SWAT training lawsuit
$30,000 settlement is OK'd
By PAT FAHERTY
Mesabi Daily News
Tuesday, March 18th, 2003 11:10:05 PM
Murphy McGinnis Newspapers
DULUTH — St. Louis County will pay $30,000 to settle its share of a lawsuit resulting from a police and sheriff training exercise in Grand Rapids.
The incident took place July 14,1999, as some sheriff department personnel took part in SWAT training at Grand Rapids High School. The scenario was modeled after the April 1999 shootings at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo.
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Grand Rapids Police Department planned the event and was in charge of notifying students and other people who would be at the school, setting up barricades and taking care of other details.
More than 90 men and women took part in the training to prepare area law enforcement agencies for a crisis in a school.
However, three people — Ellen Schafroth, Beverly Wilson and Nikki Miskovich — working near the school, got caught up in the exercise, were accosted by officers and required to lie prone on the floor.
At the time, Miskovich of Coleraine, was a dance instructor at the Reif Center which is located adjacent to the high school. She claimed the SWAT team members entered the wrong building, pointed guns at her and held her on the floor.
The plaintiffs alleged they were pushed down, sworn at, and that the officers assaulted them.
The result was a lawsuit against Grand Rapids, St. Louis County the individual county officers and other parties. The other two plaintiffs — Robert Zuehlke Jr. and David Wilson — are husbands of two of the women.
The case ended up in federal court before Magistrate Judge Raymond L Erickson. He eventually dismissed some of the claims and a jury trial was set for April 28 in Duluth, with a settlement conference March 7.
According to St. Louis County Attorney Alan Mitchell, the plaintiffs wanted to settle for $225,000, while the defendants began negotiations at $18,000. Eventually Grand Rapids and the county made one last offer of $45,000, which the plaintiffs accepted.
The county will pay $30,000 with Grand Rapids putting in $15,000. On Tuesday, Mitchell recommended the county board accept the figure as a "reasonable settlement of a complicated case involving five separate plaintiffs.
“This is a case which St. Louis County might well win after an extensive trial and lengthy appeals; however, if lost the damages could be substantial,” wrote Mitchell in a letter to the board.
Commissioners voted unanimously without discussion, to accept the settlement.
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Pat Faherty covers the Twin Ports of Duluth and Superior for Murphy McGinnis Newspapers.
Personally I think that neutering the officers involved would not be too harsh.