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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Editorial: Unnecessary SWAT Raids Put All Parties at
Title:US CA: Editorial: Unnecessary SWAT Raids Put All Parties at
Published On:2008-02-12
Source:Desert Dispatch, The (Victorville CA)
Fetched On:2008-02-14 00:30:29
UNNECESSARY SWAT RAIDS PUT ALL PARTIES AT RISK

It may be easy for Barstow residents to dismiss the concerns of
Charles Sherman. Sherman, an ex-con, was burned in his bed by a flash
bang device thrown in a SWAT team raid by sheriff's department
deputies one early morning in January.

Deputies were supporting the Barstow Police Department as they
executed search warrants related to an attempted murder investigation.

So far, Sherman has not been charged with anything related to this
attempted murder, nor were the inhabitants of three other homes
searched implicated (though five were charged with suspicion of drug
possession).

There's little sign a SWAT team was needed to execute this search
warrant. The Barstow Police department searched Sherman's home quite
peacefully two weeks prior to the raid, where they found a box of
ammunition and later charged him, as he's not allowed to possess
firearms or ammunition.

What should concern Barstow residents who don't have criminal records
is the reason why these tactics were pursued. According to Barstow
Police Lt. Albert Ramirez, a "credible citizen informant" led police
to believe that Sherman might have guns in the residence.

Let's take a quick trip to the other side of the country. Right now,
in Chesapeake, Va., Ryan Frederick is in jail, charged with murdering
a police officer. On Jan. 17, a police SWAT team converged on
Frederick's home after an informant told police he was growing
marijuana, according to the Virginian-Pilot.

Based on this information, the police organized an evening raid.
Frederick, who was apparently asleep, said he thought somebody was
trying to break into his home. The circumstances are not fully clear,
but he ultimately shot one of the officers as they broke down his
front door. The officer later died.

The police did not find a marijuana-growing operation in Frederick's
house. He was growing tree saplings in his garage apparently. He had
a slight amount of marijuana for recreational use, a misdemeanor. His
first one.

According to the Virginian-Pilot, Frederick was afraid because
somebody had broken into his garage three days before the police
raid, which may well explain the source of the informant's claims. As
a result, an officer is dead and a man who believed he was protecting
his home from an intruder may stand trial for it. The community is
coming out in support of Frederick, but it's a tragedy all around.

SWAT raids should be intended as a tool of last resort, when lives
are endangered and there is no other way for authorities to safely
enter a home or building. Even in the appropriate circumstances these
raids can be deadly for all involved. A SWAT officer was killed last
week in the Los Angeles area in a raid trying to stop an apparently
mentally ill man who killed three members of his own family.

When authorities misuse these raids - for whatever logical reason -
to execute search warrants, they put themselves and sometimes
innocent people at risk. Some may argue Sherman doesn't count as an
"innocent" because of his past and his record, but that informant
could have pointed authorities to anybody. Innocent people have been
killed in search warrant raids. Property has been destroyed. Next
time it could be you having an explosive device lobbed in your bed
while you sleep.
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