PDA

View Full Version : SWAT twam culture getting out of hand?



Armybrat
06-27-2014, 01:26 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/06/26/massachusetts-swat-teams-claim-theyre-private-corporations-immune-from-open-records-laws/


If true, that just plain isn't right - and is un-American, IMO.


As part of the American Civil Liberties Union’s recent report on police militarization, the Massachusetts chapter of the organization sent open records requests to SWAT teams across that state. It received an interesting response. As it turns out, a number of SWAT teams in the Bay State are operated by what are called law enforcement councils, or LECs.

These LECs are funded by several police agencies in a given geographic area and overseen by an executive board, which is usually made up of police chiefs from member police departments. In 2012, for example, the Tewksbury Police Department paid about $4,600 in annual membership dues to the North Eastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, or NEMLEC. (See page 36 of linked PDF.) That LEC has about 50 member agencies. In addition to operating a regional SWAT team, the LECs also facilitate technology and information sharing and oversee other specialized units, such as crime scene investigators and computer crime specialists.

Some of these LECs have also apparently incorporated as 501(c)(3) organizations. And it’s here that we run into problems. According to the ACLU, the LECs are claiming that the 501(c)(3) status means that they’re private corporations, not government agencies. And therefore, they say they’re immune from open records requests. Let’s be clear. These agencies oversee police activities. They employ cops who carry guns, wear badges, collect paychecks provided by taxpayers and have the power to detain, arrest, injure and kill. They operate SWAT teams, which conduct raids on private residences. And yet they say that because they’ve incorporated, they’re immune to Massachusetts open records laws. The state’s residents aren’t permitted to know how often the SWAT teams are used, what they’re used for, what sort of training they get or who they’re primarily used against.

From the ACLU of Massachusetts’s report on police militarization in that state:

Approximately 240 of the 351 police departments in Massachusetts belong to an LEC. While set up as “corporations,” LECs are funded by local and federal taxpayer money, are composed exclusively of public police officers and sheriffs, and carry out traditional law enforcement functions through specialized units such as SWAT teams . . .

Due to the weakness of Massachusetts public records law and the culture of secrecy that has infected local police departments and Law Enforcement Councils, procuring empirical records from police departments and regional SWAT teams in Massachusetts about police militarization was universally difficult and, in most instances, impossible . . .

Police departments and regional SWAT teams are public institutions, working with public money, meant to protect and serve the public’s interest. If these institutions do not maintain and make public comprehensive and comprehensible documents pertaining to their operations and tactics, the people cannot judge whether officials are acting appropriately or make needed policy changes when problems arise . . .

Hiding behind the argument that they are private corporations not subject to the public records laws, the LECs have refused to provide documents regarding their SWAT team policies and procedures. They have also failed to disclose anything about their operations, including how many raids they have executed or for what purpose . . .

METROLEC, one of the largest of the law enforcement councils covering the metropolitan Boston area, operates a range of specialized resources, including a Canine Unit, Computer Crimes Unit, Crisis Negotiation Team, Mobile Operations Motorcycle Unit, and Regional Response Team, in addition to its SWAT force. The organization maintains its own BearCat armored vehicle, as well as a $700,000 state of the art command and control post. In 2012, METROLEC reportedly used its BearCat 26 times, mostly for drug busts, and applied to the Federal Aviation Administration to obtain a drone license.

The North Eastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council (NEMLEC) similarly operates a SWAT team, as well as a Computer Crime Unit, Motorcycle Unit, School Threat Assessment & Response System, and Regional Communications and Incident Management Assistance Team. Its SWAT team members are trained and equipped to “deal with active shooters, armed barricaded subjects, hostage takers and terrorists,” and they dress in military-style gear with the words “NEMLEC SWAT” emblazoned on their uniforms. Given this training, it is not surprising that the NEMLEC SWAT team has over the past decade led numerous operations that involved armored vehicles, flash-bang devices, and automatic weapons.

(Note: In addition to the LEC SWAT teams, the ACLU notes that at least 25 other Massachusetts cities and towns have their own SWAT-like units, along with the state police and the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority.)

Massachusetts also has a long history of accountability and excessive force problems with SWAT teams. A few examples:

