SWAT raid on Missouri Family

I'm not going to comment on right or wrong because I haven't actually read through the articles or anything like that. But I had to watch the video. I didn't want to based on some of the replies - wasn't sure what I would see. Well it is what I heard that made me literally drop my phone on the ground and frantically hit buttons to make it stop. I turned away and finally was able to stop the video so I couldn't hear the rest. Sick. It appears they shot as soon as they opened the door! I come from a family of law enforcement and usually am one of the ones who becomes upset when others "bad-mouth" the police but this really seems unnecessary. An anonymous tip of marijuana should not produce a huge raid like this. Was no surveillance done prior? Sick. It will be awhile until I stop hearing that poor puppy crying...
 
I'm the last person to defend a pitbull but the thing was in a cage and the other dog that was shot was a corgi, has anyone been scared of a corgi? I hope we see some people lose their jobs over this, obviously the family is going to receive a large sum of cash but I can only imagine the mental damage done to the 7yr old who will never be able to trust the police ever again.

I had trouble with the download but I heard a lot of it. Glad I didn't see it! The dogs were in a CAGE?! This is indeed shocking!
 
Thank You. I do apologize, MzDiz. Boy, was I way off or what! :thumbsup2

Not a problem, lol. ;)

I'm on the legalize it side anyway. The war on drugs is such a waste of time and money. All this for something that's not even as dangerous as alcohol.
 
Ok, so let me get this straight...
the accused, the person upon whom the full force of The LAW worthy of a 1st degree felony was brought to bear, pleaded guilty to the charges brought against him, and therefore was found guilty of unlawful use of drug PARAPHERNALIA, not use of drugs, not dealing drugs, not possessing said drugs but instead was found guilty of unlawfully using drug paraphernalia... which is a misdemeanor right? So what constitutes *lawful* use of drug paraphernalia? If you are a child of the '60s and you happen to have an old hookah or bong pipe from those days around is that lawful? Or is it illegal just to possess these items?

I think it was declared unlawful use of paraphernalia because there was some residue in the bottom of whatever they found. I believe, that if the item has not been used then it is "lawful." I don't know how this would apply to an old hand me down pipe or hookah that may have the original usage residue that is now 40 years old.
 

Ok, so let me get this straight...
the accused, the person upon whom the full force of The LAW worthy of a 1st degree felony was brought to bear, pleaded guilty to the charges brought against him, and therefore was found guilty of unlawful use of drug PARAPHERNALIA, not use of drugs, not dealing drugs, not possessing said drugs but instead was found guilty of unlawfully using drug paraphernalia... which is a misdemeanor right?
You are reading more into the article than is written. It only states that he plead guilty to that charge. Their could have been other charges that went away when a deal was struck.

Either way, if the resident had not been using/selling drugs, the police would not have knocked his door down and felt the need to shoot his dogs.
 
You are reading more into the article than is written. It only states that he plead guilty to that charge. Their could have been other charges that went away when a deal was struck.

Either way, if the resident had not been using/selling drugs, the police would not have knocked his door down and felt the need to shoot his dogs.

Im sorry but there is no need to shot a animal in a cage...
 
sbell111- I still don't see the need for a full on SWAT bust down the door situation when a few officers could have come to the door and knocked and arrested the man and that would have sufficed.

Also, as has been noted in the previous articles, this situation is not isolated and these raids have MANY times also happened to the WRONG house. The supposed "intel" hadn't been verified or they got the numbers mixed up and there goes granny being mauled down by a SWAT team that now has her dentures to the floor for literally nothing.

SWAT teams should not be used for misdemeanor offenses, period. Sources and information should be verified. How about actually having an investigation instead of literally jumping the gun resulting in damage, outrage, and loss of life, both human and animal.
 
wow,:sad2:, this happens in other neighborhoods everyday too, some of the people have reasons to be invaded and some don't. That video was horrible and left me SMH, wow.
 
You are reading more into the article than is written. It only states that he plead guilty to that charge. Their could have been other charges that went away when a deal was struck.

