• DPMC Moderators: thegreenhand | tryptakid
  • Drug Policy & Media Coverage Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Drug Busts Megathread Video Megathread

A year later, reviewing the death of innocent 92 year old innocent

erosion

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Oct 16, 2003
Messages
3,182
Kathryn Johnston: A Year Later
Reason
November 23, 2007


It was one year ago this week that narcotics officers in Atlanta, Georgia broke into the home of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston.

They had earlier arrested a man with a long rap sheet on drug charges. That man told the police officers that they'd find a large stash of cocaine in Johnston's home. When police forced their way into Johnston's home, she met them holding a rusty old revolver, fearing she was about to be robbed. The police opened fire, and killed her.

Shortly after the shooting, the police alleged that they had paid an informant to buy drugs from Ms. Johnston's home. They said she fired at them first, and wounded two officers. And they alleged they found marijuana in her home.

We now know that these were all lies. In fact, everything about the Kathryn Johnston murder was corrupt. The initial arrest of the ex-con came via trumped-up charges. The police then invented an informant for the search warrant, and lied about overseeing a drug buy from Johnston's home.

Ms. Johnston didn't actually wound any of the officers. They were wounded by fragments of ricochet from their own storm of bullets. And there was no marijuana. Once they realized their mistake, the officers handcuffed Ms. Johnston and left her to bleed and die on the floor of her own home while they planted marijuana in her basement.

We now know that it was routine for Atlanta's narcotics officers to lie on drug warrants. We know that judges in the city rather systematically approved those warrants with no scrutiny at all (the judge in the Johnston case literally rubber-stamped the warrant), abrogating their oaths as guardians of the Fourth Amendment.

Two months before the Johnston raid police officers nearly killed another elderly woman in the same neighborhood after forcing their way into her home in a mistaken raid. A year earlier, they had mistakenly raided the home next door to Johnston's. And just days before, Atlanta police had conducted another forced-entry raid that turned up all of two marijuana cigarettes.

We now know that once the officers in the Johnston case knew they were in trouble, they pressured one of their actual drug informants to lie for them, and vouch for the fabricated account of the controlled buy.

That informant--Alex White--refused, and bravely came forward to tell the media what had happened. Had he given in to the pressure put on him by APD narcotics officers, the world would still likely believe Kathryn Johnston was a drug dealer, and her killing was justified.

In fact, subsequent investigations showed that the corruption at the Atlanta Police Department was so pervasive, Police Chief Richard Pennington eventually had to replace the entire narcotics division.

Atlanta is still in a state of self-examination since the Kathryn Johnston case. To its credit, the city is considering real reform in the way it conducts its drug policing. Politicians at the municipal, state and federal level may guide that process, as may a lawsuit from Ms. Johnston's family.

But beyond Atlanta, the beat goes on. All across the country, narcotics units and SWAT teams are still kicking down doors in the middle of the night and still deploying flash grenades and using aggressive, paramilitary tactics--and they're still doing all of this to apprehend people suspected of nonviolent crimes. And they're still making mistakes.

In February of this year, 16-year-old Daniel Castillo, Jr. was killed in a police raid on his family's home in Texas. Castillo had no criminal record. A SWAT officer broke open the door to the bedroom as Castillo, his sister, and her infant son were sleeping. When Castillo rose from the bed after being awoken to his sister's screams, the SWAT officer shot him in the face.

In March, police in Spring Lake, Minn., acting on an informant's tip, raided the home of Brad and Nicole Thompson. The couple was forced on the ground at gun point and warned by an officer, "If you move, I'll shoot you in the f___ing head." Police had the wrong house.

In June, a 72-year-old woman on oxygen was thrown to the ground at gunpoint in a mistaken drug raid near Durnago, Colo.

In fact, since the Johnston raid last year, there have been mistaken drug raids on innocent people in Temecula, Calif.; Annapolis, Md.; several incidents in Chicago, Philadelphia, and New York City; Galliano, La.; Hendersonville, N.C.; Ponderay, Idaho; Stockton, Calif.; Pullman, Wash.; Baltimore; Wilmington, Del.; Jacksonville, Fla; Alton, Kansas; Merced County, Calif.; and, believe it or not, Atlanta, Ga.