•In 1988, Boston Det. Sherman Griffiths was killed in a botched drug raid later revealed to have been conducted based on information from an informant a subsequent investigation revealed that the police had simply made up.
•Six years later, the Rev. Accelyne Williams died of a heart attack during a mistaken drug raid on his home. The Boston Globe found that three of the officers involved in that raid had been accused in a 1989 civil rights suit of using fictional informants to obtain warrants for drug raids. In testimony for that suit, one witness testified that after realizing they’d just raided the wrong home, a Boston police officer shrugged, apologized and said, “This happens all the time.” The city settled with the plaintiffs.
•In 1996, the Fitchburg SWAT team was already facing a lawsuit for harassing a group of loiterers when it burned down an apartment complex during a botched drug raid. The SWAT team subsequently faced a number of other allegations of recklessness and misconduct.
•In January 2011, a SWAT team raided the Framingham, Mass., home of 68-year-old Eurie Stamps at around midnight on a drug warrant. Oddly, it had already arrested the subject of the warrant — Stamps’s 20-year-old stepson — outside the house. But because he lived in Stamps’s home, the team went ahead with the raid anyway. When the team encountered Stamps, it instructed him to lie on the floor. He complied. According to the police account, as one officer then moved toward Stamps to check for weapons, he lost his balance and fell. As he fell, his weapon discharged, sending a bullet directly into Stamps’s chest, killing him.

“You can’t have it both ways,” Jessie Rossman, a staff attorney for the Massachusetts ACLU, told me in a phone interview. “The same government authority that allows them to carry weapons, make arrests, and break down the doors of Massachusetts residents during dangerous raids also makes them a government agency that is subject to the open records law.”

In some states, police agencies can claim exemptions from open records legislation for certain types of requests, such as for internal personnel files, or investigation documents that could reveal the identities of witnesses or informants. In some parts of the country, like the Virginia suburbs of Washington, police agencies have broadly interpreted open records laws to allow them to turn down just about every request. But this claim in Massachusetts is on a whole different scale.

“They didn’t even attempt to claim an exception,” Rossman says. “They’re simply asserting that they’re private corporations.”

The ACLU is now suing NEMLEC. It’s worth noting that in addition to receiving taxpayer funding from its 51 member police agencies, NEMLEC has also received significant federal funding over the years, particularly from the Byrne Grant program. In fact, just last April, NEMLEC made a series of drug busts across the state in an investigation funded at least in part with Byrne Grants. (NEMLEC seems to be involved in a lot of drug raids.) In 2010, NEMLEC received an $800,000 Byrne Grant earmarked by then-Sen. John F. Kerry.

Interestingly, in 2009, NEMLEC had to pay out $200,000 “to settle allegations that it made false claims related to the use of Justice Department grant funds” — specifically, funds obtained through the Byrne Grant program. That sounds like an agency that could use a little oversight.

The argument that the LECs in Massachusetts are private corporations and therefore immune to the state open records law was made by Jack Collins, the general counsel for the Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association. I have contacted his office to request an interview but haven’t yet heard back.

Armybrat
06-27-2014, 01:28 PM
And then there is this:

ACLU issues report about SWAT and other police militarization

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/06/24/new-aclu-report-takes-a-snapshot-of-police-militarization-in-the-united-states/

A quick snippet:



The American Civil Liberties Union has released the results of its year-long study of police militarization. The study looked at 800 deployments of SWAT teams among 20 local, state and federal police agencies in 2011-2012. Among the notable findings:

62 percent of the SWAT raids surveyed were to conduct searches for drugs.

Just under 80 percent were to serve a search warrant, meaning eight in 10 SWAT raids were not initiated to apprehend a school shooter, hostage taker, or escaped felon (the common justification for these tactics), but to investigate someone still only suspected of committing a crime.

In fact, just 7 percent of SWAT raids were “for hostage, barricade, or active shooter scenarios.”

In at least 36 percent of the SWAT raids studies, no contraband of any kind was found. The report notes that due to incomplete police reports on these raids this figure could be as high as 65 percent.

SWAT tactics are disproportionately used on people of color.

65 percent of SWAT deployments resulted in some sort of forced entry into a private home, by way of a battering ram, boot, or some sort of explosive device. In over half those raids, the police failed to find any sort of weapon, the presence of which was cited as the reason for the violent tactics.

Ironically (or perhaps not), searches to serve warrants on people suspected of drug crimes were more likely to result in forced entry than raids conducted for other purposes.

Though often justified for rare incidents like school shootings or terrorist situations, the armored personnel vehicles police departments are getting from the Pentagon and through grants from the Department of Homeland Security are commonly used on drug raids.

Armybrat
06-27-2014, 01:44 PM
Having two nephews who are career street cops (one 28 years, the other twenty), I am as pro-police as they come. However, these developments in the past decade or so with the militarization of police departments (even in small towns) is making a lot of the citizenry uneasy.

Military equipment is supposed to be used on foreign enemies, but apparently now the enemy is the American people.

Is this absolutely necessary?

Remember 6 years ago when presidential candidate Obama said he wanted an armed civilian police/military force as strong as the US Armed Forces? Well, it looks like he is getting it.

Is this all an end run around the Posse Comitatus Act?

Where will it all end?

muggsy
06-27-2014, 02:05 PM
The militarism of our police departments is in response to the escalation to drug trafficking and the armament of the drug dealers. If you would like to put on a uniform and announce you presents before conducting a raid be my guest. The ACLU is one of the most liberal of organizations. It supports things like a woman's right to choose over a child's right to life. I have absolutely no use for organizations such as the liberal socialist ACLU.