Either way, if the resident had not been using/selling drugs, the police would not have knocked his door down and felt the need to shoot his dogs.

Know what? In my honest opinion, you are just wrong. There was never a need to use force to enter his home. There was no need to kill a dog in a cage. These animals(the police officers) were simply high on power and they need to lose their jobs. Marijuana is legal for medical use in 17 states. It's a misdemeanor for possesion of less than an ounce in more than half the states in our country, maybe more. These guys were macho creeps with no respect for the laws of our country and simply adrenaline junkies. This type of person gives law enforment an really bad rep. These are the same men who beat their wives, girlfdriends and children. If I had my way....they would be dismissed, shamed, charged and imprisoned.
 
America home of the people in charge who do whatever they feel like whenever they feel like free of regret and punishment. I know I'll get negative comments towards me about this but everyone knows it's right in a way.
You won't be getting any negative comments from me. I totally agree. What is the saying? Absolute power corrupts absolute, or something like that.
The police don't know the level of threat going in. Most drug users have guns, large dogs, and interestingly snakes. Strange. When you fool with drugs, your hanging out with criminals. It's too bad he choose drugs as a way of life. There is a very good chance that this guy is up to no good and got away with it this time.

You are so naive. :sad2: You honestly think that this is what your average pot smoker looks like?:rotfl2: Oh, if you only knew you would be floored.


ITA. Was what the police did in this situation over the top? Of course, however it's still on the shoulders of the parents who would have drugs around and in the same house as their child. The police, I'm sure made bad judgment calls in this situation, however the parents made bad life choices which resulted in the bad judgment in this situation.

If the parents would've been completely innocent in this, I'd feel VERY VERY different, however they aren't, and yes of course they should be charged with child endangerment...ummmm they're breaking the law and endangering their child because of their very poor choices:confused3

Either way, if the resident had not been using/selling drugs, the police would not have knocked his door down and felt the need to shoot his dogs.

So you honestly think that what the police did, the degree in which they invaded this home and treated this family, is justifiable for finding a used bowl or pipe and possibly a bit of weed?

You believe that anytime some pissed of coworker or neighbor or ex or whomever calls the police and tells them that there is drug activity at your home, that it is okay for them to bust down your door in the middle of the night and shot your animals in front of your child?

By saying it was all the parents fault is bull. If the police had done any investigating at all, which by the way is their freakin job, then they would have discovered that the use of force was not necessary. They could have obtained a search warrant and arrested the man as he came out of the house or when he was at work, then showed up at the house and searched it. That would be the way a normal police department would and should handle a situation like this. To come in with guns blazing sounds like something you would hear about in Russia or Nazi Germany.



Not a problem, lol. ;)

I'm on the legalize it side anyway. The war on drugs is such a waste of time and money. All this for something that's not even as dangerous as alcohol.
I have never understood how something that is a 100 times less dangerous then alcohol is illegal.




Know what? In my honest opinion, you are just wrong. There was never a need to use force to enter his home. There was no need to kill a dog in a cage. These animals(the police officers) were simply high on power and they need to lose their jobs. Marijuana is legal for medical use in 17 states. It's a misdemeanor for possesion of less than an ounce in more than half the states in our country, maybe more. These guys were macho creeps with no respect for the laws of our country and simply adrenaline junkies. This type of person gives law enforment an really bad rep. These are the same men who beat their wives, girlfdriends and children. If I had my way....they would be dismissed, shamed, charged and imprisoned.
:thumbsup2
 
Either way, if the resident had not been using/selling drugs, the police would not have knocked his door down and felt the need to shoot his dogs.

Actually, there is no guarantee they wouldn't have done the same thing even if he didn't have drugs. As we've been mentioning, the same thing happened in Maryland and the homeowner was completely innocent. They raided first, and asked questions later.
 
