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- From: darkside@bronze.lcs.mit.edu (Arian Wolverton)
- Newsgroups: alt.politics.clinton,alt.politics.libertarian,talk.politics.misc,alt.activism,alt.drugs,ne.politics
- Subject: The Raping Of America
- Date: 29 Aug 1994 23:00:56 -0400
- Message-ID: <33u7d8$h7f@bronze.lcs.mit.edu>
-
- Following Are Several Articles From Around The Country. These Articles Are All
- Stories Of Botched Drug Raids And Show How UnConstitutional The War On Drugs
- Is. If It Can Happen To Any Of These People, It Surely Can Happen To You.
- Please Help End The War On Drugs.
-
- Minister dies as cops raid wrong apartment
-
- By Joseph Mallia and Maggie Mulvihill
-
- A 75-year-old retired minister died of a heart attack last night after strug-
- gling with 13 heavily armed Boston Police officers who stormed the wrong Dor-
- chester apartment in a botched drug raid.
-
- The Rev. Accelyne Williams struggled briefly when the raiding officers - some
- of them masked and carrying shotguns - subdued and handcuffed him, then he
- collapsed, police said.
-
- Williams, a retired Methodist minister, was pronounced dead of cardiac arrest
- at 4 p.m yesterday at Carney Hospital said hospital spokesman William
- Henderson.
-
- "There is a likelihood or possibility that we did hit the wrong apartment,"
- said Police Commissioner Paul Evans at a news conference last night.
-
- "If that's the case, then there will be an apology."
-
- Evans said an investigation into the "facts and circumstances surrounding the
- execution of a search warrant" was under way. Said one police source: "It's a
- terrible thing that an innocent victim died. Everyone feels terrible. He was
- totally legitimate."
-
- Said Verna Green, who was visiting her sister in another apartment in the
- building: "They scared him to death."
-
- Police raided the second floor apartment at 118 Whitfield St. based on inform-
- ation from a confidential informant, the source said. No shots were fired.
-
- "Everything was done right, except it was the wrong apartment," the source
- said.
-
- "When you're going in, you're expecting heavily armed people. (The entry team
- 's) job is to put everyone down, then withdraw. Then the other unit goes in."
-
- According to the source, police were grilling the informant last night, and
- are still interested "in an apartment in that building - just not the Williams
- apartment."
-
- Mayor Thomas M. Menino expressed his sympathy to the victim's family, and
- asked Evans for a full report, said Mayoral spokeswoman Jacqueline Goddard.
-
- Evans said the drug officers, accompanied by the police entry team, went to
- the apartment where Williams and his wife, Mary, lived and forced their way in
- at 3:15 p.m., Evans said.
-
- "With the assistance of the department's entry team, they did make a forced
- entry. A struggle ensued, and the occupant was handcuffed and collapsed,"
- Evans said.
-
- Evans said it wasn't clear whether police officers knocked on Williams' door
- or identified themselves before ramming down the door. Some of the 13 officers
- wore clothing that clearly identified them as Boston Police officers, Evans
- said.
-
- Police found no drugs or weapons in the apartment, he said.
-
- Two neighbors mourned Williams as they watched a detective lead the retired
- minister's wife to a police car, hours after the bungled raid. The wife had
- been away from the apartment shopping when the raid took place, a police
- source said.
-
- "Her husband is dead! He's dead!" said Callie Davis, 50, who lives in a fourth
- floor apartment with her husband and grandchildren.
-
- Williams and his wife had lived alone there for at last the past three years,
- she said.
-
- "I called her 'Mom' and him 'Pop.' I'm going to miss him," Davis said.
-
- "He's probably dead because he was so scared. He probably thought someone was
- trying to kill him," Davis said.
-
- Williams on Wednesday brought her three cans of evaporated milk - he knew she
- loved to drink it - and some pancake mix, Davis said. "He was like that. He
- always gave me things."
