Drug War Police Tactics Endanger Innocent Citizens

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http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,205040,00.html


Winston Churchill is commonly credited with having said, "Democracy means that when there's a knock in the door at 3 am, it's probably the milkman."

One wonders what Churchill would make of modern-day, drug war America.

For the last year, I've been researching a study on SWAT teams, "no-knock" raids, and the rise of paramilitary tactics in domestic policing (the study was released this week). The trends I've found are troubling, and some of the individual stories are absolutely heartbreaking.

Each day in America, police SWAT teams raid more than 100 private homes, many times very late at night, or very early in the morning. Many times, these teams don't even bother to knock. Because these raids are violent, confrontational, and often conducted on questionable intelligence (I'll get to that in a moment), they've left a long trail of "wrong address" raids on frightened innocents, needless injury, and even death.

Since the early 1980s, the U.S. has seen a 1,300 percent rise in the number of SWAT team deployments, from 3,000 per year in 1981, to more than 40,000 per year in 2001 (the number is likely even higher today). It's of no coincidence that this dramatic increase has taken place over the period the U.S. has reinvigorated its war on drugs.

According to Eastern Kentucky University criminologist Peter Kraska, who has tracked the trend, the vast majority of these raids are to serve routine drug warrants, many times for crimes no more serious than possession of marijuana.

If you've seen an episode of Cops or Dallas SWAT, you know the routine. These raids are commonly conducted late at night, or just before dawn, to catch suspects by surprise. Police sometimes deploy "flash grenades," then batter down or blow up doors with explosives. They then storm the home, subduing occupants, handcuffing them at gunpoint, sometimes pushing them to the ground.

They then search the home, typically with little regard for personal belongings. If the family dog gets in the way, he'll be executed.

This would all be acceptable if SWAT teams were used as they were originally intended. L.A. police chief Darryl Gates invented the concept in the 1960s shortly after the Watts riots. Gates wanted an elite team of police who could defuse dangerous situations like riots, hostage-takings, or bank robberies. For about a decade, that's how SWAT teams were used, and they performed marvelously.

Unfortunately, in the 1980s Congress began making surplus military gear available to local police departments, with the intent that they use it for drug enforcement. Millions of dollars worth of military-grade rifles, tanks, helicopters, body armor, and other gear made its way to civilian police organizations.

In some cases, the trend grew absurd. One rural county in Florida assembled its own air force with the helicopters and planes it got from the Pentagon. Another tiny town had more M-16s in its police department than the town had stoplights.

With all of this war gear, cities, towns, and even small towns decided to start their own SWAT teams. As often happens with government entities, the mission of these SWAT teams began to expand over time, to include not just emergency situations, but more routine police work as well. Federal grants for drug arrests and asset forfeiture laws that make drug policing more lucrative than other types of policing offered further incentives to use SWAT teams to serve drug warrants.

The problem is, drug policing is quite a bit different than sending an elite paramilitary team to deal with a known, immediate threat to the community. When there's a hostage situation, a bank robbery, or a riot, it's pretty clear where the incident is happening, and who's involved. That's not true of the drug trade.

Because most drug crimes are consensual crimes, there's no direct victim to report them. Therefore, police have to rely on informants to tip them off to whose dealing, and where. These informants are notoriously unreliable. They tend to be criminals themselves, looking for leniency. Or they could be rival drug dealers, looking to bump off the competition.

The problem is, these violent, highly-confrontational SWAT raids are conducted based on information first gleaned from informants. Which means the information isn't always accurate. Which means an untold number of innocent Americans have been subjected to the horrifying predicament of having armed men invade their homes in the middle of the night, and needing to decide immediately upon waking if the intruders are cops or criminals, and if they should submit or resist.

Of course, even if the suspect is guilty of small-time dope use or dope dealing, I would argue that that doesn't mean there's justification for kicking down their doors and invading their homes as they're sleeping.

Have a look at this map. It plots nearly 300 botched SWAT raids I've found over the course of about a year of research. It is by no means comprehensive. My guess is that it doesn't even begin to make a full accounting for how many times this has happened, both because police are reluctant to report their mistakes, and because the victims of botched raids are often too afraid or embarrassed to come forward.