I'm not going to comment on right or wrong because I haven't actually read through the articles or anything like that. But I had to watch the video. I didn't want to based on some of the replies - wasn't sure what I would see. Well it is what I heard that made me literally drop my phone on the ground and frantically hit buttons to make it stop. I turned away and finally was able to stop the video so I couldn't hear the rest. Sick. It appears they shot as soon as they opened the door! I come from a family of law enforcement and usually am one of the ones who becomes upset when others "bad-mouth" the police but this really seems unnecessary. An anonymous tip of marijuana should not produce a huge raid like this. Was no surveillance done prior? Sick. It will be awhile until I stop hearing that poor puppy crying...

This will be in my mind for far too long.

I can't really make a coherent sentence right now, but I will say that the use of force was not comparable to the crime. Do you know how average it is to smoke pot? I'm not condoning it, but it certainly doesn't warrant shooting dogs and scarring a young child for life.
 
This is an article from April 2007 off the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Documents Reveal: Cops Planted Pot on 92-Year Old Woman They Killed in Botched Drug Raid
Atlanta resident Kathryn Johnston's death has finally been exposed to be a case of police coverup in clear example of the insanity of the war on drugs.
April 30, 2007 |

According to federal documents released this week, these are the events that led to Kathryn Johnston's death and the steps the officers took to cover their tracks.

Three narcotics agents were trolling the streets near the Bluffs in northwest Atlanta, a known market for drugs, midday on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving.

Eventually they set their sights on some apartments on Lanier Street, usually fertile when narcotics agents are looking for arrests and seizures.

Gregg Junnier and another narcotics officer went inside the apartments around 2 p.m. while Jason Smith checked the woods. Smith found dozens of bags of marijuana -- in baggies that were clear, blue or various other colors and packaged to sell. With no one connected to the pot, Smith stashed the bags in the trunk of the patrol car. A use was found for Smith's stash 90 minutes later: A phone tip led the three officers to a man in a "gold-colored jacket" who might be dealing. The man, identified as X in the documents but known as Fabian Sheats, spotted the cops and put something in his mouth. They found no drugs on Sheats, but came up with a use for the pot they found earlier.

They wanted information or they would arrest Sheats for dealing.

While Junnier called for a drug-sniffing dog, Smith planted some bags under a rock, which the K-9 unit found.

But if Sheats gave them something, he could walk.

Sheats pointed out 933 Neal St., the home of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston. That, he claimed, is where he spotted a kilogram of cocaine when he was there to buy crack from a man named "Sam."

They needed someone to go inside, but Sheats would not do for their purposes because he was not a certified confidential informant.

So about 5:05 p.m. they reached out by telephone to Alex White to make an undercover buy for them. They had experience with White and he had proved to be a reliable snitch.

But White had no transportation and could not help.

Still, Smith, Junnier and the other officer, Arthur Tesler, according to the state's case, ran with the information. They fabricated all the right answers to persuade a magistrate to give them a no-knock search warrant.

By 6 p.m., they had the legal document they needed to break into Kathryn Johnston's house, and within 40 minutes they were prying off the burglar bars and using a ram to burst through the elderly woman's front door. It took about two minutes to get inside, which gave Johnston time to retrieve her rusty .38 revolver.

Tesler was at the back door when Junnier, Smith and the other narcotics officers crashed through the front.

Johnston got off one shot, the bullet missing her target and hitting a porch roof. The three narcotics officers answered with 39 bullets.

Five or six bullets hit the terrified woman. Authorities never figured out who fired the fatal bullet, the one that hit Johnston in the chest. Some pieces of the other bullets -- friendly fire -- hit Junnier and two other cops.

The officers handcuffed the mortally wounded woman and searched the house.

There was no Sam.

There were no drugs.

There were no cameras that the officers had claimed was the reason for the no-knock warrant.

Just Johnston, handcuffed and bleeding on her living room floor.

That is when the officers took it to another level. Three baggies of marijuana were retrieved from the trunk of the car and planted in Johnston's basement. The rest of the pot from the trunk was dropped down a sewage drain and disappeared.

The three began getting their stories straight.

The next day, one of them, allegedly Tesler, completed the required incident report in which he wrote that the officers went to the house because their informant had bought crack at the Neal Street address. And Smith turned in two bags of crack to support that claim.

