Another botched no-knock raid

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
But this time they raided the mayor's house and he is not only pissed, he is calling for a federal civil rights violation investigation.

This is just sad and it is fortuitous that no human was killed during this raid.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-mayor0807,0,4563211.story?page=1

Prince George's raid prompts call for probe
Berwyn Heights mayor denounces police tactics
By Doug Donovan | Sun reporter
8:18 PM EDT, August 7, 2008

When the shooting stopped, two dogs lay dead. A mayor sat in his boxers, hands bound behind his back. His handcuffed mother-in-law was sprawled on the kitchen floor, lying beside the body of one of the family pets that police had killed before her eyes.

After the raid, Prince George's County police officials who burst into the home of Berwyn Heights' mayor last week seized the same unopened package of marijuana that an undercover officer had delivered an hour earlier.

What police left behind was a house stained with blood and a trail of questions about their conduct. No other evidence of illegal activity was found, and no one was arrested at Mayor Cheye Calvo's home in this small bedroom community near College Park.

This week Prince George's police arrested two men for orchestrating a plot to deliver marijuana to the addresses of unsuspecting recipients -- among them, Calvo's wife, Trinity Tomsic.

Yet neither county Police Chief Melvin C. High nor Sheriff Michael A. Jackson have apologized to him, his wife or her mother, Georgia Porter, for the raid that traumatized the family and killed their black Labrador retrievers, Payton and Chase.

Thursday, Calvo called on the U.S. Justice Department's civil rights division to investigate the raid and other similar actions by Prince George's law enforcement. He said officers burst into his house without knocking or announcing themselves, in violation of the warrant they had.

"Trinity was an innocent and random victim of identity theft. Apparently, so were four or five other county residents whose names and addresses were stolen and used as addresses on drug packages," Calvo said at a news conference outside his house, near a garden of tomatoes and strawberries.

"However, Trinity and our family have not been treated as victims of a crime. Instead, our home was invaded. Our two beloved Labrador retrievers are dead. My mother-in-law and I were tied up for nearly two hours," he said. "We were harmed by the very people who took an oath to protect us."

Berwyn Heights police Chief Patrick A. Murphy appeared with the mayor Thursday and said his agency was never informed of the investigation, despite an existing memorandum of understanding to work together on such operations.

He said not knowing about the raid could have led his officers to fire upon the sheriff's SWAT team because its members were wearing street clothes, masks and carrying weapons as they approached the mayor's house.

"What about the safety of my officers?" Murphy said. If consulted, he added, "We could have gotten the mayor to put the dogs away and consent to a search."

Police officials in Arizona first intercepted the package when a drug-sniffing dog alerted them to the presence of marijuana. It was addressed to Tomsic. An undercover officer in Prince George's delivered the package near 6 p.m. and was told by Calvo's mother-in-law to leave it on the porch, according to Calvo's attorney, Timothy Maloney.

Prince George's County police arrested two men involved in a scheme to transport marijuana. Once packages were dropped off by a deliveryman, a suspect would pick them up -- with the addressee oblivious to the plot. Police seized a half-dozen packages that contained about 417 pounds of marijuana, including the 32 pounds delivered to Tomsic, the Associated Press reported.

Last Tuesday, the mayor arrived home from his full-time job as an executive with SEED Foundation, which establishes urban public charter schools. He took the unopened package inside and placed it on a table near the door. He changed clothes and walked the dogs, waving to the men and women sitting in cars near his home. He did not know they were police.

He returned and went upstairs to get dressed for an event. As he changed clothes, SWAT team members darted across the fenced-in lot. Porter, 50, was cooking artichokes in the kitchen and screamed when she saw the approaching masked men with guns.

The door was kicked in and gunshots rang out, Calvo said. Police killed one dog, Payton -- named for football running back Walter Payton -- even though Porter was standing next to him.

Police have said the dogs "engaged" officers. Calvo confirmed that Payton probably moved toward the door but would have ultimately done nothing more than lick them.

"He was an aggressive licker," said Calvo.

Cheryl Compton, a neighbor, said her two sons, 5-year-old Cody and 7-year-old Ty, played with the mayor's dogs all the time, and that everyone but the Prince George's County police knew where Calvo lived.

"I would have let them stay in a yard by themselves with those dogs," Compton said. "It really upsets me to think that I don't feel safe in my home. If they were to shoot our dog, Amber, I would be outraged."

