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A Man's Home Once Was His Castle (Drug Raids Gone Bad)
The Foundation For Economic Educaton ^ | Oct. 2000 | Paul Armentano

Posted on 09/04/2001 2:31:53 PM PDT by jmp702

A Man’s Home Once Was His Castle

by Paul Armentano

Paul Armentano is a senior policy analyst at the NORML Foundation in Washington, D.C.

Few photos have inspired as many words as that of a young Cuban boy face to face with a MP-5 machine gun. The Associated Press photo of federal armed agents seizing Elián González from his Miami relatives aroused outrage among many Americans and-perhaps ironically-several congressional conservatives. And while the photograph was unique, the act it captured was hardly unusual. Raids similar to the one on the González family home occur many times a day in the name of the War on Drugs, often with far more tragic results.

Take the case of Scott Bryant. Thirteen Wisconsin sheriff’s deputies burst into the 29-year-old’s trailer on the night of April 17, 1995, executing a no-knock warrant. Bryant, who was unarmed, was shot and killed during the assault while his 7-year-old son looked on.1 Police seized less than three grams of marijuana. On review, the county district attorney found that the shooting was “not in any way justified.”2

Robert Lee Peters had just settled down to watch a movie with his family when St. Petersburg police officers smashed through his front door unannounced with a battering ram in July 1994. Fearing that his home was being burglarized, Peters grabbed a gun and fired at his attackers. The officers returned fire, killing the 33-year-old father of two. Police confiscated two pounds of marijuana.3

Sometimes victims possess no drugs at all. Just ask the family of Annie Rae Dixon, an 84-year-old grandmother shot and killed during a 2 a.m. drug raid of her east Texas home in 1992. No drugs were ever found on the premises. One officer later hypothesized that his pistol accidentally discharged when he kicked open Dixon’s bedroom door. “[I] started throwing my guts up crying because I knew I had shot somebody that didn’t have no reason to be shot,” he said.4

No less vicious was the 1998 shooting death of Pedro Oregon Navarro by Houston police. Six officers stormed his home at 1:40 a.m. in a military-style raid after a man arrested for public drunkenness said Navarro was a drug dealer. Agents shot the bleary-eyed Navarro 12 times, killing him. A search of his residence produced no illicit drugs or weapons.5

California rancher Donald Scott, 61, met a similar fate in 1992, when a team of local and federal agents burst into his mansion during a midnight raid, ostensibly to search for marijuana. When Scott reached for a pistol to defend himself, he was shot dead. An investigation by the Ventura County district attorney later revealed that the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department had fabricated evidence that Scott was cultivating pot because it hoped to seize his property, which was adjacent to a federal park.6 Ventura County officials eventually agreed to pay the Scott family $4 million in damages; the federal government agreed to pay $1 million.

More recently, a SWAT team from El Monte, California, raided a home in neighboring Compton on the evening of August 9, 1999, killing retired grandfather Mario Paz by shooting him twice in the back. Police executing the search warrant said they believed the house was sometimes used as a mail drop by a local drug dealer.8 Although police found no drugs and filed no charges against any of the surviving family members, they refused to return an estimated $11,000 dollars seized during the deadly raid.9

Some victims are the victims of sheer error. Take the September 29, 1999, assault by Denver SWAT agents on the home of Ismael Mena. Mena, a 45-year-old father of nine, was shot eight times and killed by police in the unannounced raid. No drugs were found, and police now speculate that they may have had an incorrect address.10

An equally vicious police blunder claimed the life of Reverend Accelyne Williams, a 75-year-old retired Methodist minister who suffered a fatal heart attack when Boston police broke into his apartment on March 24, 1994. Acting on false information provided by a confidential informant, anti-drug agents chased Williams to his bedroom, shoved him to the floor, and pointed guns at his head-inducing the heart attack that killed him. Boston Police Commissioner Paul Evans later admitted at a press conference that police likely raided the wrong apartment. “If that is the case, then there will be an apology,” he said.11 Two years later, the city paid a $1 million settlement to Williams’s widow.12

William Pitt expressed the importance Americans once placed on the sanctity of the home from trespass when he said: “The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the Crown. It may be frail-its roof may shake-the wind may blow through it-the storm may enter-the rain may enter-but the King of England cannot enter-all his force dares not cross the threshold of the ruined tenement.”

The fact that our government and law-enforcement personnel now view the sovereignty of the home as a quaint anachronism should disturb us all. In this regard, the photo of a terrified Elián González is a legitimate cause for congressional concern. However, rather than use this opportunity to attack the Clinton administration’s handling of one, highly politicized case, Congress should address the broader issue of whether the escalating enforcement of drug prohibition threatens the right of all of us to be secure in our homes. To the families of the victims named above, the answer is all too clear.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial
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My apologies to those who have seen this previously.
1 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by jmp702
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To: jmp702
The fact that our government and law-enforcement personnel now view the sovereignty of the home as a quaint anachronism should disturb us all.