And of course, these are merely those reported in newspapers.

If any good has come of this, it's that the media coverage surrounding Kathryn Johnston's death has at least exposed the country to the widespread use of "dynamic entry" tactics for routine service of drug warrants, and the rather predictable problems that come with armed police breaking into someone's home. The fact that Johnston was a 92-year-old woman rather than a 19-year-old man probably has something to do with that.

This week, the Drug Reform Coordination Network will release a Zogby Poll on paramilitary police tactics. The numbers are surprising. Nearly two-thirds of those polled don't believe "aggressive entry tactics such as battering down doors, setting off flash-bang grenades, or conducting searches in the middle of the night" are appropriate tactics when the suspect is a nonviolent drug offender.

In fact, in every demographic group Zogby measured, a majority of respondents said such tactics should not be used in routine drug investigations, including 56 percent of self-identified Republicans, and 52.5 percent of respondents describing themselves as "very conservative."

There have been other Kathryn Johnstons over the years. In fact, dozens of innocent people have been killed in mistaken or botched drug raids since these more aggressive police tactics started to be used with more regularity, beginning about in the early 1980s. Cities like New York, Denver, and San Diego have, like Atlanta today, come under tremendous scrutiny over the years after a botched raid ended with the death of an innocent.

Unfortunately, these stories tend to follow a pattern: intense media coverage, followed by promises of reform from police and politicians, followed by-inevitably-a return to business as usual.

Perhaps Atlanta will turn out differently.

Link
 
what a bunch of bullshit, I can't believe police expect for people to respect them when they do things like this.

idiots
 
They shot a 92 year old woman and planted drugs in her basement to cover it up. How do they live with themselves?
 
please be careful not to smash your monitors, but here's a bunch of similar crap, sorry if her case is in here I'm just harvesting blocks of these:




Kathryn Johnston

November 21, 2006—GA



Acting on a tip from a confidential informant, police conduct a no-knock raid on the home of 88 year old Kathryn Johnston.

Johnston, described by neighbors as feeble and afraid to open her door at night, opens fire on officers as they burst into her home. Three of the officers are wounded before Johnston is shot and killed.

Relatives say that Johnston lived alone, and legally owned a gun because she was fearful of intruders. She lived in the home for 17 years. Police claim that they find a small amount of marijuana in Johnston's home, but none of the cocaine, computers, money, or equipment described in the affidavit that was used to obtain a warrant.

There are now allegations of a police cover-up.

Developing...

Source

Shaila Dewan and Brenda Goodman, "Atlanta Officers Suspended in Inquiry on Killing in Raid " The New York Times, November 28, 2006.







Michael Meluzzi.

July 8, 2005—FL


In July 2005, a Sarasota, Florida SWAT team conducts a drug raid on a home where several children are playing in the front yard.

The SWAT team descends from a van, deploys flashbang grenades, then swarms the home. 44-year-old Michael Meluzzi, who had a criminal record, begins to flee as he sees the armed agents exit the van. Police chase Meluzzi down and fire a Taser gun at him, partially hitting him.

According to Officer Alan Devaney, Meluzzi then reached into his waistband, leading Devaney to believe he was armed. Devaney opened fire, killing Meluzzi.

Police would find no weapon on or near Meluzzi's body.

Sources:

"Suspect is stunned, then fatally shot, " Associated Press, July 11, 2005.

Latisha R. Gray, "Fatal drug raid raises questions; Residents ask why a SWAT team came in with children present," Sarasota Herald-Tribune, July 31, 2005, p. BS1.










Cheryl Lynn Noel.

January 21, 2005—MD


Baltimore County, Maryland police descend on a home in the Dundalk neighborhood at around 5 a.m. on a narcotics warrant. They deploy a flashbang grenade, then quickly subdue the first-floor occupants -- a man and two young adults.

