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Timeframe

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SWAT Overkill: The Danger of a Paramilitary Police Force

In a guest editorial, law professor and instapundit.com blogger Glenn Reynolds argues that overagressive tactics and surplus military gear have turned some police units into a dangerous menace.


SWAT
Glenn Reynolds

SOLDIERS AND POLICE are supposed to be different. Soldiers are aimed at enemies from outside the country. They are trained to kill those enemies, and their supporters. In fact, “killing people and breaking things” are their main reasons for existence.

Police look inward. They’re supposed to protect their fellow citizens from criminals, and to maintain order with a minimum of force.

It’s the difference between Audie Murphy and Andy Griffith. But nowadays, police are looking, and acting, more like soldiers than cops, with bad consequences. And those who suffer the consequences are usually innocent civilians. The trend toward militarizing police began in the ’60s and ’70s when standoffs with the Black Panthers, the Symbionese Liberation Army, and the University of Texas bell tower gunman Charles Whitman convinced many police departments that they needed more than .38 specials to deal with unusual, high-intensity threats. In 1965 Los Angeles inspector Daryl Gates, who later became police chief, signed off on the formation of a specially trained and equipped unit that he wanted to call the Special Weapons Attack Team. (The name was changed to the more palatable Special Weapons and Tactics). SWAT programs soon expanded beyond big cities with gang problems.

Abetting this trend was the federal government’s willingness to make surplus military equipment available to police and sheriffs’ departments. All sorts of hardware is available, from M-16s to body armor to armored personnel carriers and even helicopters. Lots of police departments grabbed the gear and started SWAT teams, even if they had no real need for them. The materiel was free, and it was fun. I don’t blame the police. Heck, if somebody gave me a Bradley Fighting Vehicle to play with, I’d probably start a SWAT team, too—so long as I didn’t have to foot the maintenance bill.

Thus, the sheriff’s department in landlocked Boone County, Ind., has an amphibious armored personnel carrier. (According to that county’s sheriff-elect, the vehicle has been used to deliver prescriptions to snow-bound elderly residents, and to provide protection during a suspected hostage situation.) Jasper, Fla.,—with 2000 inhabitants and two murders in the past 12 years—obtained seven M-16s from the federal government, leading an area newspaper to run a story with the subhead, “Three stoplights, seven M-16s.”

This approach, though, has led to problems both obvious and subtle. The obvious problem should be especially apparent to readers of this magazine: Once you’ve got a cool tool, you kind of want to use it. That’s true whether it’s a pneumatic drill, a laser level or an armored fighting vehicle. SWAT teams, designed to deal with rare events, wound up doing routine police work, like serving drug warrants.

The subtle effect is also real: Dress like a soldier and you think you’re at war. And, in wartime, civil liberties—or possible innocence—of the people on “the other side” don’t come up much. But the police aren’t at war with the citizens they serve, or at least they’re not supposed to be.

The combination of these two factors has led to some tragic mistakes: “no knock” drug raids, involving “dynamic entry,” where the wrong house has been targeted or where the raid was based on informants’ tips that turned out to be just plain wrong.

On Sept. 23, 2006, a SWAT team descended on the home of a farmer and his schoolteacher wife in Bedford County, Va. “I was held at gunpoint, searched, taunted and led into the house,” A.J. Nuckols wrote to his local paper. “I was scared beyond description. I feared there had been a murder and I was a suspect.” When the couple’s three children came home, the police grilled them, too. The family was held under guard for five hours as the SWAT team ransacked the place, seizing computers, a digital camera, DVDs and VHS tapes. Ten days later, the cops returned the belongings. It turned out that a special anti-child-porn police unit had made a mistake while tracing an computer address and sent the SWAT team to the wrong home.

Sometimes, homeowners are killed in these actions; other times, it’s the officers. When a narcotics task force raided a duplex apartment in Jefferson Davis County, Miss., in 2001, they arrested one tenant, then burst into the adjacent apartment of Cory Maye. Thinking a burglar had broken into the bedroom he shared with his toddler daughter. Maye shot the officer fatally. Maye was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. However, his sentencing was overturned, and a motion for a new trial is still pending.

