TorontoSun.com - Mark Bonokoski - Sometimes justice stinks
TorontoSun.com - Mark Bonokoski - Sometimes justice stinks
April 24, 2005
Sometimes justice stinks
NEIGHBOUR CAUGHT FILTHY TRICKS ON VIDEOTAPE NOT ONCE, NOT TWICE, BUT 24 TIMES, MARK BONOKOSKI WRITES
By MARK BONOKOSKI, SUN MEDIA
WHEN THE Brockville police could not nab the sicko who was dumping
urine and feces on his car, Darryl Amoroso decided to become his own
private eye. He installed a small surveillance camera in his yard -- at
his own expense -- and then sat back to see who he would capture in the
act.
No doubt he had his suspicions.
Living next door with his mother, as part of a court order for
his release on bail, was one Henry Danninger, a two-bit drug dealer who
upped his criminal ante when he stabbed to death a 23-year-old
University of Ottawa engineering student named Andy Moffitt,
coincidentally also from the eastern Ontario seaway city of Brockville.
DRUG FEUD
What Danninger did on the eve of Christmas Eve 1998 was arm
himself with what he called a "bad ass knife," and then he headed off
to the Coyote Bar in a section of Ottawa called Sandy Hill in order to
confront a former roommate he suspected of scooping his stash of drugs.
In the melee that ensued, following a salt-filled beer bottle
being smashed over a head, and a patron being kneed twice in the groin,
Andy Moffitt -- a computer whiz celebrating the end of exams -- stepped
forward as an innocent peacemaker and was fatally stabbed through the
heart.
BAIL CONDITIONS
The act of courage that cost the young man his life saw him
being posthumously awarded the Governor General's Medal of Bravery in
2003.
As part of his bail conditions on a second-degree murder
charge, Henry Danninger had to be in his mother's house from 9 p.m.
until 6 a.m., not leave the premises unless accompanied by specified
relatives, as well as keep the peace and be of good behaviour.
These were conditions he apparently kept for three years.
Suddenly, however, he began skulking out of his mother's house
after midnight, armed with a bucket of urine and feces he had hidden
away in the garage.
And then he took that bucket and poured its contents over his neighbour's car and driveway.
That neighbour, Darryl Amoroso, says it is a "situation we
would just as soon have behind us." And so he did not want to comment
on his neighbour's son, who again postponed a parole hearing that was
slated to be held last week.
"All I know is that we didn't provoke him," says Amoroso. "As to what did provoke him, who knows?"
Whatever it was -- "stress," said his lawyer -- Henry
Danninger, then 30, was far from being a one-time offender when it came
to his filthy tricks campaign.
Darryl Amoroso's backyard camera caught him on tape, not once or twice, but on 24 separate occasions.
The assaults were virtually nightly. Urine over the car, feces in the driveway, sardines on the doorstep.
After Amoroso turned his tapes over to the Brockville police,
Danninger's bail was yanked for breach of conditions, and he was once
again behind bars.
'TERRORISM'
As prosecutor Harry Clarke would later tell a court,
Danninger's actions were a form of "terrorism" that caused considerable
grief to his victim, his wife and their two small children, who could
no longer play in their yard.
When Danninger finally decided to enter a guilty plea to
manslaughter back in the spring of 2003, Ontario Superior Court Justice
Roydon Kealey sentenced him to eight years imprisonment, but lobbed off
three years in two-for-one credits for the days spent in pre-trial
custody.
And, believe it or not, he was also given two-for-one credit
for the days during which he was out on bail -- the judge citing the
strict conditions and curfews as warranting an additional reduction of
his sentence.
In other words, Henry Danninger was given time off his
sentence for time he didn't spend in jail -- including the 24 days
during which he snuck out on his midnight prowls to pour buckets of
urine over his neighbour's car.