When officers enter the second-floor bedroom of Cheryl Llynn Noel, they break open the door to find the middle-aged woman in her bed, frightened, and pointing a handgun at them. One officer fires three times. Noel dies at the scene.

Friends and acquaintances described Noel as "a wonderful person," who ran a Bible study group on her lunch breaks. One man collected 200 signatures from friends, neighbors, and coworkers vouching for her character.

Officers conducted the raid after finding marijuana seeds in the Noels' garbage can.

Sources:

Joseph M. Giordano, "Woman is shot, killed by police in drug raid," Dundalk Eagle, January 27, 2005.

Joseph M. Giordano, "Petition reflects anguish," Dundalk Eagle, March 31, 2005.







Alberta Spruill.

May 16, 2003—NY



On May 16, 2003, a dozen New York City police officers storm an apartment building in Harlem on a no-knock warrant. They're acting on a tip from a confidential informant, who told them a convicted felon was dealing drugs and guns from the sixth floor.

There is no felon. The only resident in the building is Alberta Spruill, described by friends as a "devout churchgoer." Before entering the apartment, police deploy a flashbang grenade. The blinding, deafening explosion stuns the 57 year-old city worker, who then slips into cardiac arrest. She dies two hours later.

A police investigation would later find that the drug dealer the raid team was looking for had been arrested days earlier. He couldn't possibly have been at Spruill's apartment because he was in custody. The officers who conducted the raid did no investigation to corroborate the informant's tip. A police source told the New York Daily News that the informant in the Spruill case had offered police tips on several occasions, none of which had led to an arrest. His record was so poor, in fact, that he was due to be dropped from the city's informant list.

Nevertheless, his tip on the ex-con in Spruill's building was taken to the Manhattan district attorney's office, who approved of the application for a no-knock entry. It was then taken to a judge, who issued the warrant resulting in Spruill's death. From tip to raid, the entire "investigation" and execution were over in a matter of hours.

Spruill's death triggered an outpouring of outrage and emotion in New York and inspired dozens of victims of botched drug raids, previously afraid to tell their stories, to come forward.

Still, the number of real, tangible reforms to result from the raid were few. Though the number of no-knocks in New York has by most indications declined, there's still no real oversight or transparency in how they're granted and carried out. And victims of botched raids still have no real recourse, other than to hope the media gets hold of their story.

Sources:

Austin Fenner, Maki Becker, and Michelle McPhee, "Cops' Tragic Grenade Raid; Storm wrong apt., woman dies," New York Daily News, May 17, 2003, p.3.

William K. Rashbaum, "Report by police outlines mistakes in ill-fated raid," New York Times, May 31, 2003, p. A1.

Fernanda Santos and Patrice O'Shaughnessy, "Snitch had shaky rep," New York Daily News, May 18, 2003.

Leonard Levitt, "Focus on Kelly, Race After Raid," Newsday, May 19, 2003, p. A2.







Jose Colon.

April 19, 2002—NY


On April 19, 2002, police prepare to conduct a heavily-armed late-night drug raid (it includes a helicopter) on a home in Bellport, New York. As four paramilitary unit officers rush across the front lawn, 19 year-old Jose Colon emerges from the targeted house.

According to the police account of the raid, as officers approach, one of them trips over a tree root, then falls forward, into the lead officer, causing his gun to accidentally discharge three times. One of the three bullets hits Colon in the side of the head, killing him.

Police say they screamed at Colon to "get down" as they approached, though two witnesses told a local newscast that, (a) their screams were inaudible over the sound of the helicopter, and (b) the officers appeared to be frozen before the shooting -- no one tripped. One of the witnesses later recanted his story after speaking with police.

Colon was never suspected of buying or selling drugs. Police proceeded with the raid, and seized eight ounces of marijuana. A subsequent investigation found no criminal wrongdoing on the part of police. The family of Colon -- who had no criminal record and was months away from becoming the first member of his family to earn a bachelor's degree -- is pursuing a lawsuit.

