News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: OPED: Botched Raids Not Rare |
Title: | US GA: OPED: Botched Raids Not Rare |
Published On: | 2006-12-04 |
Source: | Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 20:08:06 |
BOTCHED RAIDS NOT RARE
Little Oversight, Bad Information a Deadly Mix
The botched Atlanta raid that ended in the shooting death of
88-year-old Kathryn Johnston was sad and tragic, but unfortunately, it
was neither uncommon nor unpredictable.
After taking a year to research and write a paper for the Cato
Institute on the proliferation of forced-entry, paramilitary-style
raids, I'm sorry to say Johnston is just one of at least 40 innocent
people killed in botched raids over the last 20 years in America.
Worse, there are dozens more cases of low-level offenders, bystanders
- - and police officers killed or injured.
In 2005, for example, Baltimore's Cheryl Lynn Noel, a mother and
churchgoing woman, was shot to death when she mistook raiding police
officers for intruders. She was holding a legal handgun when they
kicked open her bedroom door. That raid was conducted after police
investigators found marijuana seeds in the family trash.
Last January, Fairfax, Va., optometrist Sal Culosi was accidentally
shot and killed when a SWAT team apprehended him. He was under
investigation for wagering on football games with a group of friends.
The Johnston raid isn't even the first such tragedy in Georgia. In
2000, Riverdale's Lynette Gayle Jackson called the police after her
home had been invaded by burglars. While investigating the break-in,
police found a small amount of cocaine that belonged to Jackson's boyfriend.
A few weeks later, police raided Jackson's home, looking for her
boyfriend. Jackson, understandably afraid after having been robbed
less than a month earlier, was holding a gun when police entered her
bedroom. The raiding officers opened fire and shot her to death.
In 2005, Stockbridge's Roy and Belinda Baker were startled from their
sleep by a raiding police team that destroyed the couple's front door
with a battering ram. The Bakers were handcuffed and made to stand on
their porch at gunpoint. Police had mistaken the Bakers' home for the
house next door.
It's almost certain that there are others. This newspaper reported
that several participants at a rally last week told similar stories of
mistaken raids on their homes.
Forced-entry raids breach the centuries-old idea that a man's home is
his castle, and that the government can only violate that sanctity
under the most extreme of circumstances. Yet over the last 25 years,
we've seen a staggering 1,300 percent increase in paramilitary style
forced-entry raids in the United States --- there are about 50,000 per
year now. The majority of these raids are for proactive drug policing,
such as executing search warrants.
What's more, the very nature of drug policing requires investigative
tools that frequently produce bad information. One example is the use
of informants, notoriously shady characters often involved in the drug
trade themselves. Police maintain that they rarely use a single
informant's tip as the basis for a drug raid, but dozens of botched
raids and a stack of innocent bodies over the years suggest otherwise.
Combine this propensity for bad information with violent, highly
confrontational forced-entry raids, and the lack of oversight and real
accountability that pervades the entire process and you've created a
system ripe for tragic outcomes such as the one we saw Nov. 21 in Atlanta.
SWAT teams, forced entry and paramilitary tactics should be reserved
for extreme, emergency situations where a suspect presents an
immediate threat to the community --- hostage takings, armed robberies
or apprehending fugitives, for example. In these cases, police home
invasions are warranted because the objective is to defuse an
already-violent situation. Home-invasion raids on drug offenders, on
the other hand, create potentially violent confrontations where none
previously existed. It's an important distinction.
Even assuming that the police in the Johnston case are telling the
truth and the informant is lying (a generous assumption at this
point), Atlanta police still then concede that they conducted a
high-stakes, forced-entry raid on a private residence, based solely on
the word of an informant they now say is a liar and a career criminal.
That's a terrifying thought. One can't help but then assume that the
Johnston case is far from the first time a "wrong door" raid has
happened in Atlanta.