THE QUOTE OF THE DECADE!!!

2 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by southern rock
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To: southern rock
THE QUOTE OF THE DECADE!!!

It sure beats "I did not have sex with that woman..."

These types of raids make the Gestapo and the KGB look good.

3 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by jimt
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To: southern rock
Especially when it's a prime piece of real estate they want. Living in SoCal, I remember this incident vividly.

____________________________________________________

California rancher Donald Scott, 61, met a similar fate in 1992, when a team of local and federal agents burst into his mansion during a midnight raid, ostensibly to search for marijuana. When Scott reached for a pistol to defend himself, he was shot dead. An investigation by the Ventura County district attorney later revealed that the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department had fabricated evidence that Scott was cultivating pot because it hoped to seize his property, which was adjacent to a federal park.6 Ventura County officials eventually agreed to pay the Scott family $4 million in damages; the federal government agreed to pay $1 million.

4 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by jmp702
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To: jmp702
I hope that every Drug Warrior reading this understands that this may happen to them or their family someday. After all, aren't many FReepers gun advocates? If your front door is battered down at 2 in the morning with no warning, might you reach for your gun to protect yourself? I know I would, and we would be shot on the spot by the ninjas if we did. Aren't many FReepers outspoken critics of many things? Isn't it possible someone we angered with our beliefs may call in a tip that we're a drug dealer?

The War on Liberty must be stopped!!
5 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by FreedomIsSimple
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To: bang_list
BANG!
6 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by Travis McGee
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To: jmp702
There is no war on drugs, it is a phoney prop to cover the war on Americans and the terroism being delt them.
7 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: Dane, VRWC_minion, sinkspur, roscoe, tbeatty
And you all wonder why some of us ask for accountability from government agencies.
8 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: MissAmericanPie FreedomIsSimple
The War on Liberty must be stopped!!

Bump

9 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by jmp702
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To: NittanyLion
And you all wonder why some of us ask for accountability from government agencies.

The people that you bumped are hopeless. Logic has no meaning for them .

10 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by southern rock
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To: cultural jihad
Lion. --- Don't forget our boy above, already famous for his -'the biggest protector of our rights is the government'- quote, -- last night on the original 'confusion' thread.

Confused he was, as usual.

11 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by tpaine
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To: jmp702
I am a student of marshals and sheriffs of the old American west. In their wildest days, those guys didn't act with such reckless abandon by breaking into houses and slinging lead in all directions.
12 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: Travis McGee,sneakypete,chapita,Harpseal,Squantos
From Beck's upstairs bedroom to the Red SUV is a fair shot in MHO, so why didn't he take out more?
13 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by razorback-bert
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To: ALL
It's time to invest in some kevlar pajamas.
14 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by semaj
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To: jmp702
There is a seduction of judgement when the SWAT teams get dressed. It is becoming known that there is a great deal of truth in the statement the "Clothes make the Man". When businesses dress down, they notice that there is a degree of casualness that gets increased. There is a symbolism that becomes concrete through the clothing.

When the SWAT members get dressed, it is like medievil knights putting on armor. They are preparing for war, not for arrest, they are an assault team not a police squad. With some criminals like those LA Bank Robbers with AK-47s, this is a necessity, for others is it even advisable?

God knows that the life of a policeman is no bed of roses, but our forefathers fought many battles civil and military to protect our indiviuality and freedom from harassment. To be killed in your own home by misguided law enforcement should be as rare as hen's teeth. The fact that it is not, indicates a looser standard than should be acceptable.

15 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by SES1066
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
BTTT
16 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by jmp702
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To: SES1066
Well said!!
17 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by jmp702
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To: jmp702
The Associated Press photo of federal armed agents seizing Elián González from his Miami relatives aroused outrage among many Americans and-perhaps ironically-several congressional conservatives.

It's discouraging that the author would find it "ironic" that conservatives, of all people, would find such a violation of rights outrageous. I think we have a PR problem. No wonder we keep losing elections!
18 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by Victor_VI
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To: razorback-bert
>>From Beck's upstairs bedroom to the Red SUV is a fair shot in MHO, so why didn't he take out more? <<

Because Beck didn't take out anybody. It is MY opinion that the deputy was killed by other LEO's when he ran into their line of fire.

19 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by sneakypete
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To: sneakypete
I'll second that opinion and go you one better.

My guess is that the police/swat/nazi's fired first....!

20 posted on 12/31/1969 4:00:00 PM PST by GhostSoldier
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