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Children handcuffed in police drug raid (and SOP of shooting the family dog)
Albany Times Union ^

Posted on 09/28/2006 5:26:29 PM PDT by Sir Gawain

Children handcuffed in police drug raid Dog also killed during bust; 18-year-old charged with misdemeanors, violation

By MIKE GOODWIN, Staff writer First published: Wednesday, September 20, 2006

SCHENECTADY -- A police strike team raided a woman's Prospect Street apartment and handcuffed her children and killed her dog early Tuesday in a $60 pot bust. The woman called it excessive force and a case of mistaken identity, but officers said they stormed the home for a good reason: One of her sons was selling marijuana there.

The Police Department's tactical squad knocked down the front door of the upstairs apartment at 110 Prospect St. and flooded into the apartment shortly after 6 a.m.

"I heard a big boom. My first reaction was to jump out of bed. We were trying to find where our kids were at and all of a sudden we had guns in our faces," said 40-year-old Anita Woodyear, who rents the second-floor flat.

During the ensuing chaos, police handcuffed two of the woman's children, Elijah Bradley, 11, and 12-year-old Victoria Perez, and shot at her dog in the kitchen before killing it in the bathroom, Woodyear said.

"That seems like an awful lot of firepower for marijuana," said Fred Clark of the Schenectady chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "That's like spending $125,000 for $5."

Woodyear said she suspected police had intended to search a neighboring home, but had the wrong address on the search warrant. Neighbors said they suspect illicit drugs are dealt at other homes on the block.

"No apology, no 'sorry about your dog,' " she said.

But police said they have no reason to apologize. They said they raided the house because Woodyear's 18-year-old son, Israel M. Bradley, sold three plastic bags of marijuana there for $40 on Sept. 15. They allege he sold two other bags of marijuana in the house for $20 on Aug. 28, they said.

In addition, police said Bradley was carrying marijuana in the home on Sept. 1.

"We had the absolute right house. We had the absolute right target," said Assistant Chief Michael Seber.

Police said Bradley was one of several drug dealers they have under investigation on Prospect Street.

"The whole street is a mess right now. We'll be back," Seber said.

Bradley was arrested and charged with misdemeanor counts of criminal sale of marijuana, an offense punishable by up to one year in jail. He was also charged with unlawfully possessing marijuana, a violation.

Police Lt. Peter Frisoni said Bradley admitted he sold from the apartment in a statement to investigators after the raid.

"The moral of the story is: If you don't want officers barging into your house with their guns drawn, don't let drug dealers stay with you and deal drugs out of your apartment," Frisoni said.

Woodyear said she is appalled about the way her children were treated -- and said her 12-year-old daughter was hit with pepper spray.

The dog, a pit bull terrier named Precious, urinated on the floor in fear and tried to run from the police before it was killed, Woodyear said.

Police said the animal was aggressive and left them no choice but to shoot.

Elijah Bradley said he awoke to find armed men in his home. "They had the shotgun in my face," the 11-year-old said. "I punched at him. I didn't know who he was."

Police said they had reason to have weapons drawn. Their search warrant noted that among the things they planned to search for were firearms, although no handguns were found.

The NAACP has previously criticized how police conduct raids, most notably during an incident earlier this decade when a Hamilton Hill girl was held at gunpoint and handcuffed after her mother agreed to allow police to search their home for an armed man. The family later sued the city, but the jury awarded no damages. But Paul DerOhannesian, a defense attorney and former Albany County prosecutor, said such a response may have been warranted if police believed there were guns in the house.

"This type of search warrant execution can be very dangerous from a law enforcement point of view," he said.

"You're going to have a heightened sense or need for security for officer safety. You literally have no idea what you're walking into."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption
KEYWORDS: donutwatch; statistsonfr; warondrugs; wod; wodlist
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To: Sir Gawain

Another victory in the War on Drugs.


241 posted on 09/28/2006 11:53:45 PM PDT by Bernard ("America is not what's wrong with the world": Donald Rumsfeld)
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To: phoenix0468
Although SCHENECTADY is a suburb of New York City, there are very inner city areas there. Just as there is in other 'burbs of the big apple.

Huh?

242 posted on 09/29/2006 12:02:51 AM PDT by dread78645 (Evolution. A doomed theory since 1859.)
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To: All

Any stranger who breaks into my house like that dies, end of story, whether they're screaming "Police!" or not. I have three fully loaded guns (a .22, .38 and 12 gauge shotgun) lying at easy-hand right now, and this sort of bullshit doesn't fly with me.

No, I don't sell or smoke marijuana (at least, I've not smoked it in many a year, and I've never dealt), but it's this sort of thing that more and more drives me to identify myself as a libertarian, and not a conservative.

