Townhall
Beware
Warrior Cops
By
John Stossel
Aug
21, 2013
We
need police to catch murderers, thieves and con men, and so we give
them special power -- the power to use force on others. Sadly,
today's police use that power to invade people's homes over
accusations of trivial, nonviolent offenses -- and often do it with
tanks, battering rams and armor you'd expect on battlefields.
In
his book "Rise of the Warrior Cop," Radley Balko recounts
the rise of police SWAT teams (SWAT stands for Special Weapons And
Tactics) armed with heavy military equipment. SWAT raids began as
rarely used methods of dealing with violent situations, like
hostage-takings.
But
government always grows.
In
the 1970s, there were about 300 SWAT raids per year. "As of
2005," says Balko, "100 to 150 per day."
What
began as a few specialized groups of police trained to address
genuine threats to safety has degenerated into small armies
descending on organic farms where farmers sell unpasteurized milk and
legal medical marijuana dispensaries getting raided as if they were
heavily armed threats.
The
increase began under Nixon-era politicians who wanted to look "tough
on crime," even if that meant exaggerating the threat posed by
illegal drugs. As the futile war on drugs escalated, cops worried
that drug users would destroy evidence if cops knocked and announced
themselves. So they stopped doing that, changing a centuries-old rule
that treated citizens' homes as their castles -- castles whose owners
must be presented with a warrant before police can enter.
Soon,
every police department wanted a SWAT team -- and many were more
interested in getting cool military gear than in considering the
potential downside -- like terrorizing innocent people, raiding the
wrong house and causing violence…
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the rest of the article at Townhall
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