As I've begun to write about this issue, many more victims of these raids have called or emailed to tell me their own stories - most of which never made it into the newspaper.

But even the documented cases should be cause for concern. They include the cases of Salvatore Culosi and Cory Maye, both of whom I've written about previously in this column. They include 40 cases in which a completely innocent person was killed. There are dozens more in which nonviolent offenders (recreational pot smokers, for example, or small-time gamblers like Culosi) or police officers were needlessly killed.

There are nearly 150 cases in which innocent families, sometimes with children, were roused form their beds at gunpoint, and subjected to the fright of being apprehended and thoroughly searched at gunpoint. There are other cases in which a SWAT team seems wholly inappropriate, such as the apprehension of medical marijuana patients, many of whom are bedridden.

Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be much appetite for change. When a 2003 mistaken raid in New York City ended with the death of 57-year-old Alberta Spruill -- who was completely innocent -- public outrage and media scrutiny forced the city to promise reforms. One attorney who specializes in these cases tells me that barely three years later, the mistaken raids are happening again, and that the city maintains the reforms it promised were merely "discretionary."

Increasingly, these raids are moving beyond the drug war. SWAT teams are now being employed to serve white collar warrants, too, as was the case with Culosi. Sad as it is, perhaps that's what it will take. Perhaps once upper-class people with more power and social leverage begin to feel the brunt force of this blunt law enforcement tool, we'll begin to see some change.
 
It can't possibly be the fault of the police. They would never do anything wrong.

It's the fault of those who are poor and live in the "wrong" neighborhoods. They obviously have it coming and deserve far worse. If they didn't stop their neighbors from committing crimes, this would never happen.

Stop this police bashing now!
 
I've been thinking this for yars,. Interestingly it is one of the few topics I can get instant,non conditional agreement with from both my liberal and consevative friends.
The emperor has no clothes. (drug prohibition does not work and the war on drugs is a war on civil rights.)
 
tinfoil hat?

hmmm if you take the time to read the 80 pages you might find a lot of it offensive. awful lotta mistakes made fatal ones. if i loved one is killed wrongfully does it matter if its by a guy with a badge? the biggest point made that i saw was not about bashing anyone on the teams but rather how they are misused by whiteshirt brasshats for photo ops and empire building. with bad result for both citizens and cops. the percieved attitude that cops are unwilling to aknowledge their mistakes helps fuel cop haters. and can create ones in unlikely places.
 
I think that everyone is missing the obvious point; if it's finally caught the attention of the mainstream media, the problem must be a glaring one. Reporters are notoriously lazy and a story must practically fall on them for them to care. I wonder how quickly this issue will be shuffled off to the side?
 
The other side of the story:

Many of those who were served ultraviolent warrants were pschychopaths who have mowed down citizens who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and ended up being a victim in a gang or turf war, or have killed cops in cold blood.

Mistakes have been made and a few even tragically so. There needs to be accountability for those. I don't see anything wrong with the police using tactics to take the trash of our streets in the safest way possible.

Some will babble about the 'war on drugs' but the fact is that most of these criminals would be criminals, drugs or not. Illegal drug trafficking is jus the easiest, lowest hanging fruit for a criminal to pursue. If it weren't drugs, they would be involved with prostitution, racketeeringg, extortion, human trafficking, and likly more violent pursuits.

There are truely evil people in our society that need to be dealth with, regardless of whether or not drugs are legal.
 
Many of those who were served ultraviolent warrants were pschychopaths who have mowed down citizens who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and ended up being a victim in a gang or turf war, or have killed cops in cold blood.

Many? What percentage? 1 in 100 maybe?

Mistakes have been made and a few even tragically so. There needs to be accountability for those.

Yes there does. And presently it appears there is no practical means by which to do so. How about a mandatory ten year sentence at hard labor if they break down the wrong door? That would make them be a little more careful.

I don't see anything wrong with the police using tactics to take the trash of our streets in the safest way possible.

Most of these warrants are being served on non-violent drug offenders selling relatively small amounts of pot.

It would be a totally different story if they reserved this kind of treatment for the very few occasions it was truly warranted.