Most likely, I've broken ten laws the past week without even realizing it; we're legislated to death, and the WoD is one of the worst offenders. Free country? My ass.


243 posted on 09/29/2006 12:10:11 AM PDT by Mark-in-Kentucky
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To: pandoraou812
pandoraou812 said: "I have also known of parents who fully were aware of what the kids were doing and justified it by saying it brought more money into the household, thats really sad. "

If marijuana was legalized, the value of it would be pennies per pound. If the parents chose to smoke it, then their children probably would too. But the economic incentives would be gone. When is the last time you heard of a police swat team busting down a door, killing a pet, and terrorizing children over the manufacture of alcohol? Even with substantial taxes added, it would be very difficult to compete with commercial producers of alcohol.

The War on Some Drugs is costing us all of our freedoms. Gangsterism has led to anti-gun laws. Cash is assumed to be ill-gotten until proven otherwise, with no lower limit to the amount. Police forces are adopting militaristic processes to oppose heavily armed, heavily financed drug cartels.

The drug laws have created zones in the inner-city areas where it is possible to make a better living outside the law than by seeking education or productive skills. The cultural decay which results have doomed many of our minorities to the worst social conditions imaginable, simply because there will never be a way to eliminate substances that so many people will break laws to obtain.

244 posted on 09/29/2006 12:32:34 AM PDT by William Tell (RKBA for California (rkba.members.sonic.net) - Volunteer by contacting Dave at rkba@sonic.net)
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To: mugs99

"America today has 22.5% of the worlds prisoners. But, after all that time, after all the destroyed lives and after all the wasted resources, prohibited drugs today are cheaper, stronger, and easier to get than they were thirty-five years ago at the beginning of the so-called "war on drugs".


Nonsense...The stats are distorted because certain Asian and Arab countries execute drug dealers. We keep them alive to be released and deal again.


245 posted on 09/29/2006 3:47:00 AM PDT by Wristpin ("The Yankees announce plan to buy every player in Baseball....")
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To: Mark-in-Kentucky

Of course, you'll be dead to, but maybe someone will write a folk song about you.


246 posted on 09/29/2006 5:17:36 AM PDT by Wolfie
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To: phoenix0468
Schenectady, NY is about 170 miles northwest of New York City and hardly qualifies as a suburb of the Big Apple. Blacks migrated to places like this during the industrial expansion of the 1920s and the post-World War II era. As manufacturing moved to non-union states, Mexico, and overseas after 1970, there remained an underclass of welfare recipients, mostly black or Hispanic, who parented young males who became predatory criminals and drug users or dealers.

Not that any of this justifies the heavy handed tactics the SWAT team used in this case. The boy who faced a lawman's shotgun in his face will probably never serve his country in uniform voluntarily, even if he does not fall into the drugs and crime lifestyle.

247 posted on 09/29/2006 5:35:47 AM PDT by Wallace T.
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To: FreeReign
Your point changes -- my point stands.
We have drug dealers because of the war on drugs. My point stands.
Your point isn't a point. There are many creeps, not all of them drug dealers.
.
248 posted on 09/29/2006 7:03:10 AM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: mysterio
The cops should be fired. This dog killing nonsense has to stop. It's bad enough they are kicking down doors to find a plant for the failed war on some drugs. Killing harmless pets is unacceptable.

I agree with you. When I first started reading about the abuses of no-knock raids, one story stood out : A BATF agent who was so angry when they didn't find drugs in a raid, that it stomped a 9 year old boy's pet kitten to death before leaving . It (the BATF agent who commited that act) has a vagina attached to its worthless carcass, which I supposed shouldn't make a difference in how I perceive the event, but it does. So far as I'm aware, it incurred no penalties for an act which can only be explained as a temper tantrum-it was mad because there were no drugs in the household, so no praise, no brownie points, no medal, or whatever it expected to gain from the raid. Unprofessional as well as vicious-a GREAT combination with a badge and a gun!

249 posted on 09/29/2006 7:08:57 AM PDT by Verloona Ti (Moslems are sensitive to everything except the screams of their victims being tortured)
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To: Wristpin
Nonsense...The stats are distorted because certain Asian and Arab countries execute drug dealers. We keep them alive to be released and deal again.

Wrong. Indonesia executes more drug dealers than any other country on the planet. They average three per year. The arab countries execute more people for alcohol than drugs and Iran executes more people for fornication than drugs.
.
250 posted on 09/29/2006 7:13:59 AM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: William Tell

Can't argue with you on that. Something should be done. I think too many people are making money by not making it legal for sure. I know I would rather be around a person smoking pot then drinking. I myself, do neither though when I was younger I did. What I have seen first hand now with drugs is alarming. I had 2 of my older kids go thru terrible addictions with heroin. Spent over 40 thousand on one of them for rehab. Jail is what finally did the trick. Thankfully both are clean & sober and married . The system is in need of change but I don't know when that will happen. I often wonder why we don't bomb the opium fields during this war. I don't have any answers but in regards to why the police come at night and why the dog was shot I know thats how they do things. I am not pro cop though with dealing with my 2 children I sure learned quite a bit. Some truly care and others just have the attitude the kids are worthless.


