Posted on 02/07/2007 3:26:10 PM PST by rawhide
Fulton DA seeks charges in shooting of 92-year-old woman in her home
The Fulton County district attorney will seek felony murder charges against at least one of the three Atlanta police officers who shot and killed an elderly woman in a botched drug raid, according to one of the officer's attorneys.
Defense attorney Rand Csehy, who is representing Gregg Junnier, said he received an e-mail message from District Attorney Paul Howard's office today saying the DA would seek charges before a grand jury Feb. 26.
"It's an overbroad indictment," said an angry Csehy. He said that Howard's office has "broken with the federal government. Paul Howard is no longer part of a joint investigation."
Csehy said that his client had been cooperating with authorities.
On Nov. 21, three narcotics officers went to the home of Kathryn Johnston, 92, to execute a "no knock" warrant. A shootout ensued during which Johnston was killed and the three officers were injured.
"No knock" warrants are frequently issued so police can get inside before suspects can destroy or flush any drugs. When the officers kicked in the door, the elderly woman apparently got off five shots from her own revolver, hitting all three police officers.
Friends and family members of Johnston contended that she was a feeble and frightened woman, who rarely ventured outside after dark and knew few people. And they say that she was never involved in any drug activity.
The three officers, Gregg Junnier, Gary A. Smith and Cary A. Bond, were put on administrative leave.
(Excerpt) Read more at ajc.com ...
They were acting on a tip from a known liar. There are additional circumstances that indicate failed procedure.
Imagine that the perps were not police officers, and the question answers itself. I don't think the cops in question deserve a different legal standard than you and I would face in their place.
Don't have a link cuz it was all a series of reports here on the FOX5ATLANTA Ch 5 10 o'clock news.
There were never any drugs found on the first floor of the house where grandma lived. The police (reportedly verified by the FEDS) found a small (not boxes full) amount of drugs (don't remember what) when they cut through the lock and went in the basement. Reportedly the basement only had exterior rear entry (which they showed a bazillion times on the news).
Also bear in mind the cops used an informant (reliable in the past) to 'verify' drugs were being sold at the address. Plus the 'address' had been watched for some period of time by the narcs to observe behaviour consistent with drug selling. The snitch LATER publicly recanted his advice to the cops and went on video saying the cops made him say it.
If you want the links, search the archives of www.myfoxatlanta.com or contact the producer(s) there. They reported all this stuff before it became a witchhunt.
So don't jump to the conclusion that this was all bad from the start.
The cops had reason to believe drugs were being sold at the house. That part of Atlanta you'd be hard pressed to find 5 houses in 20 that did not exhibit suspicious activity.
Yes, it all went wrong. But it didn't really start that way.
Ther are a lot of drugs in this little Alabama Town we live in,,that's what we're looking out for..and there's alot of older folks that live alone,,I don't blame her a bit,,she was trying to give her grandson a place to live and grow,,he is guilty of killing his Granny as far as I'm concerned...
NO excuse for no-knock raids. Especially for drugs. If the criminal destroys the evidence, so what, it's not a nuke device, who cares.
By that logic, EVERY SINGLE DRUG ARREST could be a no-knock raid. What a wonderful world that would be.
They shouldn't have been busting her door down. There's way too much of that going on out in the country these days, with every town and community pretty much having its own SWAT team.
I understand your displeasure with no knock raids. I was not defending them.
These guys executed a no-knock raid that went bad ... but they did so with orders/warrants from higher ups. The grunts should NOT get charged with murder.
They should be "introduced" to a noose.
From what I've heard, they tried to coerce the informant to change his story, or to fabricate one to cover their asses, and he's since disappeared, probably into the witness protection program.
I don't know if this is true or not. But unless there is a hostage situation or a terrorist with a suitcase nuke, no-knock raids should be abolished. It's not worth it to bust somebody for a bag of pot.
There has been a lot of NAACP cries for 'justice' on this one. One guy even flew up to DC to get the Feds involved. So now these poor cops are gonna get Nifonged.
This is the trouble with "no-knock warrents", they are designed to result in violent confrontations. Sometimes the police get the wrong house, sometimes it is the right house, but the wrong person. They could have tried arresting the perp on the street, but that would have required a bit more police work.
They decided to take the lazier, more exciting approach, and just kill an innocent old woman. They deserve to fry for it.
I heard originally they found drugs, but then the police did not mention that anymore.Beside according to the neice who had bought the house and the gun she was living by herself. So where did junior come from? Do you have a link?
The assumption I'd make is not that those intruders are are cops, b/c I know I wasn't doing anything for the cops to be breaking in on me unannounced like that. Nope, anyone breaking in on me would be someone intent on doing me harm. Bang! Five shots and she hit all three. Impressive.
I don't know if murder is the right charge, but cops can't go busting in on someone and kill them because they were protecting themselves and get away with it with a slap on the wrist and administrative leave. The Second Amendment is ultimately for we, the people, to protect ourselves against the government. Bang!
See my post #42.
This was 'headline news' here in ATL for days. The info I posted was what the newsbabes reported and what B-roll they showed with her voice-over.
IF it really bugs you that I don't have links, go to myfoxatlanta.com or fox5atlanta.com and look in the archived news reports.
There's really two threads here -- one that expresses understandable disgust with no-knock outcomes; the other is about whether or not the cops should be charged with murder. I see it as wrongful death, not murder. IF the cops went in all 'cowboy' on their own with no warrant, no permissions from the Sarge, then it was murder. But these guys, however too-gung-ho, were acting within policy guidelines. It went all bad for a lot of bad reasons.
We are witnessing the end run around Posse-Commitatus with the militarization of police departments, as well as illegal repeals of the BOR (McCain-Feingold). But that's OK, as long as the people have their American Idol every week...
morons
So Junior forced the cops to make up a story so they could get a perjured no-knock warrant?
They decided to take the lazier, more exciting approach
***I had posted on the earlier thread that it seemed like the adrenaline cowboys had taken over policy decisions. If it was a matter of stopping up their toilet so that the drugs couldn't be flushed, then a daylight warrant search would have saved her life and these adrenaline junkies eventually would move on to something else. Police work involves a lot of drudgery. David Koresh could have been picked up on his weekly trip to buy groceries.
Thanks for the fast reply. I had followed the original story and did not hear any confirmation of drugs. The cops may be guilty. If they are the ones that asked for a no knock warrant based on faulty information, then the cops are responsible. If they were sent in on some elses wrong info , then they may not be guilty.
In any case, no knocks should be unconstitutional. Drugs are not a good enough reason to act like thugs.
Thanks for pointing us to FoxAtlanta
Informant Says Police Asked Him to Lie
Last Edited: Monday, 27 Nov 2006, 7:42 PM EST
Created: Monday, 27 Nov 2006, 6:24 PM EST
ATLANTA (FOX5) -- A confidential police informant tells FOX5 News APD officers asked him to lie about events leading up to the fatal shooting of an elderly woman.
http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail?contentId=1614593&version=2&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=1.1.1
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.