Sources:

Samuel Bruchey, "Victim's girlfriend says shooting wasn't an accident," Newsday, April 26, 2002.

Samuel Bruchey, "Cops' account disputed again," Newsday, April 27, 2002.

Bruce Lambert, "No indictment in shooting of young man in Suffolk raid," New York Times, August 9, 2002.







Tony Martinez.

December 20, 2001—TX


On December 20, 2001, police in Travis County, Texas storm a mobile home on a no-knock drug warrant.

19-year-old Tony Martinez, nephew of the man named in the warrant, is asleep on the couch at the time of the raid. Martinez was never suspected of any crime. When Martinez rises from the couch as police break into the home, deputy Derek Hill shoots Martinez in the chest, killing him. Martinez is unarmed.

A grand jury later declined to indict Hill in the shooting. The shooting occurred less than a mile from the spot of a botched drug raid that cost Deputy Keith Ruiz his life. Hill was also on that raid. The same Travis County paramilitary unit would later erroneously raid a woman's home after mistaking ragweed for marijuana plants.

Sources:

Clair Osborn, "Survivors sue Travis county over fatal raid," Austin American-Statesman, May 10, 2003, p. B1.

Claire Osborn, "Deputy not indicted in drug raid death," Austin American-Statesman, April 4, 2002









John Adams.

October 4, 2000—TN



On October 4, 2000 at about 10 p.m., police in Lebanon, Tennessee raid the home of 64-year-old John Adams on a drug warrant. In what Lebanon Police Chief Billy Weeks would later say was a "severe, costly mistake," police indentify the wrong house.

According to Adams' wife, police don't identify themselves after knocking on the couple's door. When she refuses to let them in, they break down the door, and handcuff her. Adams meets the police in another room with a sawed-off shotgun. Police open fire, and shoot Adams dead.

One officer would later be fired after the incident, and several others suspended, but no criminal charges would ever come of the raid. Adams' widow eventually won a $400,000 settlement from the city.

Sources:

Warren Duzak, "Innocent man dies in police blunder," Tennessean, October 6, 2000.

Ashley Fantz, "Fatal Mistake," Salon, October 19, 2000

Andy Humbles, "Wilson DA prefers simplicity to theatrics," Tennessean, March 15, 2004, p. B1.










Cheryl Ann Stillwell

December 22, 2006—FL



Cheryl Ann Stillwell was killed early on December 22, 2006 when police broke into her home looking for a stash of prescription narcotics.

The police say they had to shoot in self-defense because Stillwell pointed her gun at the raiding officers. Stillwell's mother was in a state of disbelief. She wonders why the police had to kick in the door with submachine guns.

Source

David Hunt, " For a family, drug raid went terribly wrong " The Florida Times-Union, November 5, 2006.








Peyton Strickland

December 1, 2006—NC



Peyton Strickland was fatally shot in the head on December 1, 2006 when Corporal Christopher M. Long of the New Hanover County Sheriff’s Office and his fellow officers sought to arrest him at his home. Strickland had been charged in connection with robbing a UNCW student.

Although three deputies had been placed on administrative leave after the shooting, two have been cleared, and Cpl. Long has since been fired and was charged with second-degree murder on December 11, 2006. Long was part of a “heavily armed and armored” Emergency Response Team who joined with the UNCW police to arrest Strickland, but Long had fired the fatal shot.

Source

Staff Reports " Deputy charged with murder in Strickland shooting " Star News Online, December 11, 2006.









Salvatore Culosi, Jr.

January 24, 2006—VA



A SWAT team in Fairfax County, Virginia serves a warrant on Culosi, an optometrist who is suspected of running a sports gambling pool with friends.

As the team surrounds him, one officer's weapon accidentally discharges, striking Culosi in the chest and killing him.

Culosi had no criminal record, no history of violence, and police found no weapons in his home.

Fairfax officials later tell the Washington Post that nearly all of the county's search warrants are executed with a SWAT team, even document searches.

