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Thread: Shooting the family pet: The War on Drugs in action

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    Shooting the family pet: The War on Drugs in action

    http://www.alternet.org/drugs/153048..._Drugs/?page=1


    SWAT Teams, Flash-Bang Grenades, Shooting the Family Pet: The Shocking Outcomes of Police Militarization in the War on Drugs



    There are more than 50,000 police paramilitary raids in the US each year – more than 130 every day. Virtually all are for prosecution of drug warrants.


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    November 11, 2011

    In the forty years since Richard Nixon declared a “War on Drugs,” Americans’ perceptions of that war are finally beginning to shift.

    Receding support for Prohibition is happening in large part because of virally circulated news accounts and videos of law enforcement’s disturbingly harsh tactics in the drug war. My former colleagues are making clear that besides causing thousands of deaths worldwide and costing billions of taxpayer dollars, the drug war’s most serious collateral damage has been to undermine the role of civilian law enforcement in our free society.

    In one of the most widely viewed videos, a tiny single-family home is descended upon by a Columbia, Missouri Police Department SWAT team. After pounding on the door and announcing themselves, the cops waste no time. They smash open the door and charge into the unsuspecting family’s home.

    After what sounds like multiple explosions or gunshots, we hear the sound of a dog yelping sharply, as if in pain.

    We then hear several more gunshots or explosions amid the general pandemonium.

    The camera follows the heavily armed and armored officers inside. We watch as they order a woman and a small child, still woozy from being suddenly awakened, into their living room.

    As they are forced onto the floor, a young male is brought into the room. He is handcuffed and pushed against a wall.

    “What did I do? What did I DO?” he shouts, as the woman and the child cower on the floor nearby.

    We then learn the source of the dog’s pained cries.

    “You shot my dog, you shot my DOG!” the man suddenly shouts. “Why did you do that? He was a good dog! He was probably trying to play with you!”

    He, the woman and the child all break into pitiful sobs.

    As of late October, just five months after it was posted, the Columbia police raid video has been viewed nearly two million times on YouTube. The clip quickly ricocheted across cyberspace, generating emotionally charged, outraged calls for the officers to be fired and prosecuted. Or subjected to the same kind of treatment that terrorized their fellow citizens.

    Public indignation over the incident intensified when it was learned that the Columbia SWAT team was executing an eight-day-old search warrant, and that the only things seized were a pipe containing a small amount of marijuana residue. Since possession of small amounts of pot had long ago been essentially decriminalized in Columbia, the man was charged with simple possession of drug paraphernalia, a misdemeanor.

    The reaction of Fox Business Network’s Andrew Napolitano was telling. In a segment about the raid that also found its way onto YouTube, the retired New Jersey Superior Court judge says, “This was America – not East Germany, not Nazi Germany, but middle America!”

    Yet as former Cato staffer Radley Balko, who wrote about the Columbia video, has noted, what’s most remarkable about the raid is that it wasn’t remarkable at all. The only thing that made it unusual was that it was videotaped and made public, thanks to a Freedom of Information Act request by the Columbia Daily Tribune newspaper.

    There are more than 50,000 police paramilitary raids in the United States each year – more than 130 every day. Virtually all are for prosecution of drug warrants, the vast majority involving marijuana. Many jurisdictions use SWAT teams for execution of every search warrant for drugs.



    Just like in Columbia, these drug raids are typically staged in the middle of the night by officers equipped similarly to those depicted in the video: Darth Vader–style Kevlar helmets and body armor, black uniforms, military boots, night vision goggles. The officers are armed with automatic weapons and are sometimes deployed from armored personnel carriers or rappelling from helicopters. Doors are smashed open with battering rams or are ripped from their hinges by ropes tied to vehicles. And, to further disorient those inside, officers are trained to use explosives—“flash-bang” grenades—upon entry. The slightest provocation, including any “furtive” moments on the part of the residents, often results in shots fired.


    Since drug dealers sometimes use dogs to protect their stash, family pets are shot, kicked, or, in the recent case of a New York City raid, thrown out the window.

    At least in Columbia, no human was injured or killed in the crossfire, and (unlike dozens of cases every year across the country), the SWAT team got the address right—even if the huge stash of drugs and money they thought they’d discover was nowhere to be found.

