Posted on 07/06/2015 2:09:10 AM PDT by markomalley
It was still dark outside when Jonah (not his real name) heard the pounding on his front door. As luck would have it, he was awake or mostly awake. Hed gotten up at 4:00 a.m. on October 3, 2013, to see his parents off to the airport. They were leaving on a quick trip to raise money for the childrens charity his father runs. Jonah was 16 at the time, old enough to stay home alone for a short time, but not old enough to deal with what awaited him on the other side of the door.
The pounding continued, and Jonah peered out the window to discover its source. To his horror, he saw uniformed officers, their guns drawn. Police, they yelled. We have a warrant. An officer shined a flashlight on a document Jonah couldnt read. Unsure what to do, but unwilling to defy the authorities, he let them in.
The officers sat him down, read him the entire search warrant, and ordered him not to tell anyone about the raid not even school officials. He asked if he could call his parents. They said no. He asked if he could call a lawyer. They said no.
Then, they proceeded to turn his house upside down.
This story should sound familiar. In April, National Review shared the accounts of three women Cindy Archer and two others, Anne and Rachel who related their own terrifying experiences with dawn or pre-dawn police raids. The police brought a battering ram to Archers house, literally watched her dress, and then ran into the bathroom as her partner showered. Anne thought for a moment she was facing a home invasion as investigators poured through her front door and screamed taunts in her face. Police followed Rachel into the bedrooms where her children slept, where they woke to the sight of armed officers looming over them.
The pretense for the October raids was suspected coordination between various conservative organizations and Wisconsin governor Scott Walkers campaign activity that a trial court has held constituted nothing more than entirely legal issue advocacy, if it even occurred. Because theyd had the temerity to engage in this issue advocacy constitutionally protected free speech multiple conservative citizens were subjected to so-called John Doe proceedings by Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm, a Democrat.
A quirky and dangerous Wisconsin legal mechanism, the John Doe proceeding allows, among other things, for expansive and completely secret criminal investigations, supervised not by the citizens of a grand jury but by judges who all too often simply rubber-stamp prosecutors demands. As a prominent Wisconsin conservative and political consultant, Jonahs father was one of Chisholms targets.
The origins of the affair are complex. It began almost four years before the October raids, with a request from Governor Walkers own staff to investigate the loss of $11,242.24 from a local veterans fund. Chisholm waited almost a full year to investigate and then launched his first John Doe investigation, now known as John Doe I. He subsequently expanded that initial investigation no fewer than 18 times, raiding Walkers office and campaign headquarters, his county-executive offices, and the homes of his advisers and supporters in an attempt to make any possible criminal charge the initial embezzlement complaint, sexual misconduct, campaign-finance violations, the alleged misuse of county time and property stick to the governor.
All of this occurred against the backdrop of one of the most dramatic political fights in the country, as Walker and Wisconsins Republican legislature enacted conservative public-employee-union reforms over the objections of tens of thousands of chanting protestors and virtually the entire American Left. Chisholms wife was a teachers union shop steward, and a whistleblower has said that Chisholm felt it was his personal duty to stop Walkers reforms.
He failed. The reforms passed, and Walker won a closely contested recall election. John Doe I claimed a few scalps the initial embezzler, an employee guilty of sexual misconduct, and some convictions for minor campaign violations but the governor himself was unscathed. So Chisholm tried again, launching John Doe II, the comprehensive investigation of conservative issue advocacy that led police to Jonahs door.
Jonahs father may have been the target of the raid on his home, but according to the family, investigators went well beyond the scope of the warrant to seize business records in his mothers possession, including confidential donor and financial information for two conservative Wisconsin nonprofits, which were paralyzed for weeks as a result. Yet despite the overly expansive search, to this day, no one in Jonahs family has been charged with a crime.
The damage to the familys reputation was immense. Soon after the raid, and despite court orders mandating confidentiality (orders that prevented the family from publicly defending themselves), their names leaked to the press. Jonahs father working to help the most disadvantaged kids found himself struggling to defend a professional reputation under siege. In both his day job as a political consultant and his nonprofit work, even the slightest rumor of illegality can cause clients and donors to shy away. As he puts it, when youre hired as a consultant, No matter how good you are, you cant become the issue. A consultant whose home was just raided by law enforcement is, most definitely, an issue for any politician or political movement.
