Submitted by: Mike Spindell, guest blogger
This blog, like many others has an internal search function that will lead you to past stories. It is located beneath the smiling countenance of our proprietor on the upper right. If you enter SWAT into search, you see that the first archive page shows 19 stories involving SWAT raids that were unnecessary and/or unwarranted. In those raids 4 people and 9 dogs were shot in error by the SWAT Team. Just a catalog of the shootings belies the terror that these raids can instill in people who are merely residing within their homes. Many of the articles detail doors suddenly smashed open, flash grenades and gas grenades tossed into the home, people thrown to the floor handcuffed and left for hours in that position, by invading SWAT teams that either had the wrong house, faulty leads and or in some cases enforcing what were clearly civil warrants. In one instance in California a SWAT raid was carried out due to the suspicion of a defaulted student loan. http://jonathanturley.org/2011/06/08/california-family-hit-with-swat-raid-ordered-by-the-department-of-education/
I believe that the rise of these SWAT teams is leading this country towards martial law and what we all commonly understand is a “police state” as repressive as any we’ve seen in the past century. We have seen constant encroachment on our citizens Constitutional protections and a continued erosion of “the Bill of Rights”. Free Speech, the right to peacefully assemble, Habeas Corpus and safety from unwarranted intrusion in our own homes, among others, have been steadily eroded under various guises, be it the drug war, or national security. In my opinion the SWAT team concept, which militarizes our police forces, is leading this nation to what I see as a state of Martial Law. Despite ones place on the currently inflamed political spectrum, this is a problem that I think concerns us all as citizens, not as partisans. I will present to you sufficient proof of my belief, the majority of which will come from what can be fairly described as a “Libertarian Think Tank” and which was founded by Charles Koch, among others. When I find myself on the same side on an issue as the Cato Institute, then I know with certainty that my fears are well grounded and unrelated to any personal partisanship of my own.
“Martial Law (definition)
The exercise of government and control by military authorities over the civilian population of a designated territory.” http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/martial+law
That partial definition above really doesn’t state the understood essence of the term “Martial Law”. The full definition would of course describe situations like a “State of National Emergency”, where the National Guard is called out to restore order. Yet, while I’m admittedly stretching the definition to fit my own conception, I don’t believe my conception is far from the mark of what’s occurring in America today.
First let me briefly summarize the history of SWAT teams in America as I see it and then I will present evidence that I believe backs up my opinion with factual argumentation. The man credited with inventing the “SWAT” concept was Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Police Chief Darryl Gates in 1966 as a response to the riots in the Watts section of Los Angeles. Gates was a rather controversial man, who took a draconian mindset into law enforcement. His pronouncement on racial issues regarding both Black and Latinos skirted quite closely to bigotry. Then too the history of the LAPD is a rather checkered one. It was an open fact that the police in L.A. were always seen to be the “protectors” of the “White” population from first the resident Latino’s and then from the Black people who had joined the emigration to California as a land of opportunity. The LAPD actively recruited police officers from the South who were experienced in enforcing “Jim Crow” laws. Gates’ innovation was the use of military tactics and equipment in a special force that was trained by ex-Marines. Besides “riots” the LAPD SWAT team soon became deployed in the “drug wars” and in “controlling” demonstrations.
Gates’ SWAT concept slowly gained popularity through the 70’s but it was limited to units being formed in only a few Cities around the U.S.. With the election of Ronald Reagan though and his institution of the “War on Drugs”, the SWAT concept began to spread across the Nation and local Police Department began receiving massive amounts of Federal funding to organize units, to train in military tactics and to buy military equipment. The public acceptance of these units stemmed from a media all too eager to engender fear ridden news items and to show the “heroism” (and need for) these tactics on their numerous “Cop Shows”. The over sensationalized “Crack Epidemic” of the 80’s and its’ overplay in the media helped impel this new tactic. Having been directly involved in working with “Crack” and Cocaine addiction I’m not trying to lighten their terrible effects. I was on the ground, so to speak, these were issues that required mental health professionals, rather than policing. Especially because invariably those caught and arrested were users, or low level dealers. Interestingly too, “Crack” was an addiction of the lower classes and thus caught most of the attention, whereas the more expensive Cocaine was commonly used among the wealthy with few criminal consequences, other than the health issues it raised.