Source:

Tom Jackman, "SWAT Tactics at Issue After Fairfax Shooting," Washington Post, January 27, 2006, p. B1.
 
I could've listed about a million others but got bored copy/pasting lol.


Read that bolded/underlined/italicized part of that last snippet in my previous post. Almost all warrants handled by swat teams? Hmmm, swat teams are now being used for the most routine shit it's not even funny. SWAT teams kicking in doors of SUSPECTED, RECREATIONAL pot users. I read one recently where they did the no-knock on these two kids and, well, found 5g of pot and one joint.


This is getting fucking ridiculous, the police raids and the drastically rising prevalence of swat teams and their usage for what should be routine, local police work, is insanely scary and just one strong ass step towards a police state. I have some very, very interesting articles (though a bit on the long side, but hard to pull yourself away from once you start, I promise! PM or ask here for links to more on this disturbing trend.
 
Thanks for those copy and pastes bingalpaws...

I understand your concerns about a police state. There is a similar feeling here in the UK, although our Government seem to be going about it in a more subtle way...
 
here it's getting ridiculous. The rise in the amount of SWAT teams in the US, and their increasing usage for such simplistic, police-oriented tasks is scary. When you've got 10 dudes in army gear with automatic machine guns, in all black, kicking in your door/deploying flash bang grenades and running in like a seige, all because you had a few grams of pot in your possession, something's very wrong.


The thing is that old issue about power - once it's given to a group it will be used, and it's hard to take back. That's what's happened with swat teams, they're in towns everywhere now that there's no need for them (ie high need situations like hostages or whatnot, where a tactical team is actually useful). Because of that, they put them to use on all kinds of other shit, and in lots of cases it's like the army is serving the friggin police function. (but that'd make sense if those evil drugs were involved, after all it's the WAR on drugs, and wars need armies, right?)
 
bingalpaws said:
January 24, 2006—VA



A SWAT team in Fairfax County, Virginia serves a warrant on Culosi, an optometrist who is suspected of running a sports gambling pool with friends.

As the team surrounds him, one officer's weapon accidentally discharges, striking Culosi in the chest and killing him.

Culosi had no criminal record, no history of violence, and police found no weapons in his home.

Fairfax officials later tell the Washington Post that nearly all of the county's search warrants are executed with a SWAT team, even document searches.

Source:

Tom Jackman, "SWAT Tactics at Issue After Fairfax Shooting," Washington Post, January 27, 2006, p. B1.

Damn I live in Fairfax County. I didn't hear anything about this! Just some background information on Fairfax County, it is one of the wealthiest counties in the United States. Cops are everywhere and it makes perfect sense that they would try to cover up any wrong doing to keep the image that they have.
 
How fuct is that shit though!?

Here's the meat and bones of the issue. SWAT teams are a trendy law enforcement novelty and have been for a decade or two. More towns that have *zero* justifiable need for a SWAT team get one anyways.

So, they have a SWAT team, but they haven't had a SWAT-worthy situtation in the past 20 years. So... what does their SWAT team do? Sit around and get paid for nothing? No, they send them out for routine stuff now, stuff as simple as <1/4oz pot warrants. It's just fucking ludicrous that someone with an eighth or two of pot, I mean less than $100 worth, has some chance of having their front door smashed in with battering ram, followed by flash-bang grenades and a team of soldiers with automatic weapons running in. Just pray that, if you have a weapon and think you're being robbed, you realize it's the police and drop your pistol before they bury you and claim you were trying to hurt them.

<<gotta say I'm surprised nobody's pm'd or asked in the thread for further reading on the SWAT topic in our country. Anyone who has questions or thoughts on the current condition of our policing, and whether or not you think we're 'police state' level yet or not, should really get some more reading in to see what's really happening here>>
 
the kind of retards that took on a swat team when they had no need for one, and now need to put it to use or see that department gone. That's why they're used more and more for tiny crap like this, shit at this rate maybe we'll see SWAT teams for traffic stops in the next 10 years.
 