Chase was shot while running away from sheriff's deputies, Calvo said.

"He was hunted down and shot in the back while he fled," he said. "They didn't deserve to die. They don't deserve to be blamed for their deaths."

Calvo, 37, who has been mayor since 2004, was told to walk backward down the stairs with his hands in the air. He was wearing only boxers and socks. Police handcuffed him and placed him in the living room. His mother-in-law was also cuffed and made to lie on the kitchen floor next to Payton's body.

Police said they were allowed to enter the house without announcing their presence because Porter screamed and because they had a "no-knock" warrant. Calvo and his attorney, Maloney, say that is not true.

When Tomsic arrived home, she said, she thought the house had been robbed and that police had responded with an impressive show of force. But when she saw the blood and learned what had happened to her dogs, she was in shock.

"They were my kids," said Tomsic, 33, an employee with Maryland's Department of Human Resources. "All I could see was the blood and the tissue of the dogs."

Cleaning the blood, which police tracked throughout the house, was the top priority after the police left four hours after the raid, Calvo said.

"The blood was horrendous," Calvo said. "They had tracked it everywhere."

The couple bought the corner lot home nearly three years ago and asked Porter to move from Utah to live with them about 13 months ago. On the front fence, supporters have draped an American flag banner that reads, "Cheye & Trinity We Support You." Dozens of people have written personal messages to the family on the banner.

Robert Kovalchik, a neighbor and Calvo's high school history teacher at Parkdale High School, said he was shocked that county officials had not apologized.

"This smacks of something from Nazi Germany," Kovalchik said.

Calvo said he wants federal officials to examine policies that he said have led Prince George's police officials to serve warrants on wrong addresses and kill family pets before.

In once such case, Prince George's sheriff's deputies executed a warrant on the home of Frank and Pamela Myers of Accokeek in November. The Myers told sheriffs that they had the wrong address as their dog began barking from the yard. The couple asked if they could retrieve their dog, but deputies refused. Minutes later, two shots were fired and the dog was killed, according to a notice of a tort claims filed by attorney Michael J. Winkelman. The Myers were never charged and nothing was seized from their house.

"This has happened before, and without oversight, it will happen again," Calvo said.

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Not anymore. With the cell phone revolution, two guys handle delivery, while two others deal with payment. That keeps the narcs spread thin. If one pair is caught ... either there's money with no drugs, or drugs with no money.

This ploy is disturbingly simple. The dealer has an actual courrier service deliver this package to whatever address. 90% of the time, noone's home and it's left on the stoop. That's the instructions with the package. The pickup guy swings by and collects it, if there's noone casing the place. If there's a couple of guys on the corner sitting in a car drinking coffee for more than an hour .... no pickup. The same sort of pickup is done by credit card/online thieves all the time. Hell, even if you're home ... all the guy has to do it run up and say that the sender had confused his address. Since it's obviously not something you're expecting, that sounds legit and you'll let him sign for it and take it ... or even let him take it even if you're the one who signed. That's why, boys and girls .... never, ever sign for, or accept a package you're not expecting ... and if someone suddenly arrives to collect it ... refuse to let them take it .. no matter how reasonable he sounds. Make the delivery guy take it back to the depot (which, being paid minimum wage, he's not gonna want to do) Call the delivery company and make them aware of it too. C.Y.A.
 
The cops around here tried a middle-of-the-night "No knock" raid on a suspected drug dealers house a few months ago. Cost one cop his life and the guy who shot him got off on self-defence.

*We've also had a glut of home invasions recently.
 
I still think that cops ought to walk up to dealers home, knock on the door & yell POLICE! then walk back to their car. Lots of crap being tossed & nary a law is broken.
 
I still think that cops ought to walk up to dealers home, knock on the door & yell POLICE! then walk back to their car. Lots of crap being tossed & nary a law is broken.

Ah, yes, perchance to dream. Unfortunately it doesn't happen that way because of the propaganda value. Remember, the code name of the raid on the Davidians was "Showtime".
 
this happened in the next county over from mine. and i'm still astounded by how fucked up this is. i'm so tired of hearing of no-knock warrants going horribly wrong. it's compltely awful to think that right now, at this moment, someone could burst into my house and them be a cop so it's ok. they could destroy my life, humiliate me, traumatise me, make me feel unsafe at home for the rest of my life, and not even have a REASON... but they're just doing their job, why apologize? pat those boys on the back, another job well done.
sickening.
i really hope calvo does everything in his power to change this.
 
