US Home Invasions Up As Thugs Seek Drug Cash

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Fred Fuller

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http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSTRE53K00Y20090421?sp=true

U.S. "home invasions" up as thugs seek drug cash
Tue Apr 21, 2009 12:05pm EDT
By Tim Gaynor

TUCSON, Ariz (Reuters) - When the heavy battering started to buckle the front door of her new home in Tucson, Maria remained frozen to the spot with fear.

As her family scattered to hide in the bedrooms, bathroom and kitchen, masked men toting guns and dressed in flack jackets stormed into the living room shouting "Police! Everyone on the floor!"

Her cheek pressed to the ground, she watched as the men fanned out through the comfortable suburban house, pistol whipping her brother-in-law and shouting, "Where are the guns and the drugs?"

"I raised my head and saw his black boots ... It was then I realized they weren't police at all," she recalled, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Maria, who has no connection to the criminal underworld, is among scores of law-abiding Tucson residents caught up in a wave of violent so-called home invasions, most of them linked to the lucrative trade in drugs smuggled from Mexico. Maria had bought the house weeks before and the gunmen believed drug traffickers were using it.

The desert city is less than two hour's drive from the Mexico border. It lies on a crossroads for the multimillion dollar trade in drugs headed north to market across the United States from Mexico, as well as guns and hot money proceeds headed south to the cartels.

Five years ago, police say home invasions were virtually unheard of in Tucson. Now the crimes run at three to four a week, as criminals go after the profits of the illicit trade in marijuana, black-tar heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine through the city.

"We've always dealt with those in business establishments, banks and convenience stores, it was very unusual to see them in houses," Roberto A. Villasenor, Tucson's assistant chief of police said of the recent trend. "The home was seen as a safe spot."

CAUGHT UP

Curbing drug violence is a top concern for the government in Mexico, where rival cartels murdered 6,300 people last year as they battled the authorities and each other for control of lucrative smuggling corridors to the United States.

It is also high on the U.S. agenda as authorities seek to stop cartel-related crimes such as kidnappings, home invasions and gangland-style slayings from bleeding over the porous U.S. border and taking hold here.

A year ago, Tucson police department set up a special unit to target the rising number of home invasions. Since then, the officers have investigated at least 173 cases scattered across the city, three-quarters of them tied to the drug trade, investigators say.

The assailants -- typically teams of two to six people -- frequently dress in tactical gear and identify themselves as police officers, Drug Enforcement Administration agents or SWAT team members as they burst into houses to steal drugs, cash or guns.

"Demographics mean nothing when it comes to home invasions. We see (them) in some of the richest, most wealthy parts of town, and also in some of the most downtrodden, completely poor areas," said Detective Sergeant David Azuelo, who runs the home invasion unit.

While most raids target the drug trade, some have branched out and gone after students and other law-abiding residents, Azuelo said. Others assault families who just happen to live in a house that was once used to deal drugs, or simply because the attackers got the wrong address.

"Just imagine, you're sitting at home relaxing, watching TV. All of a sudden your door bursts open, people are screaming and yelling, they're pointing guns at you, they may be hitting your family members," he said. "I can't imagine many crimes that are worse than that."

SEEKING MORE AID

Last month, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced a $184-million plan to crack down on the smuggling of narcotics, guns and money by criminal gangs that threaten security on both sides of the border.

The plan also allocated $59 million to help local law enforcement tackle border-related crime -- a lifeline welcomed by Tucson police.

"We are looking to take advantage of any of those funds that we can, because we have needs here," assistant chief Villasenor told Reuters in a recent interview.

He said the home invasion unit, which currently has five detectives, needed more officers, as well as additional crime-scene technicians to catch the criminals, whom police say are a mostly local street gang members and a "hodgepodge" of criminal opportunists.

Villasenor would also welcome better surveillance equipment to help officers nab the increasingly tech-savvy criminals, who often hard to trace disposable cell phones with prepaid minutes to plan and carry out their crimes.

Putting the criminals behind bars would also be an important step to helping victims like Maria overcome the trauma of the violent raid on her home.

"We haven't slept since it happened," she said as she perched on the edge of the couch in her living room, her eyes brimming with tears. "I keep wondering if they will be back."
 
I'm pretty close to the border here in Texas. We've had some run-ins between local law enforcement and the Mexican cartels trying to cross the Rio Grande, but to my knowledge, there haven't been home invasions anything like the one described in the article.

