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Editorial: Stop using SWAT teams on civilians
Examiner ^ | 8/13/08

Posted on 08/13/2008 3:09:59 PM PDT by LibWhacker

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - The violent assault on Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo’s home late last month was certainly not the first bungled raid by a government SWAT team, but the bad publicity it generated should make it the last time these trigger-happy squads target innocent civilians.

Tracking a 32-pound package of marijuana that had been addressed to Calvo’s wife, Trinity Tomsic, Prince George’s sheriff’s deputies forcibly entered the mayor’s home on July 29 and killed his two dogs before handcuffing him and his mother-in-law.

But like so many other SWAT team raids across the country, this one turned out to be a big mistake. After reviewing the case, State’s Attorney Glenn Ivey acknowledged that the Calvos were victims of a multistate drug ring that used innocent people’s names and addresses to hide shipments of contraband drugs. But the mayor and his family were also victims of a home invasion by the SWAT team, based entirely on what turned out to be a false premise.

In a groundbreaking study in 2006, former Cato policy analyst Radley Balko documented a disturbing pattern of cases across the country in which innocent citizens were killed by armed-to-the-teeth SWAT teams who either acted on the basis of wrong information from an informant or stormed the wrong house by mistake. “One thing I’ve noticed while picking through the depressingly long list of botched drug raids: The cops always shoot the dog,” Balko noted. Sure enough in the local case, Mayor Calvo and his family lost their two beloved black Labrador retrievers, but it could easily have been his own life or that of a family member that was lost. An apologetic “oops” from the responsible officials just doesn’t cut it anymore.

Originally set up to handle volatile, high-risk situations involving snipers, hostage takers or prison escapees, militarized SWAT teams have been unleashed on civilians with predictably disastrous results — as the fatal shooting of unarmed optometrist Salvatore Culosi by a Fairfax County SWAT team two years ago illustrated all too well. Sending a SWAT team to arrest Culosi was excessive compared with his alleged crime of betting on football games.

By sending a SWAT team to Calvo’s home, the Prince George’s Sheriff’s Department made the same mistake, setting the stage for a violent confrontation that could easily have escalated into something far worse.

It’s long past time for law enforcement agencies to restrict SWAT teams for use only in situations where massive lethal force is their only remaining option.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; US: Maryland
KEYWORDS: animalabuse; banglist; berwynheights; beserkcop; cheyecalvo; civilians; donutwatch; fourthamendemnt; jackbootedthugs; leo; lp; mayor; noknock; noknockraids; noknockwarrant; pgcounty; policestate; raids; rapeofliberty; suckstobeyoucitizen; swat; swatzis; waronswat; wod
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To: marron
One case that irritated me was Columbine, where SWAT sat outside for 3 hours until everyone was dead, then marched the survivors out as if they were the criminals.

I agree- that was utter cowardice on their part. In a situation like that, protecting the officers' lives should have been secondary to trying to stop the shooters. I remember watching that and screaming at the television for them to go into the school.

41 posted on 08/13/2008 3:53:44 PM PDT by Citizen Blade ("Please... I go through everyone's trash." The Question)
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To: wastedyears
oooops, our bad... the guy that killed him became their school "Officer Friendly" and that was the end of it.
42 posted on 08/13/2008 3:55:56 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist - CTHULHU/NYARLATHOTEP'08 = Nothing LESS!!!)
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To: untrained skeptic

Defend it if you want to. There was every evidence that a crime had been committed, and the police were within their rights to execute a warrant.

So try sending a couple of uniforms to the door, knock, and execute the warrant.

Trust me, if SWAT starts up my front walk, guns at the ready, my wife will probably start screaming too. And my dogs will go nuts, and probably the idiots will start shooting.


43 posted on 08/13/2008 3:56:09 PM PDT by marron
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To: LibWhacker
It's real simple. You can't be a super hero with a super villain, but the problem is that there are not enough super villains to go around. If you've trained to be a super cop, then you need a super bad guy, or else you're just an ordinary cop waiting for the day. If you can't find a super villain, then the psychological temptation to make one from an ordinary wrong doer, or really from anyone at hand, is irrestible. That's how ordinary citizens, like the mayor Berwin Heights, wind up being treated like this.
44 posted on 08/13/2008 3:56:09 PM PDT by PUGACHEV
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To: spetznaz

***If SWAT just knocked down the homes of FReepers, I would not be surprised if a gun fight broke out and people died (in most cases NOT the SWAT since they would be moving in with fingers on the trigger).***

You really think FReepers would go quietly?


45 posted on 08/13/2008 3:58:00 PM PDT by wastedyears (Show me your precious darlings, and I will crush them all)
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#40 Above = Where?? = I can’t stand it when people post articles and others don’t have a clue WHERE?

FYI / FWIW = California, USA: El Dorado County, east of Sacramento, in the foothills / mountains. (Gold was discovered in Coloma, 1848)
Placerville = County Seat. Shingle Springs = a small, but growing town.


46 posted on 08/13/2008 3:59:19 PM PDT by Golden Gate
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To: untrained skeptic
Would you consider having 32 pounds of pot worth upwards of $100,000 delivered to their door and taken inside to make them something other than ordinary citizens?

They were investigating a case where a FedEx driver and his accomplice were intercepting packages of drugs sent to innocent people. They had no indication that the people whose houses the packages were sent to had anything to do with this scam. So, yes, I'd consider these people to be innocent civilians.