-
- "I was in my house and I heard all this boom, boom, boom! It happened so
- quickly" said Verna Green. "This man died because of some dumb thing. The
- police should pay for this thing. They should pay big."
-
- Green said she saw police carrying a battering ram and shotguns, and she later
- saw officers performing CPR on Williams, trying to revive him.
-
- Williams' upstairs neighbor, Demetra Stinson, said he was a quiet man who had
- trouble climbing stairs. "He could barely move. He came up the stairs really
- slowly," Stinson said.
-
- A police source said the result was clearly the result of "bad information."
-
- "The question now is whether the officer who prepared the warrant put down the
- wrong information, or did the informant dupe the unit," said the source.
-
- The head of the drug unit that conducted the raid was reported to be Lt. Det.
- Stanley Philpin, a seasoned veteran.
-
- "I'm surprised if it was Stanley's unit," said one source. "He is one of the
- best, if not the best - a very capable guy.
-
- "The drug detective who was with the entry team was so sure of the apartment
- that he literally pointed at the door and said, 'This is it.' Then they burst
- right in."
-
- "You'd be surprised at how easily this can happen," said the source. "An info-
- rmant can tell you it is apartment on the left at the top of the stairs and
- there could be two apartments on the left at the top of the stairs," the
- source said.
-
- "Or people could rent rooms within an apartment that the informant doesn't
- know about. You are supposed to verify it, and I'm not making excuses, but
- mistakes can be made."
-
- On "hits" or raids, members of the entry team generally wear black knit masks
- that are designed to "psychologically freeze people where they stand."
-
- The Williams' second-floor apartment building, at 116-118 Whitfield St., has
- eight apartments. The other three apartments on the Williams' side of the
- building are occupied by families with children, and the other second-floor
- apartment is also occupied by a family with children.
-
- Seek Out Guns In BHA
-
- For someone who claims to know the people and problems of public housing,
- Boston Housing Authority Administrator David Cortiella seems terribly out of
- touch. Cortiella is fighting a plan embraced by President Clinton as well as
- federal housing officials, that would allow searches of apartments for drugs,
- guns and other contraband. He calls the plan "martial law" and a violation of
- constitutional rights. Let's hope that Cortiella is simply misinformed when
- he uses rhetoric like that. The constitution bans unreasonable searches; we
- think there's plenty of reason to introduce a kind of martial law in public
- housing. It's not as if police SWAT teams will routinely slam through the
- doors. The federal plan simply asks tenants to agree in their leases to allow
- searches without warrants, as a condition of their tenancy. "Too much of our
- public housing is in shambles," U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary
- Henry Cisneros said. "We must change course." The HUD secretary quoted a
- Chicago public housing tenant who, fed up with violence there, pleaded, "Just
- make it stop." Cortiella should listen to his own tenants, who live with gun-
- shots and police sirens as a matter of routine. Tenants here too will tell
- him, "Just make it stop." In his two-year, $60 billion Housing Choice and
- Community Investment Act of 1994, Cisneros has requested more money for commu-
- nity policing, youth recreation and other anti-crime efforts in public housing
- developments. But the warrantless search plan is by far the most direct and
- effective way to rid developments of the criminal activities that destroy the
- quality of lives for those that live there. It is dramatic to be sure, but no
- more dramatic than violent crime in America, where a child dies of gunshot
- wounds every two hours. Cortiella is starting important initiatives to improve
- life in the projects. He says he wants to evict tenants when drugs are found
- in their apartments. But he's not willing to take the tough steps necessary
- to find those drugs in the first place. Bold leadership is needed to make
- public housing safe, and in Boston, the leadership is timid.
-
- NO CONSPIRACY?
-
- The Justice Department has confirmed that Brett Kimberlin was unfairly silenc-
- ed during the 1988 presidential election. Kimberlin, who claims he was Dan
- Quayle's former pot dealer, was placed in solitary confinement by former
- prison director J. Michael Quinlan after scheduling a press conference to tell
- his story. Richard J. Hankinson, the Justice Department's inspector general,
- said in a report that although Kimberlin "was treated differently and held to
- a stricter standard of conduct" there was no "conspiracy to silence" him.