That would be a very tough spot to find yourself in - multiple armed intruders, identifying themselves as police.

Hope I never face anything like it. :eek:
 
Yeah I second that.

A DA told me she has really never seen a home invasion that wasn't related to drugs or money made from drugs. When some one not involved in that stuff is home invaded its because the invaders made a mistake on the address.

In fact its so common that when some one is home invaded the cops start keeping an eye on the victims because they know they are almost always criminals too.
 
So how do you tell the difference from a cop with the wrong address and someone pretending to be a cop? I don't want to shoot a cop or by killed by a criminal.
 
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Options
1) Put all drug users, home invaders, and drug dealers on an island. Maybe throw some lions in for fun.
2) Decriminalize/legalize drugs
3) Become a member of one of the for-profit gov't institutions that profits from the drug war
 
I live in Waterloo, Iowa, and we just had 3 in one night in my town. I don't know the circumstances about any of the involved parties, but I know a home invasion from multiple armed intruders while my family is home is about my worst fear.
 
A DA told me she has really never seen a home invasion that wasn't related to drugs or money made from drugs. When some one not involved in that stuff is home invaded its because the invaders made a mistake on the address.

Drugs are far and away the most common factor. That said, that does not preclude purposeful (as opposed to accidental) home invasions on random people; my town recently saw one perpetrated on 3 college students within walking distance of where I live; this was covered in our last recent thread on home invasions (complete with press link). Scarce, perhaps, but innocents have indeed been invaded–just because someone sees a flat screen tv and a bunch of laptops or something.

BTW, one of the students in my example had a legally possessed pistol. Things therefore ended very badly for one of the invaders (who was just let out of prison after 8 years). The other wisely fled and was later sent back to the pokey.
 
Lest we forget, home invasions became popular when the Vietnamese preyed upon Asian businessmen. Then it spread from there.
 
Home invasions are becoming common place around here. They aren't drug related though. We have a lot of college kids around here who don't get a hint and rent cheap property near the campus (which happens to be by all the project housing). These kids sit on their front porches with their laptops and tvs not knowing that their neighbors are casing the joint.

A college kid a few weeks back had a guy just knock on the door and waited for someone to answer on the other side. Criminal shot through the door 3 times hoping to kill whoever it was then busted the glass out around the door to try to get a hand on the deadbolt. I guess it took the criminal too long and he fled the scene.

College kid got lucky that the attacker used a .25 and only one of the rounds went through the thick door, missing him.
 
it's happening here in this corner of WNC some and is fairly common in parts of upstate SC around Greenville-Spartanburg area.
perps beat an elderly couple that had been studying their Bible lessons robbing them and the man died - perps got just some cash, haven't been caught yet - about 2 weeks back.
back maybe 18 months perps picked the wrong fella, a lay minister that was a good-sized man and he grabbed a hatchet he had just sharpened that evening (use for his firewood) and killed one of 'em. he got shot 2ce but not critically. the other got caught at hospital.
 
So how do you tell the difference from a cop with the wrong address and someone pretending to be a cop? I don't want to shoot a cop or by killed by a criminal.

In northern Virginia, they had so many BGs pretending to be unmarked police cars, pulling speeders over for robbery and sexual assault, that the police publicly announced no more unmarked police cars.

I would submit that the parallel needs to happen - no more no-knock raids at wrong addresses, nor for cases where knocking or a phone-call would work just as well.
 
While I have no doubt that they are, it would seem you are right, there isn't info in that article about it...
 
I don't want to shoot a cop or by killed by a criminal.
You're supposed to prefer the latter.

You should assume that anyone kicking in your door and shouting "police" are actually the police. If they aren't and you're maimed or killed, you should be glad that no cops were harmed.
 
I don't want to shoot a cop or by killed by a criminal.

You're supposed to prefer the latter.

You should assume that anyone kicking in your door and shouting "police" are actually the police. If they aren't and you're maimed or killed, you should be glad that no cops were harmed.

Its does seem like the system is biased that way. It would be nice if cops never made mistakes and never had an off day. In the real world they are human beings and thus subject to the same foibles as the rest of us. Nothing that is based on human beings will ever be perfect.

Personally, I would settle for a high level of transparency in the review of questionable situations.
 
This is the Strategies and Tactics forum and reviews of police actions outside of the scope of this forum are off topic. And you all wonder why these threads are always closed.:banghead:
 
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