If you ever wath those SWAt shows on A&E(I think) they show SWAT teams in Dallas, Detroit and somewhere else, Chicago maybe. But that is pretty much all they do, drug warrants. Usually, they put this metal bar into the front windows of the house. The bar is attatched to a tow strap that is hooked to an armored personel carrier, just like the military uses. The APC backs up and pretty much just rips the front of the house off. They then arrest everybody in the house and run around high fiving eachother and so on and so forth. Then the stuff comes up on the screen and shows who they got and what hey found. Almost always, they arrest 1 person (or the guy they were looking for isn't there) and they find a few grams of coke or meth, at the most. Usually it is like a gram of something and a bag of pot. Was all that really needed to get a gram of coke and a bag of pot off the street? I guess so, I sure do feel safe now.
 
it's complete and utter bullshit, that's all it is. When you have a team of like 10 dudes, in black uniforms, with flashbang grenades, crazy training, and automatic weapons kicking in the door of a person who's known to have an 1/8 or two of pot in his house, you know something is very, very wrong and scary.


I just hope, sooo deeply, that things don't get much worse before they get better.
 
A few quotes I'd like to share, that I feel apply specifically to the rapidly-declining quality of our once admirable government.

These apply to how things are now and how the government wants them to be.

"When the individual feels, the community reels" Brave New World
"Big Brother is watching you!" 1984
"War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength" 1984
"People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people." V for Vendetta
"Fear became the ultimate tool of this government." V for Vendetta
"We are oft to blame in this. 'Tis too much proved that with devotion's visage and pious action we do sugar o'er the devil himself." Hamlet
"One thing is true of all governments: the most reliable records are tax records." V for Vendetta
"The U.S. doesn't care for human beings" Nelson Mandela
"They're [Democrats] always accusing us of repressing their speech. I say let's do it. Let's repress them. Frankly, I'm not a big fan of the First Amendment." Ann Coulter (Who Else?)



Things that apply to how I think it should be :D
"A gramme is better than a damn" Brave New World
"I'd rather be myself. Myself and nasty. Not somebody else, however jolly." Brave New World




And this sums it all up.
"Good evening, London. Allow me first to apologize for this interruption. I do, like many of you, appreciate the comforts of every day routine- the security of the familiar, the tranquility of repetition. I enjoy them as much as any bloke. But in the spirit of commemoration, thereby those important events of the past usually associated with someone's death or the end of some awful bloody struggle, are celebrated with a nice holiday. I thought we could mark this November the 5th, a day that is sadly no longer remembered, by taking some time out of our daily lives to sit down and have a little chat. There are of course those who do not want us to speak. I suspect even now, orders are being shouted into telephones, and men with guns will soon be on their way.
Why? Because while the truncheon may be used in lieu of conversation, words will always retain their power. Words offer the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation of truth. And the truth is, there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there?
Cruelty and injustice, intolerance and oppression. And where once you had the freedom to object, to think and speak as you saw fit, you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity and soliciting your submission. How did this happen? Who's to blame? Well, certainly there are those who are more responsible than others, and they will be held accountable, but again truth be told, if you're looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror.
I know why you did it. I know you were afraid. Who wouldn't be? War, terror, disease. There were a myriad of problems which conspired to corrupt your reason and rob you of your common sense. Fear got the best of you, and in your panic you turned to the now High Chancellor, Adam Sutler. He promised you order, he promised you peace, and all he demanded in return was your silent, obedient consent. Last night I sought to end that silence. Last night I destroyed the Old Bailey, to remind this country of what it has forgotten. More than four hundred years ago a great citizen wished to embed the fifth of November forever in our memory. His hope was to remind the world that fairness, justice, and freedom are more than words, they are perspectives.
So if you've seen nothing, if the crimes of this government remain unknown to you, then I would suggest you allow the fifth of November to pass unmarked. But if you see what I see, if you feel as I feel, and if you would seek as I seek, then I ask you to stand beside me one year from tonight, outside the gates of Parliament, and together we shall give them a fifth of November that shall never, ever be forgot."
 