“The Military Cooperation with Law Enforcement Act”: Passed in 1981 it was the first “official” blending of the military and the police.
“In 1988, Congress ordered the National Guard to assist state drug enforcement efforts. Because of this order, National Guard troops today patrol for marijuana plants and assist in large-scale anti-drug operations in every state in the country.
In 1989, President Bush created a series of regional task forces within the Department of Defense, charged with facilitating cooperation between the military and domestic police forces.
In 1994, the Department of Defense issued a memorandum authorizing the transfer of equipment and technology to state and local police. The same year, Congress created a “re-utilization program” to facilitate handing military gear”
After 1994, the use of SWAT Teams for local police forces grew exponentially with the impetus coming from the infusion of massive amounts of Federal Fund and surplus military equipment. What local police chief wouldn’t want a free armored vehicle? The spread of SWAT Teams around the US has become an epidemic to the point that even relatively small town police forces (towns with 25,000 to 50,000 people) have their own SWAT teams supplied via generous Federal funding and trained by military personnel, often at specialized military training bases.
The essence of this problem as I see it is that conceptually police and the military, while both carry weaponry, have two distinctly separate functions. The Military are to be used for making war and for invading foreign countries. Historically in America we didn’t allow the military to be used on our shores. The responsibility for maintaining order within our country is given to State and Local Police forces and not to the Federal Government. That idea has in fact been chipped away for many years, for many reasons. The FBI which was supposed to investigate Federal Criminal activity has found its duties expanded, either legally by legislation, or by fiat from such figures as J. Edgar Hoover, who conveniently conflated FBI work with his own personal power interests. Since the founding of the DEA, the line between Federal and State/Local has further been blurred, as indeed the line between the DEA and the Military has also been blurred. Finally, the establishment of the Department of Homeland Security and the Patriot Act has made the separation between Federal and local law enforcement almost nil.
Traditionally in this Country Police Officers were seen as members of the community and most felt that way. Thus policing, with exceptions of course, was more about maintaining public peace rather than frightening, disabling and punishing citizens. From a military perspective though, especially in occupying other countries, the idea is that all the populace are possible enemies not to be trusted and with whom harsh treatment is needed to instill fear and submission. When you begin to train police officers in those same tactics, then the citizens they deal with suddenly become “the other” in their minds, to be harshly repressed, frightened and dominated. It is this mindset that has become all too prevalent today and it has come into being via the SWAT concept.
A second problem with the SWAT teams and with the largesse of supplying localities with military equipment, structure and training is that “cool” stuff when available will be used and “overused”. To local police officers, indeed to many ordinary people, this equipment is “cool” stuff and its’ availability makes its usage much more likely. That is how a SWAT Team can be sent to deal with a delinquent Department of Education Student Loan. The human “need” to use the “team” and the equipment leads to rationalizing its use in instances that in the past were dealt with without the need for overwhelming firepower. While any situation where police must go to a house on official business can turn deadly for the police, this is generally not true in the overwhelming majority of cases. In fact in these days where 300 million firearms are owned by our citizens, sudden massive confrontation can exacerbate violence.
Beyond the lack of Constitutionality, the unneeded expense of manpower and the plethora of tragic happenstance is the bald fact that for us average citizens these SWAT actions are terrifying and have a “chilling” effect on even our legal activities. This to me is the essence of a Police State and a close harbinger of the imposition of Martial Law upon us. The word “martial” itself means military, or warlike.
Since this is the essence of the over proliferation of SWAT teams, to me at least, it seems that what is being rapidly imposed on Americans is Martial Law. Before you decide to agree, or disagree with me I would humbly request that you don’t take my word for what it happening. Below I’ve supplied 3 sources that detail copious proof of my allegations and a thorough discussion of what is happening to America due to the SWAT team craze.
The first is from one of the most popular (definitely centrist for financial reasons) and iconic magazines in the United States Popular Mechanics. It is written by Law Professor Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit.com
“SWAT Overkill: The Danger of a Paramilitary Police Force
“In a guest editorial, law professor and instapundit.com blogger Glenn Reynolds argues that over aggressive tactics and surplus military gear have turned some police units into a dangerous menace. SOLDIERS AND POLICE are supposed to be different. Soldiers are aimed at enemies from outside the country. They are trained to kill those enemies, and their supporters. In fact, “killing people and breaking things” are their main reasons for existence.