They plotted how they would cover up the lie.

They tried to line up one of their regular informants, Alex White, the reliable snitch with the unreliable transportation.

The officers' story would be that they met with White at an abandoned carwash Nov. 21 and gave him $50 to make the buy from Neal Street.

To add credibility to their story, they actually paid White his usual $30 fee for information and explained to him how he was to say the scenario played out if asked. An unidentified store owner kicked in another $100 to entice White to go along with the play.

The three cops spoke several times, assuring each other of the story they would tell.

But Junnier was the first to break.

On Dec. 11, three weeks after the shooting, Junnier told the FBI it was all a lie.

Note: Junnier will face 10 years and one month and Smith 12 years and seven months. No sentencing date was immediately set, and the sentences are contingent on the men cooperating with the government. Arthur Tesler, also on administrative leave, was charged with violation of oath by a public officer, making false statements and false imprisonment under color of legal process. His attorney, William McKenney, said Tesler expects to go to trial.
 
This is an article from April 2007 off the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

I remember when that came out. Totally disgusting. These are the type of idiots that give cops a bad name.
 
Everyone here is outraged as well and the town meeting is to be held on 05/17. Should turn up a lot of a lot of angry people. I can't believe this happened in February and we are just hearing about it. They are now reporting that the dog was not crated but there should have been other means. Thats what dogs are supposed to do. Protect!!
 
A few new articles on the matter-->

From the Missourian There are links to documents on there too.

UPDATE: Columbia Police Department still dealing with backlash about SWAT raid
Monday, May 10, 2010 | 9:51 p.m. CDT

COLUMBIA — For the second time in less than a week, Columbia Police Chief Ken Burton stood in front of reporters and announced changes in the way his department uses a SWAT team.

"We did some things wrong," Burton said at the Monday afternoon press conference held at the Columbia Police Department. "And I'm telling you, it won't happen again."

Several officers packed the doorways behind the press corps, listening to their chief as he outlined changes he called "unpopular" among some in the department.

The changes include:

* A captain in charge of the area where the raid is to take place has to approve the operation.
* The location has to be under constant surveillance once the warrant has been issued.
* A raid is not to take place when children are present except "under the most extreme circumstances," Burton said.

"We will always police with common sense," he said.

However, it's yet to be seen whether the latest adjustments will stem the backlash over a case that has thrown the department's little-publicized SWAT team into the spotlight and raised questions about several of the departments' policies.

The department has faced criticism — and even received death threats — since a video of a Feb. 11 drug raid on a Columbia man's home was posted on the Internet. The video captured the sound of Jonathan Whitworth's pit bull, Nola, being fatally shot by SWAT team of at least eight officers. The Whitworths' Welsh corgi was also injured during the raid, which took place with Whitworth's wife and 7-year-old son in the home.

The raid came eight days after police obtained the warrant on tips from two confidential informants. Police suspected Whitworth of dealing a large amount of marijuana but only found a pipe and what police described as a misdemeanor amount of the drug.

Whitworth later pleaded guilty to misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia and was fined $300. He has not filed a lawsuit or a complaint with the department, and his lawyer, Jeff Hilbrenner, said Monday that Whitworth was still considering all his options. Hilbrenner said Whitworth had received offers from strangers "all across the country" to set up a legal fund for him, or to buy him a new dog.

But though Whitworth's criminal case may be closed, his file was in the office of Associate Circuit Judge Larry Bryson on Monday morning, according to the Boone County Courthouse clerk's office. Bryson presided over Whitworth's criminal case. Typically, unless there's a hearing scheduled, the case file is available in the clerk's office for public viewing.

An explanation was neither available nor apparent. Judges are not allowed to comment on individual cases.

Adding to the intrigue was the possibility of a high-profile test for the Citizens Police Review Board, which could come from a complaint filed by someone not involved in Whitworth's case. Anyone is allowed to file a complaint with the department if they are dissatisfied with police conduct, said Columbia Police Department spokeswoman Jessie Haden.