- - New York Post
- September 9, 1993.
-
- OFFICER, RETIREE KILLED IN BOGUS RAID
-
- When Manuel Medina Ramirez, a 63-year-old retired golf-course groundskeeper,
- was routed from his slumber at 2 AM by armed men breaking down the door of his
- modest Stockton, CA. home, he instinctively reached for his bedside pistol.
- Shooting into the darkness, he brought one of the men down; the others return-
- ed fire, and Ramirez was shot dead in front of his son and daughter, who had
- also been awakened. The armed men turned out to be a Stockton police antidrug
- team who had obtained a warrant for the house after a friend of the Ramirez
- family was found with marijuana in his car and gave the police the Ramirez
- address as his own. "He died not knowing they were police officers," said
- Maria Ramirez, the victim's 23-year-old daughter. She said that her father had
- allowed the friend to use his address to get a driver's license. The officers
- claim they had identified themselves, but Maria says her father spoke poor
- English and couldn't understand them. No drugs were found in the house. "These
- were very quiet people," said a neighbor. "I never saw anything going on that
- could indicate drugs at all."
- - Sacramento Bee
- January 26, 1993.
-
- DEA Does It Again
-
- A Colorado woman was hospitalized after eight DEA agents forced open her door,
- cursed her, and beat her to the ground - before realizing they were at the
- wrong house. Daniel Thomas, the man they were really after, was later charged
- with amphetamine manufacture. The Jefferson County DA has not commented on
- whether charges will be brought against the agents. In a letter to the DA,
- Wheat Ridge Mayor Ray Winger wrote that "drug manufacturers must be controlled
- but not by people who cannot even get the address for the raid correct."
- - Denver Post
- July 16, 1993.
-
- AKRON DRUG SQUAD BUSTS DOWN WRONG DOOR
-
- A 32-year-old mom and her three young kids were terrorized when a gang of
- black-clad men knocked down their front door and rushed into their apartment.
- Only when the family was lying on the floor at gunpoint did the mom, indentif-
- ied only as Joyce, recognize the intruders as Akron police officers. "I never
- heard them indentify themselves," Joyce says. "All I saw were black uniforms,
- helmets and guns." The officers from the Akron Police Department Street Narco-
- tic Uniform Detail shortly realized that the address on the warrant was incor-
- rect. "It didn't look like any drug house," says unit leader Lt. Harold Craig.
- - Akron Beacon Journal
- March 23, 1993.
-
- CALIFORNIA COUPLE SUES IN BOTCHED RAID
-
- Michelle and Tony Jones of Poway, CA. have filed a $10 million suit against
- the DEA and Customs Department after they were detained and falsely accused
- of drug dealing. The couple were fingered by Ronnie B. Edmonds, the same info-
- rmant whose bad tips had previously led to the botched drug raid which result-
- ed in the shooting of an innocent San Diego business executive, Donald
- Carlson. Carlson, who was critically wounded, has his own $20 million lawsuit
- pending. Edmonds is wanted on 25 counts of making false statements to drug
- agents.
- - San Diego Union-Tribune
- March 5, 1993
-
- OREGON COUPLE WINS CASH SETTLEMENT FOR BOTCHED RAID
-
- Jose and Esperanza Navarro won a $100,000 settlement in their suit against
- city and county authorities in Medford, OR. for a wrongful raid on their home.
- Under the settlement, police deny any wrongdoing in their mistaken raid on
- the Navarro residence. An informant told the police that a drug dealer lived
- "in the second house on the right," according to court documents. He didn't
- count a house on the corner, and police busted the wrong house.
- - Seattle Times
- December 12, 1993.