Is there any such thing as a knock before entering warrant? If they're coming to get you, you will not have time to react.
 
The thing is that the warrant was not a no-knock warrant. They simply decided that they should do so after the M-I-L screamed.

Their impetus for doing this was that someone in the house COULD grab a firearm or they COULD make 32 pounds of marijuana disappear in a few seconds. Maybe they thought the place was filled with Rastafarians. :beardbng: :beardbng: :beardbng: :beardbng: :beardbng: :beardbng:
 
Is there any such thing as a knock before entering warrant? If they're coming to get you, you will not have time to react.

Warrants come in various flavors. They range from "If you see him pick him up" to "Go in throwing flashbangs and shoot anything that you think is in any manner threatening".

The SCotUS has unleashed the dogs of war on the citizenry of this country with their idiotic rulings which expand the tenets of the BoR to the advantage of the government.
 
Don't forget "asset forfeiture". Police in Sulphur, Louisiana took a woman's car. Seems it had some sort of "secret compartment" in the undercarrriage. There wasn't anything in it and they didn't charge her with anything, just took her Caddy and sold it at auction.
And what kind of country are we living in where if a police officer finds a lot of cash on you, he can just assume it's drug money and "confiscate" it? Not all of us have credit cards or checking accounts. I know it's a bad idea to carry a lot of cash, because of muggers, but now we've gotta worry about being "mugged" by the cops, too? Is this the USA or some Third World Banana Republic?
 
Don't forget "asset forfeiture". Police in Sulphur, Louisiana took a woman's car. Seems it had some sort of "secret compartment" in the undercarrriage. There wasn't anything in it and they didn't charge her with anything, just took her Caddy and sold it at auction.
And what kind of country are we living in where if a police officer finds a lot of cash on you, he can just assume it's drug money and "confiscate" it? Not all of us have credit cards or checking accounts. I know it's a bad idea to carry a lot of cash, because of muggers, but now we've gotta worry about being "mugged" by the cops, too? Is this the USA or some Third World Banana Republic?
JIMPEEL- what is ScotUS and BoR?

Supreme Court of the United States

Bill of Rights

Sorry. Those terms are used often at the firearms sites I visit.
 
Don't forget "asset forfeiture". Police in Sulphur, Louisiana took a woman's car. Seems it had some sort of "secret compartment" in the undercarrriage. There wasn't anything in it and they didn't charge her with anything, just took her Caddy and sold it at auction.
And what kind of country are we living in where if a police officer finds a lot of cash on you, he can just assume it's drug money and "confiscate" it? Not all of us have credit cards or checking accounts. I know it's a bad idea to carry a lot of cash, because of muggers, but now we've gotta worry about being "mugged" by the cops, too? Is this the USA or some Third World Banana Republic?

They tried to take a car from a high school student after a drug sniffing dog "hit" on it. She showed them that she had bought the car from the police auction and that it had been seized from a drug dealer so it will always be "hit" on by a drug dog.

Then there was the guy who bought a car from the police seizure auction and found a bunch of drugs in that they had failed to detect when they searched it. Lucky for him he found it before he got stopped and sniffed.
 
Thanks. I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but I've seen some- not a lot- but some evidence that credit card companies hire lobbyists to influence laws that try to make cash obsolete, or at least inconvenient, such as needing to have a major credit card to rent a car, etc. I'm not saying they are behind the "you're carrying too much cash, it must be drug money" laws, but they probably like anything that discourages cash transactions. You can follow the money trail via the lobbyists and see where a lot of these piss-poor anti-American laws come from.
 
They tried to take a car from a high school student after a drug sniffing dog "hit" on it. She showed them that she had bought the car from the police auction and that it had been seized from a drug dealer so it will always be "hit" on by a drug dog.

Then there was the guy who bought a car from the police seizure auction and found a bunch of drugs in that they had failed to detect when they searched it. Lucky for him he found it before he got stopped and sniffed.

This kind of stuff happens all the time, all over the country. People who wouldn't have anything to do with drugs in any way get victimized by these stupid laws and practices. While police chiefs and sheriffs are busy grabbing up property to fund their departments (and sometimes line their own pockets) innocent bystanders catch stray bullets from some stupid turf war between rival "drug gangs". Isn't the solution obvious?
It was pretty obvious in 1934...take away those outrageous profit margins.
:retard3:D-H
 
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