Police look inward. They’re supposed to protect their fellow citizens from criminals, and to maintain order with a minimum of force. It’s the difference between Audie Murphy and Andy Griffith. But nowadays, police are looking, and acting, more like soldiers than cops, with bad consequences. And those who suffer the consequences are usually innocent civilians.” Read more: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/military/4203345
The second source consists of a paper written for The Cato Institute by Radley Balko, who is a well-known libertarian journalist:
“CATO Paper: Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America: (published in 2006)
Executive Summary:
Americans have long maintained that a man’s home is his castle and that he has the right to defend it from unlawful intruders. Unfortunately, that right may be disappearing. Over the last 25 years, America has seen a disturbing militarization of its civilian law enforcement, along with a dramatic and unsettling rise in the use of paramilitary police units (most commonly called Special Weapons and Tactics, or SWAT) for routine police work. The most common use of SWAT teams today is to serve narcotics warrants, usually with forced, unannounced entry into the home.
These increasingly frequent raids, 40,000 per year by one estimate, are needlessly subjecting nonviolent drug offenders, bystanders, and wrongly targeted civilians to the terror of having their homes invaded while they’re sleeping, usually by teams of heavily armed paramilitary units dressed not as police officers but as soldiers. These raids bring unnecessary violence and provocation to nonviolent drug offenders, many of whom were guilty of only misdemeanors. The raids terrorize innocents when police mistakenly target the wrong residence. And they have resulted in dozens of needless deaths and injuries, not only of drug offenders, but also of police officers, children, bystanders, and innocent suspects. This paper presents a history and overview of the issue of paramilitary drug raids, provides an extensive catalogue of abuses and mistaken raids, and offers recommendations for reform.”http://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/balko_whitepaper_2006.pdf
Included with the paper that you might profit from seeing is an interactive map of the U.S. showing the huge amount of botched SWAT teams’ raids across the country and their results. This map alone is worth looking at to get an idea of the extent of the problem, with the understanding that it was created in 2006 and so it omits the increasing SWAT usage of the last seven years. http://www.cato.org/raidmap
Finally, my evidence comes from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) an organization I’ve supported since my teens. The ACLU to me has proved that it will fight for any civil liberties cause, without judging the politics of the people it fights for. The ACLU has just launched a nationwide program to investigate the abuses of SWAT Teams and the militarization of police enforcement in the U.S.
“American neighborhoods are increasingly being policed by cops armed with the weapons and tactics of war. Federal funding in the billions of dollars has allowed state and local police departments to gain access to weapons and tactics created for overseas combat theaters – and yet very little is known about exactly how many police departments have military weapons and training, how militarized the police have become, and how extensively federal money is incentivizing this trend.
It’s time to understand the true scope of the militarization of policing in America and the impact it is having in our neighborhoods. On March 6th, ACLU affiliates in 23 states filed over 255 public records requests with law enforcement agencies and National Guard offices to determine the extent to which federal funding and support has fueled the militarization of state and local police departments. Stay tuned as this project develops.
Consider these ten chilling stories. If the anecdotal evidence is any indication, use of military machinery such as tanks and grenades, as well as counter-terrorism tactics, encourage overly aggressive policing – too often with devastating consequences:
1. Confused after throwing a deafening and blinding “flashbang” into a home, police mistakenly shot and killed a sleeping nine-year-old.
Read more »
2. A county sheriff’s department in South Carolina has an armored personnel carrier dubbed “The Peacemaker,” which can shoot weapons that the U.S. military specifically refrains from using on people.
Read more »
3. New Hampshire police received federal funds for a counter-attack vehicle, asking “what red-blooded American cop isn’t going to be excited about getting a toy like this?”
Read more »
4. Two SWAT Teams shut down a neighborhood in Colorado for four hours to search for a man suspected of stealing a bicycle and merchandise from Wal-Mart. Read more »
5. A company in Arizona submitted a patent for shock cuffs, which can be used by cops to remotely administer a Taser-like shock to detainees.