What's fucked is how any SWAT officer trained in even a rudimentary fashion, could let their fucking weapon "accidentally" discharge. 8(

Never point a firearm at someone unless you intend to kill them immediately. If that's not the case, point your trash at the ground! When I was at MCRDSD, I got the living bullcrap IT'd out of me for pointing a very much UNLOADED (of course) weapon accidentally at a DI for about a split second. "RECRUIT ______, ARE YOU TRYING TO KILL ME, SON?????? BEGIINNNNNNN!" Boy was I glad to get the FUCK up outta that place on a medical.:)

These are the types of incidents that happen all the time in a REAL war, where people are engaging in REAL combat. This is absolutely ludicrous and fucked up that anyone in their right mind would emply the use of these GI JOE-ass paramilitary tactics against your run-of-the-mill drug dealer (or senior citizen in this case).

The SWAT team guys are wearing fucken body armor too! They must just be pussies, to tell you the truth, shooting up the place at the first sign of danger...Someone needs to beat some discipline into them, so they can learn to get shot at without turning into a damn wild west shootout. They're so damn cowardly they're shooting before they've even ascertained the nature of the threat, for chrissakes.
 
Last edited:
Are you guys sure of the amounts... why the hell would they use a SWAT team on an individual's house that isn't a crackhouse or something? For one gram of pot? Not impossible I'm sure, but why... what do they hope to accomplish? OK the occasional mistake, but are y'all saying regularly ?
 
MDPVagrant said:
Are you guys sure of the amounts... why the hell would they use a SWAT team on an individual's house that isn't a crackhouse or something? For one gram of pot? Not impossible I'm sure, but why... what do they hope to accomplish? OK the occasional mistake, but are y'all saying regularly ?
Yes, quite regularly.<<EDIT - I didn't realize this was an older thread, MDPVagrant, check out post #7, specifically the last sentence I had underlined>> The issue lies with the fact that far too many towns are taking on unnecessary swat teams, and are essentially faced with nothing to put them to use for. And if public offices have shown us 1 thing, it's that they will use full budget, full resources, etc, lest they lose budget/resources. So you have a ton of towns that have swat teams, but no real need for one. They become the general police in warrant situations many times, see the following examples (btw, these are all just from my state of FL, I should note. All from the map I'll post after this post. PM me for some good, albeit long, reading about the current swat proliferation taking place across the country).




Sharon Cumming.

January 10, 2006—VA


After sifting through four bags of garbage found outside Sharon Cumming's home, police in Leesburg, Virginia raid her house on a warrant for suspicion of possession of marijuana. Deputies use flashbang grenades and allegedly curse at neighbors who inquire about the noise, telling them to get back inside.

Leesburg Today reports, "deputies seized 20 items, including $8,175 in cash, $122.88 in coins, $6.59 in Barbados coins, a palm pilot, cell phone and a box of ammunition," in addition to one small bag of marijuana.

Source:

Dan Telvock, "Round Hill Drug Raid Turns Up Cash, Marijuana," Leesburg Today, January 12, 2006










Anthony Diotaiuto.

August 5, 2005—FL



23-year-old Anthony Diotaiuto is shot ten times by police in Sunrise, Florida on a paramilitary drug raid of his home. Diotaiuto was suspected of dealing small amounts of marijuana. Police found about two ounces in his home.

Police say Diotaiuto confronted them with a gun, though his body was found in a closet in his bedroom. Police said the fact that Diotaiuto had a licensed firearm gave them cause to believe he might be dangerous, and necessitated the use of a SWAT team. Diotaiuto had one prior conviction for marijuana possession as a minor, but otherwise had no criminal record, and no history of violent behavior.

Police also say they knocked and announced themselves before entering, though neighbors say they never heard an announcement.

Diotaiuto's family is now suing for the release of police records relating to the raid.

Sources:

Janette Neuwahl, "Relatives, friends criticize death of man in Sunrise police raid," Miami Herald, August 10, 2005.