-
- New Drug War Nerve Center Unveiled
-
- The $50 million National Drug Intelligence Center, a new federal facility
- administrated by its own new agency, was opened in rural Pennsylvania. While
- Attorney General Janet Reno says its role is to coordinate intelligence from
- rival federal agencies, critics say the center is a "boondoggle" with no
- clear mission and a "pork barrel" for local Democrat Representative John
- Murtha. Chair Of The House Defense Appropriation Subcommittee, Murtha has an
- important role in setting the $263 billion Pentagon budget - and deciding
- where it will be spent. A recent Congressional audit found the drug intellig-
- ence network rife with "unnecessary overlap and duplication." Four of the 19
- drug intelligence centers monitor the same air traffic over Mexico, and three
- monitor the same parts of Central America. The Pennsylvania facility, approved
- by the Bush White House in 1990, is almost identical to the DEA nerve-center
- in El Paso. Murtha, then a member of the House Ethics Committee, was secretly
- videotaped by the FBI agents saying, "It might be that I would change my mind
- one day," as he turned down a bribe from undercover agents in the 1980 Abscam
- sting.
- - New York Times
- November 17, 1993.
-
- Cops Bust Mayor
-
- A police SWAT team in Venice, MO. broke down the back door and crashed through
- the window of the home of Mayor Tyrone Echols in a fumbled crack raid. Police
- claimed that the goof resulted from a wrong address on the search warrant, but
- the furious Mayor Echols, a black man, says the cops were lucky he was not
- home at the time. "I probably would've taken my pistol and shot through the
- door." Noting that the incident took place just as contract negotiations
- between police and the city were starting, Echols says, "Don't think I haven't
- considered the possibilities. I'm no fool."
- - St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- June 5, 1992.
-
- A camera team from the TV show Cops recorded a police team in King County, WA.
- as, guns drawn, they burst into a private home, rousting a sleeping couple and
- their children from their slumber, slipped handcuffs on the half-naked woman
- and finally realized they were in the wrong house. "They pulled me out of bed
- and put a gun on me," complained victim Theresa Glover. "Here I am with my
- butt showing, and I see the camera." Cops decided not to air the fumbled
- crack-bust footage, to which the grateful commander of the local precinct,
- Maj. Larry Mayes, says, "How much more embarassing can you get?" But this was
- not the precinct's first such foible - last year, officers mistakenly charged
- into the home of another local resident, Terry Krussel. In both cases, police
- had written the wrong address on the search warrant.
- - Associated Press
- May 25, 1992.
-
- Feds Ransack Tulsa Home
-
- Johnnie Lawmaster returned home last December 16 to find that his front and
- back doors had been broken down with a battering ram, and his personal papers,
- legally-registered guns and ammo strewn all over the floor. Furniture was
- broken and gas, electricity and water had been shut off. The only explanation
- was a note reading: Nothing Found - ATF. Neighbors informed Lawmaster that 60
- agents in a joint team of local and state police and the Federal Bureau of
- Alcohol, Tobacco, & Firearms had raided the house to search for illegal weapo-
- ns. Lawmaster's lawyer is demanding to see the affidavit supporting the search
- warrant, but the Tulsa federal attorney has had it sealed.
- - American Rifleman
- March 1992.
-
- Army Chopper Spooks Cattle
-
- Maine farmer Bill Melgey is suing the U.S. government for $150,000 following
- an incident in which an Army helicopter swooped down over his land at tree
- level, terrifying the cows Melgey was herding. Melgey was trampled in the
- subsequent stampede and sustained permanent injuries.
- - Bangor Daily News
- May 30, 1992.
-
- Cops Bust Rose Bushes
-
- Mark Campbell of Glastonbury, CT. is suing the local police department for
- $750,000 over a faulty 1989 bust which cost him his job, home, and family.
- Cops raided Campbell's new condominium on a tip from the DEA, which had track-
- ed a fertilizer shipment from Applied Hydroponics to the condo. Police did
- find marijuana plants in Campbell's basement but Manchester Superior Court
- Judge Sam Sferazza ruled that the search warrant had been illegally obtained
- and dropped the charges after Campbell testified that he had seen the Applied
- Hydroponics ad in Popular Science, and had purchased the fertilizer for the
- rose bushes outside his condo. In the meantime, however, Campbell had been
- fired from his job, his wife left him and took the kids to avoid prosecution,
- and the condo was foreclosed when he could no longer meet payments.