The tactics the police use to apprehend a suspect ought to fit the
crime the suspect is accused of committing. Which means nonviolent
suspects shouldn't be met with violent police tactics.
Little Oversight, Bad Information a Deadly Mix
The botched Atlanta raid that ended in the shooting death of
88-year-old Kathryn Johnston was sad and tragic, but unfortunately, it
was neither uncommon nor unpredictable.
After taking a year to research and write a paper for the Cato
Institute on the proliferation of forced-entry, paramilitary-style
raids, I'm sorry to say Johnston is just one of at least 40 innocent
people killed in botched raids over the last 20 years in America.
Worse, there are dozens more cases of low-level offenders, bystanders
- - and police officers killed or injured.
In 2005, for example, Baltimore's Cheryl Lynn Noel, a mother and
churchgoing woman, was shot to death when she mistook raiding police
officers for intruders. She was holding a legal handgun when they
kicked open her bedroom door. That raid was conducted after police
investigators found marijuana seeds in the family trash.
Last January, Fairfax, Va., optometrist Sal Culosi was accidentally
shot and killed when a SWAT team apprehended him. He was under
investigation for wagering on football games with a group of friends.
The Johnston raid isn't even the first such tragedy in Georgia. In
2000, Riverdale's Lynette Gayle Jackson called the police after her
home had been invaded by burglars. While investigating the break-in,
police found a small amount of cocaine that belonged to Jackson's boyfriend.
A few weeks later, police raided Jackson's home, looking for her
boyfriend. Jackson, understandably afraid after having been robbed
less than a month earlier, was holding a gun when police entered her
bedroom. The raiding officers opened fire and shot her to death.
In 2005, Stockbridge's Roy and Belinda Baker were startled from their
sleep by a raiding police team that destroyed the couple's front door
with a battering ram. The Bakers were handcuffed and made to stand on
their porch at gunpoint. Police had mistaken the Bakers' home for the
house next door.
It's almost certain that there are others. This newspaper reported
that several participants at a rally last week told similar stories of
mistaken raids on their homes.
Forced-entry raids breach the centuries-old idea that a man's home is
his castle, and that the government can only violate that sanctity
under the most extreme of circumstances. Yet over the last 25 years,
we've seen a staggering 1,300 percent increase in paramilitary style
forced-entry raids in the United States --- there are about 50,000 per
year now. The majority of these raids are for proactive drug policing,
such as executing search warrants.
What's more, the very nature of drug policing requires investigative
tools that frequently produce bad information. One example is the use
of informants, notoriously shady characters often involved in the drug
trade themselves. Police maintain that they rarely use a single
informant's tip as the basis for a drug raid, but dozens of botched
raids and a stack of innocent bodies over the years suggest otherwise.
Combine this propensity for bad information with violent, highly
confrontational forced-entry raids, and the lack of oversight and real
accountability that pervades the entire process and you've created a
system ripe for tragic outcomes such as the one we saw Nov. 21 in Atlanta.
SWAT teams, forced entry and paramilitary tactics should be reserved
for extreme, emergency situations where a suspect presents an
immediate threat to the community --- hostage takings, armed robberies
or apprehending fugitives, for example. In these cases, police home
invasions are warranted because the objective is to defuse an
already-violent situation. Home-invasion raids on drug offenders, on
the other hand, create potentially violent confrontations where none
previously existed. It's an important distinction.
Even assuming that the police in the Johnston case are telling the
truth and the informant is lying (a generous assumption at this
point), Atlanta police still then concede that they conducted a
high-stakes, forced-entry raid on a private residence, based solely on
the word of an informant they now say is a liar and a career criminal.
That's a terrifying thought. One can't help but then assume that the
Johnston case is far from the first time a "wrong door" raid has
happened in Atlanta.
The tactics the police use to apprehend a suspect ought to fit the
crime the suspect is accused of committing. Which means nonviolent
suspects shouldn't be met with violent police tactics.
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