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Neocon Nuttery See other Neocon Nuttery Articles Title: SWAT Overkill: The Danger of a Paramilitary Police Force In a guest editorial, law professor and http://instapundit.com blogger Glenn Reynolds argues that overagressive tactics and surplus military gear have turned some police units into a dangerous menace. SOLDIERS AND POLICE are supposed to be different. Soldiers are aimed at enemies from outside the country. They are trained to kill those enemies, and their supporters. In fact, killing people and breaking things are their main reasons for existence. Police look inward. Theyre supposed to protect their fellow citizens from criminals, and to maintain order with a minimum of force. Its the difference between Audie Murphy and Andy Griffith. But nowadays, police are looking, and acting, more like soldiers than cops, with bad consequences. And those who suffer the consequences are usually innocent civilians. The trend toward militarizing police began in the 60s and 70s when standoffs with the Black Panthers, the Symbionese Liberation Army, and the University of Texas bell tower gunman Charles Whitman convinced many police departments that they needed more than .38 specials to deal with unusual, high-intensity threats. In 1965 Los Angeles inspector Daryl Gates, who later became police chief, signed off on the formation of a specially trained and equipped unit that he wanted to call the Special Weapons Attack Team. (The name was changed to the more palatable Special Weapons and Tactics). SWAT programs soon expanded beyond big cities with gang problems. Abetting this trend was the federal governments willingness to make surplus military equipment available to police and sheriffs departments. All sorts of hardware is available, from M-16s to body armor to armored personnel carriers and even helicopters. Lots of police departments grabbed the gear and started SWAT teams, even if they had no real need for them. The materiel was free, and it was fun. I dont blame the police. Heck, if somebody gave me a Bradley Fighting Vehicle to play with, Id probably start a SWAT team, tooso long as I didnt have to foot the maintenance bill. Thus, the sheriffs department in landlocked Boone County, Ind., has an amphibious armored personnel carrier. (According to that countys sheriff-elect, the vehicle has been used to deliver prescriptions to snow-bound elderly residents, and to provide protection during a suspected hostage situation.) Jasper, Fla.,with 2000 inhabitants and two murders in the past 12 yearsobtained seven M-16s from the federal government, leading an area newspaper to run a story with the subhead, Three stoplights, seven M-16s. This approach, though, has led to problems both obvious and subtle. The obvious problem should be especially apparent to readers of this magazine: Once youve got a cool tool, you kind of want to use it. Thats true whether its a pneumatic drill, a laser level or an armored fighting vehicle. SWAT teams, designed to deal with rare events, wound up doing routine police work, like serving drug warrants. The subtle effect is also real: Dress like a soldier and you think youre at war. And, in wartime, civil libertiesor possible innocenceof the people on the other side dont come up much. But the police arent at war with the citizens they serve, or at least theyre not supposed to be. The combination of these two factors has led to some tragic mistakes: no knock drug raids, involving dynamic entry, where the wrong house has been targeted or where the raid was based on informants tips that turned out to be just plain wrong. On Sept. 23, 2006, a SWAT team descended on the home of a farmer and his schoolteacher wife in Bedford County, Va. I was held at gunpoint, searched, taunted and led into the house, A.J. Nuckols wrote to his local paper. I was scared beyond description. I feared there had been a murder and I was a suspect. When the couples three children came home, the police grilled them, too. The family was held under guard for five hours as the SWAT team ransacked the place, seizing computers, a digital camera, DVDs and VHS tapes. Ten days later, the cops returned the belongings. It turned out that a special anti-child-porn police unit had made a mistake while tracing an computer address and sent the SWAT team to the wrong home. Sometimes, homeowners are killed in these actions; other times, its the officers. When a narcotics task force raided a duplex apartment in Jefferson Davis County, Miss., in 2001, they arrested one tenant, then burst into the adjacent apartment of Cory Maye. Thinking a burglar had broken into the bedroom he shared with his toddler daughter. Maye shot the officer fatally. Maye was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. However, his sentencing was overturned, and a motion for a new trial is still pending. And, in a case that is now drawing national attention, 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston, who lived in a high-crime neighborhood of Atlanta, recently opened fire on police when they broke down her door while executing a drug warrant. They returned fire, killing her. Its hard to believe any of this would have happened had the police taken a less aggressive approach in the first place. It used to be that police came to the door, announced themselves and, once a homeowner responded, entered the premises. Most policemen still work this way. But an alarming number now break down doors first and ask questions later. Dont get me wrong: Police often do dangerous work and they need equipment thats going to protect them. And dynamic entry is valid when dealing with desperate criminals, but these tactics put ordinary citizensand the policeat risk. And when they do, its often hard to get redress. Lawsuits against police and supervisors face strict legal limits in the form of qualified immunity, and prosecutors, who work with the police on a regular basis, are unlikely to bring criminal charges against officers who negligently kill people. But homeowners confronted with tactics like flash-bang grenades and shouting that are intended to disorient targets, tend to be held to a much higher standard. The result, as in the Cory Maye case, is that people who do the laudable thing and defend their homes against unknown, armed intruders sometimes wind up being prosecuted for murder. I discussed the issue with political commentator Radley Balko, who wrote a troubling report titled Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America. Balko said that the problem is more common than people realize. He suggests that accountability and transparency are what we need. I agree. Police raids should be videotaped, in an archival format that discourages tampering. And I think we need legal reform, too. Police who raid the wrong house, or who fail to give homeowners adequate warning except in truly life-or-death situations, shouldnt benefit from official immunity. Our homes are supposed to be our castles. The police shouldnt treat them like enemy camps.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ferret Mike (#0)
We don't live in Mayberry any more...
#2. To: lodwick, IndieTX (#1)
In 2007 Sherif Taloy and Barney Fife would be fired for incompetency. Example: they would find that Sheriff Taylor should have stormed Ernest T. Bass' house for shooting at him instead of assuring people that crack shoot bass would be able to hit him if he realy did want to. Common sense and a lack of aggressiveness are just not wanted in police work much anymore.
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