Actually, I would be happy if all they did when a dynamic entry was going on would be to stream video on the Internet filmed by multiple independent cameramen so that people can make up their own minds as to whether this tactic is warranted or not. Shining a little light on things often does a lot of good.
 
Mistakes have been made and a few even tragically so. There needs to be accountability for those. I don't see anything wrong with the police using tactics to take the trash of our streets in the safest way possible.
Safest for WHOM?

But of course anything they do is for the greater good, no matter what. If the police kick in your door and shoot you after getting the address wrong, it's just as much your fault, because by living in that place YOU chose the wrong address as well. If you had lived somewhere else, you would never have been harmed.

Any criticism of their actions is just cop bashing and should never be allowed, anywhere.
 
deanimator said:
But of course anything they do is for the greater good, no matter what. If the police kick in your door and shoot you after getting the address wrong, it's just as much your fault, because by living in that place YOU chose the wrong address as well. If you had lived somewhere else, you would never have been harmed.

Any criticism of their actions is just cop bashing and should never be allowed, anywhere.

Ok, I've got to say that this is probably some of the best flamebait trolling i've ever seen....even on fark. BRAVO!!!! :D :D
 
Keep it clean, folks. Blanket stereotyping and bashing will not be tolerated. If I see one more "cops are nazis" post, I will close this thread and leave some bruises.
 
Cops are nazis.


Oh wait I forgot, I work at a police department. Must've forgotten my jackboots today :rolleyes: On a more serious note, one of the reasons I chose my current department was that there is no SWAT team or anything like it, and we never have to serve high risk warrants with blitzkrieg tactics.
 
Quote:
"must we ALWAYS resort to the 'tin foil hat' routine to discredit a message we don't like?"


Yes, it is a requirement of the folks that don't want to take the time to read stuff like you see on www.spp.gov

(Federal Government Web Site by the way)

I have to go now, and polish my aluminum foil sombrero.
 
the camera idea is a great one. That is the ONLY reason Rodney King ever got a trial. Video is king. Kick the wrong door? big deal. Shoot an innocent? big deal. Get it on tape- A very very big deal, and perhaps a great way to make sure these raids are conducted carefully.
Although the Cops show apparently declined to run the episode they were filming where the police killed a homeowner in a wrong door no knock.
 
cameras

have proven to help cops when fools tell outrageous storys about what happened. just knowing there is videotape cuts a lotta nonsense from ambulance chasers.
apropo of nothing at all i know a guy who has video oh him getting outa hisbuds car for driving with .08 bac. the look on my.... er his face is priceless.
 
Although the Cops show apparently declined to run the episode they were filming where the police killed a homeowner in a wrong door no knock.
Do you have any details on this? I've never heard about it.
 
Although the Cops show apparently declined to run the episode they were filming where the police killed a homeowner in a wrong door no knock.
The homeowner shouldn't be portrayed as an innocent victim. The police never would have shot him if he hadn't done something wrong, at some time, somewhere. He was clearly a threat to officer safety. He died so that they could make it home alive.

It's good they didn't show that video. It would have been cop bashing.

Such things need to be swept under the rug.
 
On more than one recent episode of Dallas SWAT I have been amazed the department allowed the film crew to leave town with the video. It just seemed to me the amount of drugs and bad guys they were nabbing in no way justified the theat the SWAT teams posed to the community they were supposedly policing.

In one case they wrecked a house, found some people but IIRC no drugs, pit bulls, A-bombs or staurday night specials.

In another they attacked the house with their APCs by pulling out the front and back doors and one window to get that the BGs. After everyone was safely arrested and on their way to the PO-lease station (their words not mine) and the situation was under control, they APC'd every other window in the place to splinters. The house was totally destroyed.

Their closing statment as the last set of burgler bars skidded across the parking lot was along the lines of "we do this because that'll keep'em from going back" or something to that effect.

S-
 
If a homeowner gets injured or family member killed in a mistaken raid, what recourse does the family have in civil court? Would a civil lawsuit be allowed against a federal entity? I imagine a lawsuit could be undertaken against a local or state entity.
 
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