And, in a case that is now drawing national attention, 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston, who lived in a high-crime neighborhood of Atlanta, recently opened fire on police when they broke down her door while executing a drug warrant. They returned fire, killing her. It’s hard to believe any of this would have happened had the police taken a less aggressive approach in the first place.

It used to be that police came to the door, announced themselves and, once a homeowner responded, entered the premises. Most policemen still work this way. But an alarming number now break down doors first and ask questions later. Don’t get me wrong: Police often do dangerous work and they need equipment that’s going to protect them. And dynamic entry is valid when dealing with desperate criminals, but these tactics put ordinary citizens—and the police—at risk. And when they do, it’s often hard to get redress. Lawsuits against police and supervisors face strict legal limits in the form of “qualified immunity,” and prosecutors, who work with the police on a regular basis, are unlikely to bring criminal charges against officers who negligently kill people. But homeowners confronted with tactics like flash-bang grenades and shouting that are intended to disorient targets, tend to be held to a much higher standard. The result, as in the Cory Maye case, is that people who do the laudable thing and defend their homes against unknown, armed intruders sometimes wind up being prosecuted for murder.

I discussed the issue with political commentator Radley Balko, who wrote a troubling report titled “Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America.” Balko said that the problem is more common than people realize. He suggests that accountability and transparency are what we need. I agree. Police raids should be videotaped, in an archival format that discourages tampering. And I think we need legal reform, too. Police who raid the wrong house, or who fail to give homeowners adequate warning except in truly life-or-death situations, shouldn’t benefit from official immunity.

Our homes are supposed to be our castles. The police shouldn’t treat them like enemy camps.
 
Timeframe- i am kind of curious as to why you posted this on the SWAT magazine forum?
Trolling, or just ignorant of what SWAT magazine actually is- and does.

Your paste story is interesting.
Are you aware that the Sheriff elect of Boone County IN is possibly the most pro 2nd Amendment in the entire country?
Are you aware that his predecessors have permitted training of civilians on the SD range, and that Sheriff Elect Campbell is in charge of that training- and has been for years.
Are you aware that he also writes for SWAT?

Re the shock of the author that Boone County has an amphibious APC, in (of all things) a landlocked county.
Perhaps the author was to busy tripping over assumptions to understand that there are bodies of water in most counties, but facts shouldn't interfere with theory now, should it?
Note that the esteemed law professor/ blogger failed to mention that during the described Hostage Situation, the minute the SWAT team rolled up in the APC, the situation was diffused?
You don't fight from a position of inferiority. The application of force, within the constraints of the law, is what limits the loss of life.
The use of police tactical teams normally ends with no physical force used.
If a community police office- Mr Nice Guy, attempted to do the same, significantly more people- Cops, hostages and criminals would be hurt or killed.

Oversight- be it on cops, Rabbi's, lawyers and truck drivers is always a good thing.
However, if cops can't handle a situation, they get hammered. If they handle it correctly, they get hammered.
I am amazed at the ex-spurts on the internet, but the world is a constantly changing thing, and the post 9/11 world is likely to chang even more.

You need to do your research before you post.
 
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I was just about to fire the red-star cluster on this, again. But Pat has taken care of that.
This theme has reared it ugly head again and again by those who fail to conduct logical research beyond their own opinions, know nothing of the subject matter at hand (thereby only regurgitating someone else's banter), nor seek out those that are really in the know.
 
Roger, apparently he did not have an understanding of what the SWAT magazine forum actually is.

Breacher- good to hear from you. How are the dogs?
 
Police need to be held accountable for their actions. That's the only way they'll earn the respect so many - but certainly not all - deserve.
bill adama said:
There's a reason we seperate the military from the police. One fights the enemy of the state while the other serves and protects the people. When the military becomes both then the enemies of the state tend to become the people.
 
Redworm- everyone needs to be accountable for their actions.
Cops have greater authority then average citizens in order to properly carry out their job- which is enforcing laws.
They also have greater oversite, and less rights under job regulations and some laws, and are normally held very much more accountable for their actions than most other job titles.

No one likes to deal with cops.
The avearge interaction with cops is always strained.
They are placing you unders arrest.
They are issuing you a summons for a traffic infraction.
They are coming to tell you that a family member is dead.
They are telling you that your hose/ store has been burglarized and there is little hope that you will recover anything.
They are telling you that your darling. precious daughter is now brain dead in a hospital because she was really a tweaker.