Haden called a complaint "superfluous" since the department is still wrapping up its internal investigation, expected to be completed later this week. But once the internal review is complete, the path could be open for a complaint about the review's findings that can be appealed to the review board, said board chairwoman Ellen LoCurto-Martinez.

“We can’t do anything at this point as far as an actual investigation, but we are supposed to review Police Department policies and procedures,” said LoCurto-Martinez.

The review board has also moved their 7 p.m. Wednesday meeting from the Armory Sports and Community Center to the council chambers in City Hall.

“We’re expecting a lot of people from the public to be attending, so we wanted to find a place that was a bit larger,” said LoCurto-Martinez, who also said the board had been swamped with letters and e-mails from people across the nation who are outraged by the incident.

Mayor Bob McDavid and Chief Burton are expected to attend the meeting. Burton also said he expected to present his policy changes to the board soon, but purely as a review; the changes have already been implemented.

The public feedback is also expected to spill over to next week's City Council meeting. According to Carol Rhodes, who works in the City Manager's office, at least eight people had signed up to speak about the incident by Monday afternoon.

The rancor that has accumulated around the SWAT raid — the video had amassed almost 900,000 hits on YouTube as of Monday night — may be due to the fact that the incident has struck a nerve with a broad cut of the public.

In Monday's press conference, Burton said feedback to the department seemed to be coming from three discrete groups, some of whom he believed were reacting to bad information.

"The biggest group seems to be the marijuana legalization advocates," Burton said, who he urged to lobby policymakers if they wanted a change in the law.

The next group were animal rights advocates. Burton lamented the death of the Whitworth's pit bull, but had a do-what-you-gotta-do outlook on the SWAT team's handling of dogs, calling human safety the "primary" concern.

And the last group?

"The last group is the people that hate us anyway, for whatever reason," Burton said. "And I don't put any stock into what they say. There are cop haters out there, and that's just something we'll have to live with."

While the incident has prompted decision-making changes in handling of drug raids — such as Burton's Thursday announcement that raids would now be served within eight hours after police obtain a warrant — the department's policies on the tactical treatment of dogs and suspects remain unchanged.

So has Burton learned anything from the incident?

"I hate the Internet," he deadpanned.

Missourian reporter Anne Christnovich contributed to this report.

It seems to me that very little (if anything) is actually being changed in how the dept and unit is run. There is always that little caveat of extenuating circumstances that can be put in there as a blanket for future bad behavior.

I took a look at the incident reports and found it interesting that apparently, depending on who you ask, there was only 1 pit bull, or two, in the kitchen the dog either was or wasn't "acting aggressively", and that six shots needed to be fired at this dog that was already hurt and scared and trying to protect his family because he was so much of a threat against officers in full swat gear that is supposed to protect them from freaking bombs.

Also, be careful if you have duffel bags or suitcases in your garage. I guess that means that you are trafficking drugs.

And from Reason.com
Columbia, Missouri Police Chief: "I Hate the Internet"

Radley Balko | May 12, 2010

Columbia, Missouri Police Chief Ken Burton is apparently frustrated. At another press conference yesterday, a reporter asked the chief what he has learned from the international attention generated by the YouTube video of his department's SWAT team conducting a drug raid last February.

His reply: "I hate the Internet."

I'll bet he does. For two-and-a-half months, Burton and his department were quiet about the raid. That's likely because, as I wrote yesterday, the raid was really no different from the tens of thousands of similar raids conducted every year, and that are probably conducted by his own department a couple of times per week. Within days of the video hitting the web, Burton was forced to hold several press conferences, and has now laid out several reforms to the way SWAT raids will be conducted in Columbia in the future. I suppose it's possible those reforms were brewing all along, and the timing of him announcing them after the video went viral was mere coincidence. It seems at least plausible, though, that the dread "Internet" sparked some actual policy changes, here.