- - Glastonbury Citizen
- June 18, 1992.
-
- Cops Bust Elderberry Bushes
-
- The Florida ACLU is representing an Orlando family in a $200,000 false arrest
- suit after the sheriff's department mistook their elderberry bushes for marij-
- uana plants. Two dozen deputies swarmed over the home of Ed and Jane Carden,
- drawing guns and handcuffing family members face-down in the yard before real-
- izing their mistake. "It was terrifying," says Ed Carden.
- - Santa Fe New Mexican
- April 30, 1992.
-
- MOM TO SUE DEA IN BOGUS BUST
-
- The DEA has agreed to provide reimbursement for damages sustained to the home
- of Gracia Figueroa of Pasco, WA. after it was ransacked by their agents in a
- raid which turned up no contraband. But Figueroa, who says agents broke down
- her door, pulled her daughters from their beds and held them at gunpoint,
- still plans to sue. DEA calls the raid legitimate, noting that Figueroa's ex-
- husband had been arrested on a drug charge in Wisconsin the day before.
- - Seattle Post Intelligencer
- December 18, 1992
-
- BOGUS BUST ON HIGH SEAS
-
- Steve Decter and his wife were taken into custody and hauled across 400 miles
- of open sea to Key West after their cabin cruiser, the Night Breeze, was
- stopped by the Coast Guard for a "routine inspection" during a vacation cruise
- in the Caribbean. The Coast Guard had the Night Breeze stripped, incurring
- some $8000 in damages, but no contraband was found. The Coast Guard says a
- computer check indicated the Night Breeze had recently been overhauled in
- Cartagena, Colombia, a notorious drug port. Decter says the Coast Guard never
- told him why he and his wife were being held until after they arrived in Key
- West. "We were kidnapped for four days," he says.
- - Miami Herald
- December 4, 1992.
-
- EXEC SEEKS $20 MILLION IN BOGUS BUST
-
- Donald Carlson, the vice president of the Fortune 500 Anacomp company who was
- shot by DEA and Customs agents after a bum tip from a paid informant, is
- seeking $20 million in damages. Carlson suffered a punctured lung in the mist-
- aken raid.
- - San Diego Union-Tribune
- December 2, 1992.
-
- RETIRED COUPLE BRUTALIZED IN BOGUS RAID
-
- William Hauselmann, a 64-year-old retired ranch foreman was wrestled and
- pinned to the floor of his Oakdale, CA. home by Stanislaus County drug agents
- as his wife was held at gunpoint in her bathrobe. "They were like bandits -
- whooping and hollering like they were the ones on drugs," said Marian Hausel-
- mann, 61. The Sheriff's Department admits that the tip that led to the raid
- was "180 degress wrong."
- - San Diego Union
- December 1, 1992.
-
- SWAT Team Terrorizes Elderly Couple
-
- Retirees Marian and William Hauselmann say their worst vice is that they eat
- too much bratwurst. But in November, a SWAT team with ski masks kicked down
- the doors of their Oakdale, Ca. home and held them at gunpoint for 45 minutes
- as they searched for drugs. The Sheriff's Department now admits that the
- informant's tip which led them to the house was "180 degrees wrong." But the
- Hauselmann's still have nightmares. "They put a pillowcase on my head and
- handcuffed me and forced me to stay on the floor," says Marian. "My husband
- and I tried to speak and they screamed to shut up. It was the worst thing that
- ever happened to us." William, 64, who has a heart condition, says officers
- stepped on his back and cut his face while wrestling him to the floor. Marian
- still complains of sore wrists caused by the plastic cuffs. "Funny thing is,
- after they realized their mistake, they had to ask us for something to cut
- them off with!" Although they now have trouble sleeping, Marian says "we're
- not going to a shrink. It's those police who need psychiatrists."