And cops by and large deal primarily with people who lie. Most of the time, most whom i have interacted with when still a cop would lie even if telling the truth was sufficient to keep them free.

The original poster placed a paste job up that held one of the staunchest supporters of the 2nd Ammendment up for ridicule. Want to guess how this make him feel for what he has done for the citizens of his county?

Want to lose your gun rights? Keep trying to drive a wedge betwwn cops and civilians.
 
Redworm- take a good look at the OP. The blogger hasn't a clue about what is, and what isn't.
Cops are paramilitary. Always were- always will be.
They have discipline that is enforced by regulations. They have to render respect to superior officers (the salute). They carry guns.

However, you believe what you want to.
There is a reason why a lot of very good people seldom visit here.

Adios, and enjoy your life.
 
Cops are paramilitary. Always were- always will be.
They have discipline that is enforced by regulations. They have to render respect to superior officers (the salute). They carry guns.

You're correct...by those standards the police have always been paramilitary.

What we're talking about, however, is using what are basically straight-up military tactics in the execution of what are all too often "routine*" drug warrants. Tactics that basically mirror the tactics our soldiers would use to raid the houses of suspected insurgents in Iraq. This is the kind of thing that might seem reasonable if used in cases where the risk of violence to the officers is unusually high (say, a crackhouse known to be full of heavily armed gang members)...less so for the raids of marijuana dealers with no history of violence.

SWAT teams are necessary. They have a purpose, and I'd rather have them around than not. However, the problem is that for some reason we're not okay having a group of police who do nothing but "sit around**" and train for the sporadic events in which they are needed (hostage situations, the aforementioned crackhouse full of dangerous gang members, whatever)...I don't see why not, that's what the military does for the long stints between wars and short stints between deployments. But for for whatever reason we seem to think that SWAT teams should be out "doing something**" more often. We also saw that people were managing to dispose of evidence when the police would show up, leading to fewer drug convictions.

So somebody had the bright idea that sending what is essentially a military team to assault citizens' homes like they're the 82nd Airborne. Great idea, except that A) some people who would be otherwise nonviolent seem to become so when surprised by people suddenly and violently entering their home (who knew) and B) sometimes they screw up and enter the wrong home (or the warrant is actually drawn up against innocent people...you know, that's why we have trials), or C) both A) and B).

A is bad. B is really bad. C is downright tragic. But, as we've discussed in other threads, the law enforcement community as a whole seems to have decided that the few innocent deaths, and other quasi-innocent (people who are otherwise nonviolent and not guilty of crimes warranting death) deaths are well worth it in the name of preserving evidence and attaining a higher conviction rate.

I suppose if you look at it statistically, it's worth it. Then again, the number of deaths from terrorist attacks is pretty statistically insignificant and we don't seem to think those are acceptable. We certainly try not to adopt policies that we know will cause more.

This is what happens when you declare "war" on your own people. Suddenly innocent citizens can start to look like the enemy, and "collateral damage" becomes more and more acceptable.

* - Don't worry, I know there is really no such thing as a "routine" drug warrant. Or a routine surgery, or a routine combat patrol. I'm speaking relatively.

** - Note that this is not how I feel. As a soldier, I know very well the value of training, especially for the kind of jobs these guys are expected to do. I know that training certainly doesn't qualify as "sitting around," and certainly does qualify as "doing something"...something very important.
 
Redworm- take a good look at the OP. The blogger hasn't a clue about what is, and what isn't.
Cops are paramilitary. Always were- always will be.
They have discipline that is enforced by regulations. They have to render respect to superior officers (the salute). They carry guns.

However, you believe what you want to.
There is a reason why a lot of very good people seldom visit here.

Adios, and enjoy your life.
Absolutely not. They have not always been paramilitary, not by any common sense definition of that word.

If you want to keep your gun rights you'll realize that the most powerful tool Uncle Sam has against gun owners is the War on Drugs. A tool wielded by those very same paramilitary cops.
 
