police secrets and protection for $20,000 monthly payments from a cadre of drug dealers.

The Crown's key witness the drug dealer who allegedly set up the deal to pay off Ruthowsky previously testified that he cut a deal with Ruthowskyin the summer of 2011, after araid on the dealer's Caroline Street condo in downtown Hamilton. The dealer can't be named because of a publication ban.

Ruthowsky, however, presented an entirely different scenario. He said he met the dealer after his arrest, and after police found nine ouncesof cocaine inside his condo. During an interview with the dealer at the police station, Ruthowskytold him that was a substantial amount of coke, and he was facing jail time, he testified.

There was no money given to me for any reason at any point.- Craig Ruthowsky

"Faced with those facts, we gave him the option to work with us, because we know there's bigger fish out there," he said. "It was put to him that he could work off his charges.

"He was very open, very willing to the idea."

Ruthowsky, a 17-year-veteran of Hamilton police, has pleaded not guilty in Superior Court in Toronto to charges of bribery, attempting to obstruct justice, trafficking cocaine, criminal breach of trust, and conspiring to traffic marijuana.

Decision hinges on who the jury believes

Quickly, the trial has become a "he said, she said" situation. Three different former drug dealers with lengthy criminal pasts have alleged that Ruthowsky was a cop on the take, who let them roam free and selldrugs in Hamilton. Ruthowsky, bycontrast, has testified that the dealers were feeding him information as informants, while he strung them along with minor assistance in the form of "perceived benefit."

As the day's testimony wore on, Ruthowskyattempted to debunk the dealer's accusations of shady dealings, one by one.

The dealer previously testified that he told Ruthowskyabout a marijuana grow-op he had sunk money intothat he felt was ripping him off. The two made a deal, he alleged thedealer would give up the grow op to Ruthowsky to "appear legit," and he would also get to keep half of any pot that police seized.

Court has heard this marijuana was seized from a Hamilton grow op on a warrant written by Craig Ruthowsky. (Court exhibit)

In the end, there was no harvestable weed in the location to steal, court has heard. The dealer said Ruthowskyoffered for him to come down and tour the location to make sure he wasn't trying to pull one over on him.

Ruthowsky testified Thursday that none of that was true. He said the dealer offered up the grow op while "out for a drive" with him, and then came to see it of his own accord while police were in the middle of dismantling the operation on the night of the raid.

"His request was to come and look, specifically howit was set up electrically, he wanted to see where his money was going," Ruthowsky said. He told the jury that at the time, he couldn't think of any law or police policy he would be breaking by letting a known drug dealer and supposed confidential informant walk around behind the police tape so he let him.

Several police officerspreviously testified they had never seen a confidential informant wandering around a crime scene. Ruthowskysaid he saw at it as "source development" and "building trust."

Questions about cocaine press

The jury also heard last weekfrom another dealer,Nigel Dheilly-Mattiuzzi, who saidhe bought a massive cocaine press from Ruthowsky at an undercover police location.

Ruthowsky, again, presented an opposing narrative to what the jury has already heard. He said the press was seized from the Crown's key witness, and he was attempting to give it back to him.

The press, which was being kept at a covert guns and gangs unit location at a shuttered police station, became part of a massive "office cleanup" in 2011, Ruthowsky said.

A "supervisor at the time" told him to get rid of the press, he testified.

"At the conclusion of a case, the non-drug exhibits can actually be returned to the individual," Ruthowsky said.

"I felt I had complete authority and it was within the policy of the HamiltonPoliceService to give it back to its rightful owner."

Defence lawyer Greg Lafontaine questions his client, Craig Ruthowsky. Ruthowsky is facing charges including cocaine trafficking and bribery in Superior Court in Toronto. Justice Robert Clark and Assistant Crown Attorney John Pollard look on. (Pam Davies/CBC)

The rightful owner, he understood, was the dealer who is the Crown's key witness. But the dealer made it "pretty clear he had no interest in the press" now, Ruthowsky said, because it was too big, and he had no means of getting it.

Ruthowsky pushed him to come get it anyway, he testified, and the dealer told him he was sending his "good friend Nigel" to pick it up.

Ruthowsky said that whenDheilly-Mattiuzzicame to pick up the press from the police location, he said it was a "beautiful piece of equipment" and that his father, who owned a machine shop, "would love it."

"For whatever reason, he seemed to fall instantly in love with this press," Ruthowsky said. He told the jury that he toldDheilly-Mattiuzzito contact the dealer and see if they could work out some sort of deal between the two of them.

Ruthowskytestified that he helped load the press onto a truck, andDheilly-Mattiuzzidrove off with it.

"From that point, I don't know what happened," Ruthowsky said.

That stands in stark contrast toDheilly-Mattiuzzi'sown testimony from last week, when he told the court that Ruthowsky called him upand offered him the press, some cutting agent and pressing plates as a $5,000 package deal.

Ruthowskydenied that ever happened.

"There was no money given to me for any reason at any point," he said.

adam.carter@cbc.ca