Posted on 09/10/2001 5:43:42 AM PDT by Israel
The suspect offered no resistance when about 20 federal agents entered his home, said Mark James, special agent in charge of the Kansas City office of the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
Authorities would not say who lived in the home, but relatives and neighbors identified the resident as 43-year-old James "Jamie" Schwartz.
The standoff began Thursday afternoon at the home about eight miles north of Salem on Missouri 68 when agents tried to serve a federal search warrant and an occupant refused to come out.
A woman left the home Thursday shortly after officers arrived. James would not say where she was or if she had been arrested. No children were in the home when officers arrived.
James said he could not discuss what prompted the search warrant because it had been sealed by a judge. He would say only that agents "found what we were looking for."
Denton County Sheriff Bob Wofford said his department had previous contact with the suspect but he declined to elaborate.
"We knew there was activity here," Wofford said.
The suspect is expected to be arraigned before a federal magistrate in St. Louis, possibly as early as Monday, James said.
A team of 12 negotiators had been unsuccessful in contacting the man throughout the siege, despite using bullhorns, a telephone and robots equipped with audio and visual capabilities.
James said officers decided to enter the home in part because they were concerned about the man's condition.
"The individual would not answer us or respond to us," James said.
About 100 officers, including some from U.S. Customs, surrounded the home throughout the standoff.
Portions of Missouri 68 were closed and two homes located nearby were evacuated. James said the inconvenience caused by the standoff also was a factor in deciding to enter the home.
Mike and Mary Mrozowicz, who live in a nearby home that was not evacuated, said the ranch-style house also has a mobile home on the property.
The Mrozowiczes said they've seen men wearing camouflage clothing and helmets hiding in the nearby woods with guns.
They said they've seen agents coming and going over the last couple of days, but the agents weren't giving area residents any clues what they were doing there.
The warrant was ordered out of the eastern district of Missouri. Jan Diltz, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in St. Louis, said she could not discuss the warrant.
And unfortunately I have noticed it in myself as well. Time for a few changes.
Dominus vobiscum.
What I am saying is simply this. In the Minneapolis area, we have some people doing some things they shouldn't. Especially in the Bloomington and Richfield area. I'd lay money on it, after my posting, I get pulled over and ticketed. Why? Because some people abuse their power. Don't get me wrong, I have always respected the law, and have never done anything to ask for trouble. However, I have had some injustices done to me by the police because They Could, when I was a kid. Now as an adult, I can tell you that it's very real. The vulgar display of power is Very Real.
The police are doing things they KNOW are constituionally illegal. I realize that they have to uphold the local laws. The problem is that a lot of them aren't saying anything about it, nor are they trying to change things. When they start going door to door for health and welfare inspections, and start confiscating guns, that will be the time that people wake up.
Unfortunately, the sheep will bleat, but nothing will be done.
I didn't have to wait too long. Was in the middle of a conversation on the phone, and all of a sudden, I hear a beep a few clicks, and then disconnected. When I resumed my call with a client, they told me they heard people talking about my business. How quaint...
Maybe it's the paranoia talking, but then again it could be that someone didn't like what I wrote. How nice... I better break out the Wagner, and Mahler CD's to learn how to goose step properly.
Isn't it sad when a guy who loves his work doesn't love the people he does it for? I mean, you must not care for the leadership that tasks your outfit if you want to leave it, which means you have lost respect for the very people in charge of one of the most respected professions in America, police officers. My sister is a deputy, and while she respects many she works with, she has lost all respect for her superiors.
My best friend's dad who retired a few years ago after 30 years on the force, told me some stories that were just out and out bizarre. Cops giving rides to drunks, Cops taking care of their communities, instead of filling quotas. Police being treated with respect because they were pretty well the best, and most trustworthy. My friend's dad was that kind of cop. He is my friend, and never once lied to me about anything. If I ever had any questions, or had any ideas about my community, he answered them Truthfully.
Today's police force, is a lot different. There are good cops, and there are bad cops. The good ones, seem to be uncannily good, and bad, well... we see them all the time. I've met 2 bad cops in my entire life, the rest were great, and some of the best guys on the planet. However.. It's those 2 bad cops, that can really make a bad impression on you, and leave that impression indelible, so that you don't like even the good cops.
What can be done to improve public and Police Relations? I'd say first, get rid of the bureaucracy, and politics. The police should just enforce the laws, and not meet quotas. The average police officer should be empowered to make his own decisions, and make his own calls on each infraction. Rather than adopt a mass punishment mentality. Sensitivity training, is not an answer, a better answer is to make the public aware of who these people are, what they represent, and to respect authority. That way, the average law abiding citizen isn't having a bad time at the hands of police. Let the police save that for the real criminal element.
I'd much rather see a cop do his or her job, make the right decisions, and be able to go home at night feeling like they made the right decisions. As opposed to someone who follows every letter of the law, and is nothing more than a mindless thug of a police state.
Hey, who are you kidding? Everyone knows those garbage cans and trucks are really dangerous. Maybe grendade launchers should be standard issue. Who cares if the workers die from the blast, at least they'll take the enemy with them.
You nailed it. That seems to be the attitude of law enforcement these days.
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