Unfortunately the changes—while small steps in the right direction—still miss the point. Burton says his department will no longer conduct SWAT raids at night. They won't conduct raids in homes where children are present. Suspects will be under constant surveillance until the raid is carried out. And raids will be conducted within a shorter period of time from when police get the initial tip about a suspected drug dealer. But the Columbia Police Department will still conduct volatile, violent, highly aggressive forced-entry raids on people suspected of consensual, nonviolent drug crimes. That is what's wrong with the YouTube video. Changing the time of day of the raid doesn't change the wildly disproportionate use of force.

Burton and his department have also criticized web commentary on the video, citing both death threats aimed at members of the SWAT team and an abundance of what Burton calls "misinformation" about the raid.

He's right. I saw both. In particular, the description that accompanied the YouTube video (which today topped 1 million views) described the pit bull the police killed as crated when it was shot. It wasn't. (I should disclose that I passed on this bit of incorrect information to several people while discussing the raid before discovering it was incorrect, though I didn't put it in print). And death threats, even from keyboard commandos posting on Internet discussion boards, are inexcusable.

That said, Burton is deflecting. When the video first went viral, his department's spokesperson acknowledged that the police didn't know a seven-year-old boy was in the home, but explained that the department has to carry out drug raids quickly before dealers can move their supply. That was, as Burton would put it, "misinformation." You might even call it a lie. At the very least, it was another example of a police spokesperson reflexively defending the department before knowing all the facts. Eight days passed between the time the police were tipped off to the alleged marijuana stash and the time they conducted the raid.

As I reported yesterday, according to Brittany Montgomery, the mother and wife in the home at the time of the raid, the police initially gave the family a copy of the video in which the audio and portions of incriminating video had been removed. That sounds like "misinformation," too. Montgomery also wrote that when her neighbors inquired with the department about the raid, they were initially told it was a drill, and that no shots were fired. That too was "misinformation." (The department didn't return my call, so I haven't been able to get their response to these two allegations.)

"Misinformation" coming from police department officials acting in their official capacity is a hell of a lot more troubling than misinformation disseminated on Internet discussion boards and in blog comment threads.

As for the death threats, yes, they're an unfortunately ugly part of often-anonymous Internet discourse. But Burton's men were just captured on video firing off seven rounds into a home just seconds after they'd broken into it. This, despite the fact that there was nothing in the home that posed a lethal threat to them. (Yes, some pit bulls can be dangerous, but not to an armed SWAT team bedecked in full body armor.) One of those rounds missed its intended target (the pit bull) and struck an unintended target (the Corgi). According to Montgomery, there are now bullet holes in the walls of the house. There were other people in that house who weren't suspects, people the cops weren't aware of before they started firing their guns, including a child. That seems like a pretty reckless disregard for human life.

But Burton would have us believe that the real outrage here is the faux "if they try to come to my house and do that, I'll kill them" Internet bravado that came in response to the video, not the very real violence actually depicted in it.
 
There are no words for this mess except to say that this is very, very sad.
 
It seems that the wife and child were held in a locked police car for four hours after the raid.

I read the documents and apparently every police officer made a big deal about cleaning up the dead dog somewhat. Great.
 
It seems that the wife and child were held in a locked police car for four hours after the raid.

I read the documents and apparently every police officer made a big deal about cleaning up the dead dog somewhat. Great.


STOP IT!!! Those *** HOLES!!!

:mad: This is just sick.

You know when you first posted this, I had said to my husband, that if that happened to us, I realized I'd probably have gotten shot, as well. I would be dead. My first reaction would be to run over to my shot dog, and I couldn't and wouldn't have left him there, wimpering and fighting for life. I would have not moved, I know me.

And had I not been in a position to comfort him, or he was already dead I think I would have ended up going bat **** crazy. Not intentionally - but I would have LOST it. Just lost it - crying, crazy angry - KWIM?

I know it's not always a popular opinion on these boards. but my animals are my family, too. I love them. I deeply, truly love them. They have become a very, very special part of my heart.

(not Hazel the 4 month old puppy as much....she still makes me wanna pull my hair out, but I'm hoping she gets there. :laughing: )
 


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