Brian Haas, "Relatives of Slain Man Hire Lawyer," Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, August 11, 2005, p. B1.

Michael Mayo, "An Ounce of Pot, 10 Bullets, and One Failed Drug War," Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, August 16, 2005, p. B1.










Richard Paey.

March 21, 1997—FL


In March of 1997, police in Pasco County, Florida arrest Richard Paey on charges of prescription fraud. Paey, a multiple sclerosis patient suffering from the effects of a car accident and subsequent botched back surgery, is wheelchair-bound and paraplegic. His various ailments required him to take copious amounts of painkillers to lead a normal life. Unfortunately, Florida law makes it difficult to get the medication he needs. Prosecutors accused Paey of forging prescriptions, though they conceded that there's no evidence he was selling or distributing.

Despite Paey's condition, and that he obviously posed no threat, prosecutors sent a SWAT team to arrest him. Officers in ski masks with body armor and assault weapons broke down the door to Paey's home, needlessly terrorizing him, his wife, and their children.

Sources:

Morley Safer, "Prisoner of Pain," 60 Minutes, CBS News, January 29, 2006.

Interview with Linda Paey conducted by Radley Balko, December 10, 2005.









Donald MacKay.

March 18, 1997—FL


On March 18, 1997, a SWAT team in Apopka, Florida raids the home of Donald MacKay. Police announce, "Orange County Sheriff's Department! Search Warrant!" a split second before obliterating his front door.

MacKay and his roommate are pulled from their beds, naked, and taken to the living room at gunpoint. Police scour the residence, and confiscate a bag of flour, a flowerpot and a marigold starter kit they list as "cultivation equipment," and half a joint found under the couch.

For the joint, MacKay and his roommate are taken to jail.

Lt. Mike Miller would later say of the raid, "I'm sorry Mr. MacKay feels violated... I'm a little jaded to the idea that people are innocent." Miller added, "We always have probable cause, but there's not a lot of investigative -- how can I word this? -- many times these warrants are based on citizen's complaints, trash pulls. Things aren't as sure-fire as wiretaps...Our experience is that drug dealers, couriers, will hide their dope in other people's houses."

MacKay spent a night in jail, suffered a black eye, and had to pay for hundreds of dollars of damage to his apartment. He was never charged.

Source:

Edward Ericson Jr., "Commando cops," Orlando Weekly, May 7, 1998.










Doug Carpenter and Carlos LeBron.

January 11, 1996—FL


In December 1995, police visit the two men at their new apartment as part of Maitland, Florida's "New Resident Visitation Program." While there, police find evidence that Carpenter and LeBron may be recreational marijuana users.

A month later, a SWAT team broke down the mens' door with a 60-pound battering ram and stormed inside. Police handcuffed the men and embarked on a three-hour search of their apartment. At first, they found nothing. Finally, LeBron pointed them to his personal stash of marijuana, where they found one cigarette, and 5.3 grams of marijuana.
The men were each given a $150 fine.

Police concede that neither man was suspected of selling drugs, and they had no complaints from neighbors, or previous criminal records. The Orlando Weekly reports that police say the two were targeted because they were new to the area, and were renters, both apparently warning signs to Maitland police of possible drug activity. Town police chief Ed Doyle said of the raid, "It's not one we're going to put on the mantle."

Source:

Edward Ericson, Jr., "Commando cops," Orlando Weekly,, May 7, 1998.
 
Last edited:
Damn I realized through someone's pm that this is the same thread I had previously posted an invitation for pm's for further reading on swat excesses in our country. I also previously posted a ton of bad swat examples, but luckily none were even overlaps. I'm only posting this because I think it's really messed up that a case of a 92 y/o innocent SWAT death, that the story hit only a month ago, and was resurrected yesterday, just appeared to me to be a new story, that's how frequent this shit happens. I didn't even hesitate or have trouble believing another innocent 90-something year old was killed, didn't even get the feeling it was old news - because this crap happens far too often.
 
Top