At present, John Doe II is halted. In response to a challenge from Wisconsin conservative activist Eric OKeefe and the Wisconsin Club for Growth, a trial judge blocked multiple prosecution subpoenas, holding that they do not show probable cause that the moving parties committed any violations of the campaign-finance laws. This ruling has been appealed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and a decision that could potentially end Chisholms witch hunts once and for all is expected any day. At least one victim isnt waiting for such a decision before she takes action. Cindy Archer has filed a civil-rights lawsuit against Chisholm, and more suits may be coming.
Still, no lawsuit or court ruling will undo the harm the investigations have already inflicted on their victims. Even reliving the experience of the raid in an interview was difficult for Jonah. He has a deep sense that his home is no longer safe. His family lives in a rural part of their county, and cars especially dark SUVs approaching their driveway now cause him deep, immediate anxiety. His family used to be more politically active; now, they watch what they say. They used to be more trusting, especially of police; now, they assume the worst.
And his mother continues to be terrified by the thought of what could have happened in the raid.
Were so fortunate that hes okay, she says. He could have been in the shower. They could have broken the door down. He could have been shot. Over politics.
Sounds like Chisholm is Wisconsin’s very own Mike Nifong.
Way to go Milwaukee!!
Is it any wonder the police are called jack booted thugs and NAZI Sturm troopers? Will someone defend these evil pricks? Calling all bootlickers. Cleanup in Wisconsin.
“You are certainly stretching it by saying that SWAT and other officers KNEW that they were being used and didn’t care.”
Swat officers knew they were being used,, and they didn’t care.
When a raid is to be executed at 4am, the first question is why it had a night certification. This is normally reserved for unusually dangerous suspects.
They next question on a professional swat team is why is a swat raid called for? Every search warrant does not need swat. They would ask why swat is being used. Is the suspect known to be dangerous? Is the house fortified or hardened? Does the suspect have a record of violence?
If the questions were answered that in lieu of two men in suits at 8am knocking on the door, a 4am raid was being ordered against non violent people, and that the crime was that maybe they had sent emails on state time or some such, then the officers were unprofessional thugs. They violated their oath of office,,,,, period.
And I bet if the families were sworn to secrecy, the Nazi officers were also likewise threatened, or were told that the goal of the warrant was secret, and that their only task is to secure the house.
And yes dear, the officers executing a warrant had damn well better know the justification of every single warrant they execute a raid for. If one of those swat officers had have shot that boy, he would have been investigated for homicide as an individual, and the first question is why were you there, what did you know about this raid, etc. Saying he kicked in the door because he was told but really doesn’t know anything about it wont fly.
Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping!
To get onto The Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping List you must threaten to report me to the Mods if I don't add you to the list...
We cannot continue to rely on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives that weve set. Weve got to have a civilian national security force thats just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded. Barack Hussein Obama, 7/2/2008They dont call it a Civil Defense force, that would imply we need (or perhaps that we deserve) defense. The official name is National Civilian Community Corps.
I think of it as the NatCCC, or more simply, as the NatCs...
There are several reasons my early enthusiasm for Walker is fading. This is one of them.
Me too, BUT, if we did the press would paint us as more paranoid than Nixon.
Perhaps better to wait until elected?
Beware the wrath of a patient man...
Take a look at him. Imagine him in the Legion's garb. You'll see it.
Hear hear! The police were only told one side of the story. Control someone’s information, you control their world view. Control their world view, you control their actions.
They were only pawns, mere tools.
Even then, they presented a warrant and didn’t shoot anyone.
Oh yeah, right down to the bloody gladius.
Outstanding point!
So who is really more guilt?
The one who gave the illegal orders or the order followers?
General warrants....ah who cares the constitution doesn’t apply to the elite
You and I are of like mind. We should meet up again and raid the coastal town of Carthagia.
The order givers. Take out the brain and the hand become inert.
No point at this point...
If we had a large and powerful and educated Christian rights support network, nationwide, whoever sent these thugs to terrorize these Christians would be on the hot seat right now.
It IS their BUSINESS after all. It's how they pay themselves!
Point made.
Given the existing legal statutes, what exactly should Scott Walker be doing?
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