Oh yeah, I totally forgot about this part:

The original poster placed a paste job up that held one of the staunchest supporters of the 2nd Ammendment up for ridicule. Want to guess how this make him feel for what he has done for the citizens of his county?

What does a person's viewpoint on one issue have to do with criticizing them for their viewpoint on another? I fail to see how my right to keep and bear arms is in any way related to law enforcement's privilege to kick down my door in the middle of the night and shoot me if I don't react properly while half-asleep.
 
Until recent times the military's sole purpose was to destroy and kill till the enemy said uncle. Recently we have branched out into Civil Affairs to help with infrastructure and other civil matters.

I think of the police mission as to provide protection and order maintenance and to preserve life. There are probably some bad apples in SWAT or the police chain of command who let stuff go wrong and give SWAT a bad name.

I have an SWAT instructor/team member in one of my courses and have had him as an assitant in several other courses. He strikes me as being a very professional and polite person. He is very adamant about following procedure and the law. If most SWAT guys are like him I have a very hard time imagining him terrorizing citizens. I concede that there are bad apples in any profession that give the vast majority a bad name.
 
I have an SWAT instructor/team member in one of my courses and have had him as an assitant in several other courses. He strikes me as being a very professional and polite person. He is very adamant about following procedure and the law. If most SWAT guys are like him I have a very hard time imagining him terrorizing citizens. I concede that there are bad apples in any profession that give the vast majority a bad name.

I actually know a couple members of SWAT teams up here...great guys. I don't think most people are judging SWAT members...even the paper by Balko doesn't necessarily do that. They're questioning the policies and procedures that they're following.

I can't personally blame any individual SWAT member for firing on anybody who fires up him. That's common sense, and officers do and should have the ability to defend themselves (the Balko paper reasserts this repeatedly as well). I, along with others, am questioning the policies set at higher levels that is injecting a SWAT team into a situation that would otherwise have an incredibly low relative risk of violence.

When a routine drug warrant turns into a bloodbath, or when an innocent homeowner dies thinking he's defending his family, I don't blame the SWAT team. I blame the ones that put them there.
 
The problem with the misuse of SWAT teams might lie with the administrators over the department. If you consider that there is a continuum of force from a flyswatter to a sledgehammer you want to use the lowest force on that continuum possible. Could it be that in order to present to the public I'm a tough guy on criminals that the use of SWAT is seen as good publicity by the department leadership?

What are the criteria that trigger SWAT usage? I am sure there is a risk assement done and if certain criteria are met then SWAT is called in. Maybe those need to be examined? maybe something as small as the suspect is an owner of a firearms owner might trigger it in some departments even though he doesnt have a past history of violence.
 
The problem with the misuse of SWAT teams might lie with the administrators over the department. If you consider that there is a continuum of force from a flyswatter to a sledgehammer you want to use the lowest force on that continuum possible. Could it be that in order to present to the public I'm a tough guy on criminals that the use of SWAT is seen as good publicity by the department leadership?

Both department leadership and political leadership, I suspect. People don't win elections by being "soft on crime," after all.

What are the criteria that trigger SWAT usage? I am sure there is a risk assement done and if certain criteria are met then SWAT is called in. Maybe those need to be examined? maybe something as small as the suspect is an owner of a firearms owner might trigger it in some departments even though he doesnt have a past history of violence.

SWAT specifically, I don't know. From what I've read, though, "no-knock" warrants can be issued solely due to the disposable nature of the evidence (especially concerning drugs) in order to keep it from being destroyed before police can get to it. They aren't always due to a high risk of violence. That's a large part of the problem people like me have with them.

And I imagine once you've authorized a no-knock warrant, using SWAT is probably a no-brainer as those are the guys best trained and best equipped to execute such a raid.

I'd actually say the problem comes mostly from higher-up in the LEO/Justice community (police chiefs, judges, DA's, etc)...except I haven't heard very many "lower echelon" LEOs speak out against the practice either. Instead, as in the thread about the 92-year-old woman shot down in Georgia, it turns into a big "us vs. them" battle. So instead I feel it's just a problem with the entire law enforcement community in general. EDIT: I'd love to have my mind changed, though.
 
I don't know here- I am asking and not trying to make a point- but how many police officers were being killed each year serving warrants before SWAT became the standard, and how many citizens and cops are being killed in those same situations now? Are there any numbers available?
 