- - USA Today
- December 1, 1993
-
- NYPD "TERROR RAID" ON WOMAN'S APARTMENT
-
- Sylvia Romero, 20, a pre-med student at New York's Fordham University, and her
- sister Elsa, who is on medication for a nervous disorder, were sprayed in the
- face with Mace, strip-searched, handcuffed, and made to lie on the floor as
- 15 plainclothes housing police ransacked their Bronx apartment in a surprise
- raid. "As I approached the door, they were banging it down," says Romero. "I
- asked what was going on. Through the crack they sprayed me in the face with
- Mace." Romero says the officers wore civilian clothes and did not identify
- themselves. When she asked what was happening, one cop shouted, "Bitches -
- shut the fuck up!" The sisters were dragged from the apartment, sobbing and
- handcuffed, but were released when no contraband was found. They returned to
- find the apartment trashed and their pet dog Crissy missing. Police said that
- they had taken the pet to the pound, and the Romeros had to pay $25 to get
- Crissy back. The Romeros' mother Victoria, who also lives at the apartment,
- had been visiting her son Pedro Segarra in Hartford, CT. when the raid happen-
- ed. Segarra, who is an attorney for the city of Hartford, says, "My mother's
- biggest fear was that someone would break into the apartment and something
- would happen to her children. She never expected that it would be the cops."
- Housing Police Chief Joseph Keeney said a "high-level informant" had dropped
- a tip that the apartment was being used to store heroin and defended the raid
- as "standard procedure." But Ron Kuby, the Romeros' attorney, accuses the
- police of racism. "This is the kind of thing that simply does not happen to
- white people in New York City, no matter what the offense."
- - NY Daily News
- November 5-6, 1992.
-
- FAMILY SEEKS $6 MILLION IN BOGUS BUST
-
- Jerry and Denise Jones of Guthrie, OK. are seeking $6 million in damages from
- the federal government following a mistaken drug raid on their home. In Decem-
- ber 1991, DEA agents knocked down the Jones' front door with an ax and wrestl-
- ed Jerry to the ground while pointing guns at Denise and their 8-year-old
- daughters Laura and Misty before realizing they had read the address on the
- warrant wrong.
- - Tulsa World
- September 23, 1992.
-
- OFFICERS CHARGED IN BOGUS BUSTS
-
- Two Jacksonville police officers were arrested in an investigation of charges
- that a group within the city police force has been planting crack cocaine on
- drug suspects. Sheriff Jim McMillan says that at least 16 pieces of crack have
- been found in two police cars and that more arrests are possible. The officers
- are charged with using their own crack as evidence against arrested suspects.
- The scandal could taint up to 200 drug cases now pending, and McMillan says,
- "There's no doubt that some folks have gone to jail that probably wouldn't
- have if this hadn't been done. I think they've been wronged."
- - Florida Times-Union
- October 29, 1992.
-
- Family Feels "Raped" By Bogus Bust
-
- When Bloomington Police knocked on the door of Michael and Katrina Moore at
- 10:30pm on August 4, their 11-year-old daughter answered. The officers barged
- in, knocking the girl back, then proceeded to the bedroom and rousted the
- sleeping Michael and Katrina from bed. Relates Katrina: "I said, 'Officer,
- I'm not dressed,' and he said, 'I don't care, get up...." Katrina says he
- kept the flashlight aimed at her breasts as she hurriedly dressed. Over the
- next two hours, the officers searched the house top to bottom, but only found
- a bong - in the bedroom of the Moores' 17-year-old son. The Moores' have filed
- a complaint, but police say the warrant was based on an informant's tip. "They
- were very rude, very hateful," says Katrina. "They treated us like we were
- dirt. I feel like I've been raped."
- - Indiana Daily Student
- September 10, 1993.
-
- Well, now you all know why the War On Drugs has to end. I hope this makes
- you all take some sort of action.
-
- Arian
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