    How did local police departments in a free society ever reach this point?

    Nixon’s use of the word “War” was no accident. From the outset, Washington’s approach to the problems of drug use and addiction has been overtly militaristic in nature.

    “It’s a funny war when the ‘enemy’ is entitled to due process of law and a fair trial,” the nation’s first “Drug Czar,” William Bennett, told Fortunemagazine. Never known for moderation, he later famously urged repeal of habeas corpus in drug cases and even went on to recommend public beheading of drug dealers.

    The federal government has instituted policies that have encouraged local law enforcement agencies to increasingly blur the roles of soldiers and police.

    SWAT, a specialized paramilitary force used in especially dangerous situations—think armed robberies, barricaded suspects, hostages, the Columbine school shootings—had been in existence before the drug war. But today, their mission is almost exclusively the execution of search warrants in drug cases.

    Criminologists Peter Kraska and Louis Cubellis have documented that, as of 1997, 90 percent of American cities with populations of greater than 50,000 had at least one paramilitary or SWAT unit, twice as many as the decade before.

    In the post-9/11 era, paramilitary police units have been formed in such unlikely places as Butler, Missouri (population 4,201); Mt. Orab, Ohio (2,701) and Middleburg, Pennsylvania (1,363). Even college campuses like the University of Central Florida have their own campus police SWAT units, operating independently from state and local police departments or civil authorities.

    The federal government has given local SWAT units access to highly sophisticated equipment, encouraging its use in an ever-more aggressive War on Drugs.

    Beginning with the Military Cooperation and Law Enforcement Act of 1981, the Pentagon gave local and state police access to surplus military equipment for purposes of drug interdiction. By 1997, local police departments around the country had stockpiled 1.2 million pieces of gear, including thousands of military-style M-16 automatic rifles, body armor, helmets, grenade launchers, night vision goggles, even armored personnel carriers and helicopters.

    But the military equipment transfers to local police for drug enforcement were just the first step in Washington’s intensification of the drug war.

    Throughout the 1980s, Congress and the White House together eagerly chipped away at the Civil War–era Posse Comitatus Act, which for more than a century had forbidden use of the military for civilian law enforcement purposes.

    Following Ronald Reagan’s 1986 National Security Directive declaring drugs a threat to national security, Congress ordered the National Guard to aid state drug enforcement efforts. The effect has been to order the American military to search for marijuana plants.

    By 2000, as the Cato Institute’s Diane Cecilia Weber documented, Posse Comitatus had been all but repealed with respect to drug interdiction. The first President Bush went so far as to institute a program of “regional task forces” to facilitate civilian-military cooperation in areas of intelligence sharing, equipment transfers, and training of local police in advanced military assault tactics.


    A police officer’s job is to preserve the peace, to maintain public order on the streets of America’s cities. A soldier’s job is to fight wars on foreign soil. These are two profoundly different roles.

    Tragically, the gradual evolution of local law enforcement into paramilitary units has, over a generation, dramatically changed the culture of police work—in ways the public increasingly and justifiably, finds objectionable.

    The shock-and-awe drug enforcement tactics now employed almost a thousand times each week have needlessly injected a high risk of violence into the prosecution of what are almost always non-violent, consensual crimes.

    For the innocent bystanders who get caught up in them, the paramilitary raids impose a traumatic and lasting punishment where none is justified. Even for the perpetrators, the raids constitute a reversal of the presumption of innocence (and, as evidenced so vividly by the Columbia raid, a grotesquely disproportionate response to a minor—or non-existent—offense).

    Fortunately, we are moving closer and closer to a tipping point in the effort to restore sanity to our drug laws and enforcement priorities.

    For the first time since Gallup began tracking the issue 41 years ago, fully half of Americans now support legalization of marijuana, with the issue now receiving actual majority support (55 percent) on the west coast.

    The changing public attitudes toward marijuana bode well for marijuana policy reform initiatives now being circulated in California, Colorado, Massachusetts, Ohio and Washington State, and for legislation now pending in several state houses to allow medicinal use.

