- In recent years, American police forces have called out
SWAT teams 40,000 or more times annually. Last year did you read in your
newspaper or hear on TV news of 110 hostage or terrorist events each day?
No. What then were the SWAT teams doing? They were serving routine warrants
to people who posed no danger to the police or to the public.
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- Occasionally Washington think tanks produce reports that
are not special pleading for donors. One such report is Radley Balko's
"Overkill:
The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America" (Cato Institute,
2006).
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- This 100-page report is extremely important and should
have been published as a book. SWAT teams ("special weapons and tactics")
were once rare and used only for very dangerous situations, often involving
hostages held by armed criminals. Today SWAT teams are deployed for routine
police duties. In the U.S. today, 75-80 percent of SWAT deployments are
for warrant service.
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- In a high percentage of the cases, the SWAT teams forcefully
enter the wrong address, resulting in death, injury, and trauma to perfectly
innocent people. Occasionally, highly keyed-up police kill one another
in the confusion caused by their stun grenades.
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- Mr. Balko reports that the use of paramilitary police
units began in Los Angeles in the 1960s. The militarization of local police
forces got a big boost from Attorney General Ed Meese's "war on drugs"
during the Reagan administration. A National Security Decision Directive
was issued that declared drugs to be a threat to U.S. national security.
In 1988 Congress ordered the National Guard into the domestic drug war.
In 1994 the Department of Defense issued a memorandum authorizing the transfer
of military equipment and technology to state and local police, and Congress
created a program "to facilitate handing military gear over to civilian
police agencies."
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- Today 17,000 local police forces are equipped with such
military equipment as Blackhawk helicopters, machine guns, grenade launchers,
battering rams, explosives, chemical sprays, body armor, night vision,
rappelling gear, and armored vehicles. Some have tanks. In 1999, the New
York Times reported that a retired police chief in New Haven, Conn., told
the newspaper, "I was offered tanks, bazookas, anything I wanted."
Balko reports that in 1997, for example, police departments received 1.2
million pieces of military equipment.
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- With local police forces now armed beyond the standard
of U.S. heavy infantry, police forces have been retrained "to vaporize,
not Mirandize," to use a phrase from Reagan administration Defense
official Lawrence Korb. This leaves the public at the mercy of brutal actions
based on bad police information from paid informers.
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- SWAT team deployments received a huge boost from the
Byrne Justice Assistance Grant program, which gave states federal money
for drug enforcement. Balko explains that "the states then disbursed
the money to local police departments on the basis of each department's
number of drug arrests."
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- With financial incentives to maximize drug arrests and
with idle SWAT teams due to a paucity of hostage or other dangerous situations,
local police chiefs threw their SWAT teams into drug enforcement. In practice,
this has meant using SWAT teams to serve warrants on drug users.
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- SWAT teams serve warrants by breaking into homes and
apartments at night while people are sleeping, often using stun grenades
and other devices to disorient the occupants. As much of the police's drug
information comes from professional informers known as "snitches"
who tip off police for cash rewards, dropped charges, and reduced sentences,
names and addresses are often pulled out of a hat. Balko provides details
for 135 tragic cases of mistaken addresses.
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- SWAT teams are not held accountable for their tragic
mistakes and gratuitous brutality. Police killings got so bad in Albuquerque,
N.M., for example, that the city hired criminologist Sam Walker to conduct
an investigation of police tactics. Killings by police were "off the
charts," Walker found, because the SWAT team "had an organizational
culture that led them to escalate situations upward rather then de-escalating."
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- The mindset of militarized SWAT teams is geared to "taking
out" or killing the suspect thus, the many deaths from SWAT
team utilization. Many innocent people are killed in nighttime SWAT team
entries, because they don't realize that it is the police who have broken
into their homes. They believe they are confronted by dangerous criminals,
and when they try to defend themselves they are shot down by the police.
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- As Lawrence Stratton and I have reported, one of many
corrupting influences on the criminal justice (sic) system is the practice
of paying "snitches" to generate suspects. In 1995 the Boston
Globe profiled people who lived entirely off the fees that they were paid
as police informants. Snitches create suspects by selling a small amount
of marijuana to a person whom they then report to the police as being in
possession of drugs. Balko reports that "an overwhelming number of
mistaken raids take place because police relied on information from confidential
informants." In Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, 87 percent of drug
raids originated in tips from snitches.
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- Many police informers are themselves drug dealers who
avoid arrest and knock off competitors by serving as police snitches.
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- Surveying the deplorable situation, the National Law
Journal concluded: "Criminals have been turned into instruments of
law enforcement, while law enforcement officers have become criminal co-conspirators."
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- Balko believes the problem could be reduced if judges
scrutinized unreliable information before issuing warrants. If judges would
actually do their jobs, there would be fewer innocent victims of SWAT brutality.
However, as long as the war on drugs persists and as long as it produces
financial rewards to police departments, local police forces, saturated
with military weapons and war imagery, will continue to terrorize American
citizens.
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