The police said they started yelling who they were and burst in because of fear that the suspected drug dealers inside might be arming them selves and preparing organized resistance, or destroying evidence.

The cops might as well claim that the house was full of nukes and aliens, for all the investigation they did. If they had spent 20 minutes checking who lived at the house, they would have figured out it was the mayor. To any thinking person, that would make you pause and consider whether the people in the house were likely to be drug dealers "arming them selves and preparing organized resistance, or destroying evidence."

47 posted on 08/13/2008 3:59:57 PM PDT by Citizen Blade ("Please... I go through everyone's trash." The Question)
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To: wastedyears

No, which is what I said in my post. FReepers would probably die because the SWAT would be coming in in force and with fingers on the trigger, while the FReepers would be rushing to grab their fire-arm. Let me add that it is sad that it would be the FReepers going down, because (in my book) if some masked men rush into my house they will be identified as crooks.


48 posted on 08/13/2008 4:01:09 PM PDT by spetznaz (Nuclear-tipped Ballistic Missiles: The Ultimate Phallic Symbol)
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To: steve-b
I can see the guy's house from my rooftop.

Is that "local" enough for your taste?

The cops had the correct address.

49 posted on 08/13/2008 4:07:26 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: starlifter

Exactly.

That sums up this issue as clearly as anything.


50 posted on 08/13/2008 4:11:23 PM PDT by Skooz (Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us)
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To: spetznaz

I don’t think they would be too far away from any firearm.


51 posted on 08/13/2008 4:12:07 PM PDT by wastedyears (Show me your precious darlings, and I will crush them all)
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To: untrained skeptic
You appear to have a faulty understanding of the situation. Let's clarify a couple of things:

1) the Fedex guy didn't deliver the package - the cops did. That's right, the cops caught on to the contents of the package while it was being shipped from its original source (before it reached its local distribution center). They intercepted it, found out the address on the package, then delivered the package themselves to the mayor's house and put it on his doorstep.

2) The mayor found the package on his doorstep, addressed to his wife, so he took it inside and put it on a table. I can't imagine a more natural reaction.

3) The mother-in-law started screaming because she saw multiple heavily-armed men in plain clothes and masks approaching the house. I can't imagine a more natural reaction. If it had been me, I would have been racing for my firearms, as, I would imagine, most people would.

Now, I would be very interested in your justification of the police behavior in this instance.
52 posted on 08/13/2008 4:12:38 PM PDT by fr_freak
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To: Gene Lalor
"Agreed that excessive force is always unacceptable, as long as it is agreed that adequate force should NEVER be proscribed."

The ONLY time a "dynamic entry" type situation is warranted is in an active hostage crisis. NO "drug bust" is worth the risk of the kinds of screwups that are endemic with "Swat team" drug raids. They SHOULD be proscribed, period.

53 posted on 08/13/2008 4:13:30 PM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: fr_freak
Now, I would be very interested in your justification of the police behavior in this instance.

There simply is none.

54 posted on 08/13/2008 4:14:53 PM PDT by Skooz (Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us)
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To: autumnraine

This kind of violence won’t stop, as politcians can’t be seen as “soft on crime.” Magistrates don’t have the courage to refuse to sign these “warrants.” The Fourth Amendment is dead. It will continue to get worse. The only pragmatic solution is attrition.

I mean attrition of SWAT team members; attrition of municipal budgets lost to immense punitive judgments; attrition of magistrates removed from the bench.


55 posted on 08/13/2008 4:18:09 PM PDT by Unknowing (Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.)
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To: autumnraine
War on drugs? More like war on citizens. No drug out there is worth killing innocent people over. This reminds me of the prohibition days when more people died from gangster thugs running the booze and poisoned alchohol than from what was supposed to originally bad for them.

You are never going to convince the WOD warriors on this site
56 posted on 08/13/2008 4:19:01 PM PDT by uncbob
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To: muawiyah

I didn’t say druggies wouldn’t or don’t hurt anyone. Nice try to change my post though.

What I said is that no one’s life is worth it for drugs. If some moron wants to off himself by injecting whatever drugs he wants, so be it. I really don’t care. But don’t come busting in my house guns a blazing in the name of protecting me from drugs on the street.

If a person commits a crime, they should go to jail. I just don’t think drugs should be the reason to go to jail. If they steal to get a fix, go to jail for theft.

Not because I like drugs, or think they are a good thing. But because “fighting” them is doing no good. Keeping a junkie alive in prison is prolonging the length of time we as society has to deal with them.


57 posted on 08/13/2008 4:19:18 PM PDT by autumnraine
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To: LibWhacker

Maybe we should stop referring to them as “SWAT” and start referring to them as what they really are: government-trained home invasion gangs.


58 posted on 08/13/2008 4:19:35 PM PDT by fr_freak
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To: autumnraine
You know doggone well what you meant ~ and that was that all druggies, dealers, users, enablers, etc. are all sweetness and light and everything nice.

I bet you even believe that if dope was totally legal none of these people would ever show up at the dealer's door ready to kill him for his stash.

59 posted on 08/13/2008 4:23:03 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: Drango

>The dogs are just the canary in the coal mine here. People are dying and the Constitution is being trampled. <

Even when people are just thrown to the floor and handcuffed, there is an enormous violation of Constitutional rights occurring. We should feel secure in our homes, not wonder each night if some cowboy sheriff is getting ready to send a squad full of goons through our door.


60 posted on 08/13/2008 4:25:31 PM PDT by Darnright (A penny saved is a government oversight)
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