    More and more Americans are coming to realize the staggering human toll—in lives, dollars, and civil liberties—of the drug war. Some of these awakening Americans are police officers—a rapidly growing minority of cops who realize the harm these tactics have done to the people they’ve been hired to serve, the risks to their own safety and wellbeing, and the erosion of public confidence and respect for law enforcement this policy has caused.

    We owe it to ourselves, and to those whose job is to help make our neighborhoods safe, to put an end to the drug war.

    Norm Stamper is former chief of the Seattle Police Department, and an advisory board member of NORML and Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP). He is the author of Breaking Rank: A Top Cop's Exposé of the Dark Side of American Policing (Nation Books, 2005).

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    It's not just drugs anymore. Bush militarized the government agencies like the Food and Drug Administration. They have raided farms for producing raw milk and organic grocery stores. Kids even selling lemonade have been busted. The government has gone completely nuts. You give Bubba some body armor and a MP5 machine gun and he goes nuts. My brother in law used to fly illegal immigrants back to Mexico out of Las Vegas. One day one of the federal immigration officers said he couldn't wait for the day. My brother in law said wait for what? He said the day someone did something that he could use his firearm. He was just hoping for the excuse to shoot one of those bean eating wetbacks.

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    Thumbs down

    Quote Originally Posted by Nitro Express View Post
    one of those bean eating wetbacks.
    How very shit-heel of you.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jhale667 View Post
    How very shit-heel of you.
    Fuck you. It was used in the context of flavoring what that asshole immigration officer thought of them. You are one simple minded fuck.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Nitro Express View Post
    Fuck you. It was used in the context of flavoring what that asshole immigration officer thought of them. You are one simple minded fuck.
    Coming from you that means so much... "in context/flavoring" my ass, Nyquil. Nice try.

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    These fascist pigs aren't going to be happy when they meet my dog Cerberus. They won't have the option of shooting him.
    Eternally Under the Authority of Satan

    Quote Originally Posted by Sockfucker View Post
    I've been in several mental institutions but not in Bakersfield.

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    I find it odd that whenever some asshole like Bernie Madoff gets arrested, they never have a SWAT team raiding their mansion. WTF is up with that?

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    Quote Originally Posted by BITEYOASS View Post
    I find it odd that whenever some asshole like Bernie Madoff gets arrested, they never have a SWAT team raiding their mansion. WTF is up with that?
    Sometimes it is needed in fraud cases. I am in no way condoning the excessive use of SWAT in drug raids, but SWAT is used in fraud and corruption cases too. Recall the shyster guitar man from nashville, I for get his name. And this latest one:

    In 2010, the Washington Post ran a piece about the U.S. Department of Education being in the market for 27 shotguns.

    Those curious about what the Department of Education could be doing with those shotguns got an illustrated answer yesterday when this story ran: a Stockton, Calif., man was pulled out of his house by a SWAT team based on a warrant signed by the Department of Education’s Office of the Inspector General.


    Initial reports suggested the SWAT team was pursuing unpaid student loans left by Kenneth Wright’s estranged wife Michelle — an allegation that made little sense to us at insideARM at the time. However, Wright, the gentlemen on the wrong end of a knee-to-the-back, gave a heart-felt plea to other student loan holders as part of a television news piece, reminding them that student loans are no laughing matter, and need to be repaid.

    The problem, of course, is that it turns out this wasn’t so much a defaulted-student-loan story; it was a financial-fraud-using-student-loans story.

    Walter Steele, a commentor on yesterday’s insideARM.com piece, called it: “Based on my long standing experience in the student loan industry and the extreme measures that were taken by the US Department of Education in this instance, I would have to guess (and that is exactly what it is, a guess based on this story) that this was the culmination of an extensive investigation into a student loan fraud ring. Student loan fraud rings cost the industry hundreds of millions of dollars every year and are investigated by not only the originating entity but also the US Department of Justice and the FBI.”

    In an update, it’s revealed that the Department of Education was interested in Kenneth Wright’s estranged wife not because of late student loans, but because of allegations of student loan fraud.

    Justin Hamilton of the Department of Education was very careful to correct any mistaken perceptions about the nature of the raid: “The Inspector General’s office does not execute search warrants for late loan payments.”

    For the collections industry in particular, this correction is important. It’s too easy for an incorrect story about alleged SWAT-team-led collection methods to lodge in the minds of those already unfairly critical of the industry. The conversation we should be having with consumers is about managing finances and controlling debt; it should not have to be about correcting false stories that paint the industry in a negative light.