251 posted on 09/29/2006 7:25:26 AM PDT by pandoraou812 ( barbaric with zero tolerance and dilligaf?)
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To: AirForceBrat23

I'm thinking that if the dog ran into the bathroom, they could have just shut the door.


252 posted on 09/29/2006 7:35:11 AM PDT by WV Mountain Mama (Kids everywhere are cheering because they will never be forced to eat spinach again.)
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To: Hildy
Just last week, Joey Porter's (Pittsburgh Steeler) 2 pit bulls got loose and killed a neighbor's miniature horse. What perplexes me is that the dogs were returned to him. Any other Joe Shmoe's dogs would have been destroyed, even for just a bite. These dogs are now killers and yet returned to the owner, I guess the golden rule was in effect.
253 posted on 09/29/2006 7:39:38 AM PDT by WV Mountain Mama (Kids everywhere are cheering because they will never be forced to eat spinach again.)
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To: dontpethesweatythings

Excellent link to the CATO institute's interactive no-knock map. I love CATO!


254 posted on 09/29/2006 7:45:23 AM PDT by t_skoz ("let me be who I am - let me kick out the jams!")
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To: metmom

If strangers broke down our door and ran into our house no matter what the time, my 5 year old would be swinging. He wouldn't understand what was going on, he would hear yelling, see guns, etc. Now imagine the reaction when being woken up to that chaos. It would most certainly be my reaction too.


255 posted on 09/29/2006 7:46:52 AM PDT by WV Mountain Mama (Kids everywhere are cheering because they will never be forced to eat spinach again.)
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To: phoenix0468

"Do you have children? Do you know what they do, if you have them? If you don't know what you're children do under the roof you provide them then, IMO, you are subject to the fate that they incur. Let's step away from personal attacks, since you know I am not dense at all and realize that from the article you have absolutely no idea how involved the son was in drug dealing. In addition, the officers, regardless of the amount of drugs that were found, had enough of a reason or they wouldn't have had the raid."

Alrighty then, let's see whatcha got. First, I have grown children and know from that experience that I could not have possibly been aware of their every move as teenagers. Later in life they have told me things they did I would never have suspected. If you have kids, and believe otherwise, then you are living in a fantasy world...that or you are abusing their rights and privileges to experience life...keeping them under lock and key 24/7.
Course then again, if they are just the perfect little angels, then aren't you the lucky one...that one in a million parent of teenagers.

I am also speaking from my own experience as a teenager doing things then I would never do today, and my parents never knew and never will. Maybe you lived this quiet sheltered life as a teenager, but that is not the common experience.

Actually we do know what the kid sold and the amounts he sold as asserted by the chief. You did read the article right?

Regardless, this assault was way over the top for the alleged crime. Therefore, I have an opinion already expressed regarding anyone unable to comprehend that.


256 posted on 09/29/2006 7:50:48 AM PDT by takenoprisoner
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To: Sir Gawain
"The dog, a pit bull terrier named Precious, urinated on the floor in fear and tried to run from the police before it was killed, Woodyear said."

That is reason enough to shoot a Pit Bull.

257 posted on 09/29/2006 8:02:40 AM PDT by albee (The best thing you can do for the poor is.....not be one of them. - Eric Hoffer)
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To: pandoraou812
Some truly care and others just have the attitude the kids are worthless

LEAP cares.
.
258 posted on 09/29/2006 8:12:50 AM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: MarkL
[...when the police sieze property in a drug raid, the funds and property go to the state. If the feds perform a drug raid, assisted by the local police, the feds share the booty with the police department.]



During the witch trial period of history (in Europe as well as America), the "convicted" person's property was divied up by the local police, judges, jurists, and various other officials. This provided an obvious incentive to "find" more witches, using torture, forced self incrimination, automatic seizure of property, assumed guilt and burden of proof on the defendant, and other assaults upon liberty now protected by the Constitution. We erode these rights at our peril.
259 posted on 09/29/2006 8:14:15 AM PDT by spinestein (I'm spending this year clinically brain dead......for tax reasons.)
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To: Verloona Ti

The agent stomped a kitten? Sick. I'll get flamed for this, but I would support life in prison for that agent. People like that shouldn't be walking the earth freely.


260 posted on 09/29/2006 8:18:59 AM PDT by mysterio
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