I don't know here- I am asking and not trying to make a point- but how many police officers were being killed each year serving warrants before SWAT became the standard, and how many citizens and cops are being killed in those same situations now? Are there any numbers available?

If you limit it to innocent civilians, I imagine the number killed prior to SWAT would have to be near zero...law-abiding citizens don't generally pull out guns when people knock on their door, just when persons unknown kick it down.

As for number of officers killed/wounded before and after this practice became common, I have no idea. But I have to ask, is there some ratio that would be acceptable? If we assume the number of innocents killed from "knock and wait" raids was zero (which I think is a fairly valid assumption), then we're basically saying that an additional innocent death is acceptable for every X officers saved.

I think X ought to be a very high number. Anybody who thinks otherwise should probably consider a career in sales.

And, in case anybody has forgotten, this is coming from a US soldier and Iraq veteran, so I don't need to be lectured about "putting my life on the line" either. Not directed at you, divemedic...but at anybody else who might be looking to respond.
 
Militarization of the Police

All:

Thanks for the heads up about this posting.

I learned of the article one day this week when a "Fact Checker" called to verify we have a V150 APC. As folks have called us before about this topic (some misrepresenting what they were writing about) I always ask about the article content. Regarldess of the spin, we always answer the questions.

When told it was an opinion piece, I told the fact checker that a good journalist would ask follow-up questions such as:

"Why do you have it?"
"How do you use it?"

As they didn't ask, I told them. (I will say they called me back a few hours later and told me they were adding some of my comments. They did, on a very limited basis.)

My response here must be brief as I am headed to the range shortly for TD 2 of a Gunsite Off Site Carbine Class hosted at the Boone County IN Sheriff's Range. (18 degrees at the moment.) As Pat was kind to note, we proudly have citizens of our great Republic training alongside the fine officers of my department and neighboring agencies.

We do have a V150 LAPC courtesy of the USG. We have approximately $4000 in a multi-hundred thousand dollar vehicle (split among 3 participating agencies.) We had to sell the idea to one Sheriff, one Town Marshal, and one Police Chief to get approval. This was after we spoke to the EMS Director and EMA Director to see if they could see value in its use. Finally, we had to go to the elected County Commissioners (CEO of IN county government) for their approval.

This is a rescue vehicle. While land-locked, we do receive very heavy snow. Our first use of the V150 was to deliver prescription medications to snow bound county residents. Amphibious operations out of a local gravel pit? I assure that thought is laughable.

Did you watch the television during the Columbine tragedy? They were using an ambulance as a moving shield to move officers and kids in and out. Not the proper use of a resource. (Nor is it really a bullet shield.) In our active shooter training (We just completed this again for all county officers this week.), we use the V150 as a bullet resistant moving shield.

Actual operations, we bring it up (With a trained driver. ALL operators MUST annually successfully complete an Emergency Vehicle Operations Course with a state certified EVO Instructor) to stage with a Fire Engine and ALS Ambulance. Ready rescue that should stop .30 bullets.

In the event something bad happens to officers or citizens, we have a movable bullet shield to bring in our Tactical Medic, load the injured up, begin immediate treatment, and get them out of the hot zone.

We also had a suicidal person who would not come out of his house nor communicate on land-line or cellular phone. (He was armed.) We took the negotiators to the front door of the residence and hailed with our PA. A few moments later, the deterrent effect of our V150 also came into play as the person responded to the telephone calls and surrendered a short time later.

It is militarization or simply proper use of a resource that our taxpayers have paid for once and now can be returned to our local communities.

Leadership and ethics are what is important here. (Should I blame all authors for pornography because it is printed?)

What I have said above is a synopsis of what I said to the Fact Checker.

Time to head to the Range.

Thanks for allowing me the bandwidth to respond.

Respectfully,


Capt. Ken Campbell
Sheriff-Elect, Boone County Indiana
 
They also have greater oversite, and less rights under job regulations and some laws, and are normally held very much more accountable for their actions than most other job titles.

Your joking, I would hope that statement was true. For some, probably most police departments are like that. But, I can post so many incidents where your statement is false.
 
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