    What happens next to Michelle and Kenneth Wright is uncertain. The Department of Education’s investigation is ongoing, so there’s little beyond “Yep: this is a fraud case” that they can reveal. As we learn more we’ll share it with you.
    "I have heard there are troubles of more than one kind. - Some come from ahead and some come from behind. - But I've bought a big bat. I'm all ready you see. - Now my troubles are going to have troubles with me!" ~ Dr. Seuss
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    And a good reminder not all shysters are of the 1% that defrauded USAmerica through corporate manipulations.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jhale667 View Post
    Coming from you that means so much... "in context/flavoring" my ass, Nyquil. Nice try.
    Oh. I guess you are God and can read my mind. Yeah, you are God and know everything and can make 100% accurate judgement's on a person's character.
    Last edited by Nitro Express; 11-18-2011 at 11:55 AM.

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    It's nazi shit. Plain and simple. The country is going broke and the people in power want to stay in power so you steal some money and hire some thugs. If it can't be fixed politically it's going to get real nasty folks.

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    Thumbs down Yeah, yeah...worship me or die. Whatever.

    Quote Originally Posted by Nitro Express View Post
    Oh. I guess you are God and can read my mind. Yeah, you are God and know everything and can make 100% accurate judgement's on a person's character.
    Give it up dude...or learn to put quotation marks around something you're stating as "humor" so you don't get confused with a "douche" who's hurling racial epithets as part of his "regular" post, it's pretty simple.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jhale667 View Post
    Give it up dude...or learn to put quotation marks around something you're stating as "humor" so you don't get confused with a "douche" who's hurling racial epithets as part of his "regular" post, it's pretty simple.
    I would like to take this opportunity to tell jhale to FUCK OFF!


    Thanks and have a nice day. BEANER...

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    "nigga please" to all the stupid bickering.
    My late sister had a similar thing happen years ago when the cops broke down her door and held her on the floof with a gun to her head until they realizd they simply had the wrong address... Apparently The drug dealers lived next door. I guess it was still "her fault for living next to suspected criminals" anyway... right?

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    Arrow Wondered how long it'd take your sorry ass to chime in...

    Quote Originally Posted by Jagermeister View Post
    I would like to take this opportunity to tell Nyquil to stop stealing my shtick!


    Oh, and to remind everyone that I'm a huge LOSER...

    Go die in a fire.

    :dafinger:


    Back on topic... someone's dog was killed by the cops at an OWS event too...basically for barking at the cops.

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    "Girl, you can't even call this shit a war."

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    "Wars end."

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    Quote Originally Posted by jhale667 View Post
    How very shit-heel of you.

    Hmmm...I read it as Nitro quoting what the guy with the gun was saying. Not his own words.
    “Great losses often bring only a numb shock. To truly plunge a victim into misery, you must overwhelm him with many small sufferings.”

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    Quote Originally Posted by sadaist View Post
    Hmmm...I read it as Nitro quoting what the guy with the gun was saying. Not his own words.
    same here. and while we're off topic, what kind of fucking moron would take a dog/kid/person in wheelchair to an ows event?

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    Quote Originally Posted by ashstralia View Post
    same here. and while we're off topic, what kind of fucking moron would take a dog/kid/person in wheelchair to an ows event?
    Didn't read like a quote to me, more like enthusiam for the description that proceeded it, but whatever, let's move on.

    I can almost see taking your kid to show them how democracy is supposed to work, but at the same time you probably don't wanna take a kid to something that could potentially get violent - same thing with an animal in a crowd situation. Too much of a chance something goes south...and while we're off topic, what cop feels it necessary to pepper spray an 84 year old woman, or punch an unarmed woman in the face for showing you the court order that says she has the right to be there protesting? All kinds of wrong to be had.

    It's kind of a lose/lose situation, an animal in a house that's being raided, though...the dog's natural instinct is to alert and protect it's owner, and it's not like they really have the time or means to subdue it without harming it. I feel bad for the dogs in both situations.

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    cops here have been known to take meat to drug busts. if that fails, pepper spray. the real baddies tend to have really aggro dogs.

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