Longitude Zero
06-27-2014, 02:16 PM
The militarism of our police departments is in response to the escalation to drug trafficking and the armament of the drug dealers. If you would like to put on a uniform and announce you presents before conducting a raid be my guest. The ACLU is one of the most liberal of organizations. It supports things like a woman's right to choose over a child's right to life. I have absolutely no use for organizations such as the liberal socialist ACLU.


Precisely. The turds raised the standards and LEO's responded to one step above the turds. Armybrat militarizing by equipment and training is not even on the same planet as discussions about Posse Comitatus. Apples and oranges.

DavidR
06-27-2014, 02:21 PM
The militarism of our police departments is in response to the escalation to drug trafficking and the armament of the drug dealers. If you would like to put on a uniform and announce you presents before conducting a raid be my guest. The ACLU is one of the most liberal of organizations. It supports things like a woman's right to choose over a child's right to life. I have absolutely no use for organizations such as the liberal socialist ACLU.


Amen!

Armybrat
06-27-2014, 06:34 PM
I am no fan of the ACLU and am aware of the drug dealer escalation over the past few decades, but if their study is the straight dope then I would be concerned. We have all read about these no-knock SWAT raids gone bad and how innocent citizens end up dead or property destroyed because of some police incompetence.

I refuse to turn a blind eye to that.

Plus the Massachusetts situation is downright un-American and is a sorry attempt to put themselves above the law by denying open scrutiny of their activity.

Much of this is overkill, and it will alienate the citizens they are supposed to serve & protect.

And yes, I know what kind of scum many LEOs have to deal with every day - have ridden around with street cops on more than one occasion.

muggsy
06-30-2014, 07:21 PM
I'd say that you need more ride time. You haven't learned enough.

CPTKILLER
06-30-2014, 07:29 PM
A deputy in Bastrop County. TX was recently fired & will go to trial for murder after shooting a woman.

CJB
06-30-2014, 07:30 PM
So..... Officer Friendly, you lead the SWAT team.... did you ever fookin' try to ring the door chime? Hmmm?

mr surveyor
06-30-2014, 09:15 PM
I am no fan of the ACLU and am aware of the drug dealer escalation over the past few decades, but if their study is the straight dope then I would be concerned. We have all read about these no-knock SWAT raids gone bad and how innocent citizens end up dead or property destroyed because of some police incompetence.

I refuse to turn a blind eye to that.

Plus the Massachusetts situation is downright un-American and is a sorry attempt to put themselves above the law by denying open scrutiny of their activity.

Much of this is overkill, and it will alienate the citizens they are supposed to serve & protect.

And yes, I know what kind of scum many LEOs have to deal with every day - have ridden around with street cops on more than one occasion.


ditto, my friend.

SlowBurn
06-30-2014, 09:49 PM
I think the whole 'war on drugs' has been a bad mistake. Like prohibition, which launched organized crime here in a big way. The whole gang culture is fueled by drug money. So now our civil police are militarized and it's really a continuous war within our own society, with all the bad things that happen in the fog of any war. All from trying to force people not to mess themselves up. Its foolish and as long as we insist police do the impossible, we have to keep escalating. I don't blame cops. They don't make the policy and can't choose not to follow the law.

I read a book published probably 40 years ago called The Honest Politicians Guide to Crime Control that studied all the costs and unintended consequences, and it was staggering. But of course its only gotten worse because, well, the title says it all. Should have been The Unicorns Guide to Crime Control because unicorns are much more common.

knkali
06-30-2014, 09:54 PM
People wanted this. Now they got it and are scared. Be careful what you wish for--you might get it. There are a host of factors that have led to this. It can be undone but no one wants to do it. Why?
Because they want to be tough on crime but are worried that this highly tactically outfitted and trained force with be used against our citizens for the new world order. Like I said on another thread. If Muggs and LZ are worried, then I'll stand at attention. Until then ehh. Yeah I use these guys as the canary in the coal mine. I don't see it happening. However, I am glad that you are vigilant and ready to rally us into action should the need arise.

Longitude Zero
07-01-2014, 07:50 AM
The fact these incidents make the news is BECAUSE THEY ARE RARE. If it was a regular occurrence the news would barely if ever cover them as it was a normal course of events. Also with the national/international coverage we hear about things in other states that we never heard about 20+ years ago. I am concerned about what happens in my state. Beyond my states borders I have very little if any interest or concern. The media sensationalizes the unique and seldom occurring stories. Run of the mill stuff is ignored. Here in my area traffic injuries/fatality crashes get maybe a 5-7 second blurb and then they go on. The time for legitimate concern is when these type stories stop making the news.