Read more »
6. Police in North Dakota borrowed a $154 million Predator drone from Homeland Security to arrest a family who refused to return six cows that wandered onto their farm. Read more »
7. Police in Arkansas announced plans to patrol streets wearing full SWAT gear and carrying AR-15 assault rifles. Read more »
8. Drone manufacturers may offer police remote controlled drones with weapons like rubber bullets, Tasers, and tear gas. Read more »
9. An Arizona SWAT team defended shooting an Iraq War veteran 60 times during a drug raid, but had to retract its claim that the veteran shot first.
Read more »
10. The New York City Police Department disclosed that it deployed “counter-terror” measures against Occupy Movement protesters.
http://www.aclu.org/militarization
I think that these three articles and the information they supply has proven my case, with solid evidence, that our country is fast becoming a police state under martial law. Do you think I’m wrong, if so how?
Submitted by: Mike Spindell, guest blogger
Mike,
Excellent and well thought out as usual. Not all departments are becoming militarized, thank goodness. I saw a military type armored vehicle on the back of a big truck the other day. It had the name of a police department on the side, but was a place I never heard of so the memory did not stick. I can see the occasional need for such a vehicle, but on a simple cost analysis, they do not make sense. I read of one being used just yesterday in Minneapolis to end a 9-hour standoff. They used the vehicle to approach the suspect, making a successful arrest with no one being injured. On the other hand, I read of several towns who plan to use these tanks on wheels for routine city patrols. I am not the type to be paranoid, but these kind of news reports give me the willies.
I sat down with our local sheriff recently and he went over his annual budget with me. I was stunned to see how many of his patrol cars have well over 200,000 miles on them. My daughter was riding with one of the deputies when they got a Code 3 call out in a remote part of the county. She told me she looked over at the speedometer and it was sitting on 91 mph. In a high mileage patrol car, that is risky, especially on mountain roads. If the county commission cannot see fit to spring for some new patrol cars, they have no business spending anything on military type toys.
As for so-called “drones” there is a real conflict going on behind the scenes between Homeland Security, the FAA, and the Academy of Model Aeronautics. The AMA is to model airplane hobbyists as the NRA is to firearms hobbyists. I prefer to call them remotely piloted aircraft. They can be any size. The USAF Predator is 27 feet long and has a 49 foot wingspan. That is bigger than my twin-engine Cessna was. The newest version is called the Reaper is even bigger. The Reaper has a 66 foot wingspan and is 36 feet long. These are real airplanes in every sense of the word. One model airplane kit company sells radio controlled models of these two USAF drones, but the models are just that, model airplanes. They are no more drones than a model of a P-51 is a fighter plane.
I read recently of a Canadian law enforcement agency that acquired a small remote controlled aircraft. It looks just like the radio controlled models you can see any weekend afternoon at your local radio control model flying club. That Canadian police department had a mountain of paperwork with their government before being allowed to deploy it. Their small “drone” has controllable cameras that can be monitored in real time by police on the ground. The first time it was used was to locate a missing child in the woods. There are many uses for such small aircraft that are not malignant. The Canadian officer in charge of the project said they planned to use it when searching for lost people ranging from children to fleeing felons. They can also take an aerial view to scout out situations such as hostage standoffs. I don’t have any problem at all with that kind of use. Where I have a problem is if they plan to weaponize UAVs, especially ones as big as a Cessna aircraft.
Researchers are working on completely autonomous robotic weapons. That scares hell out of me. I read a science fiction short story back when I was a teenager. It described small anti-personnel robots to be used in warfare. These were deployed in large numbers against an enemy force, but their direction sensors got confused, causing them to turn 180 degrees, attacking and killing the force that had deployed them.
There are so many weight and balance restrictions on small remote control airplanes, they would have trouble carrying a weapon that weighed more than a firecracker. The FAA restricts model airplanes to a maximum altitude of 400 feet, and if they weigh over a certain amount, have to be registered. Range is strictly line of sight and obviously radio range is not all that far due to power restrictions on hobby equipment.
The latest big thing to hit the model airplane hobby is FPV, which stands for First Person View. The pilot wears goggles that are actually tiny computer video monitors. The model has a HD camera that sends back pictures in real time to the pilot, and a video record can also be made. The equipment is so sophisticated, the pilot can activate a heads-up display of flight instruments, just like modern military aircraft. This is a genie that will never go back in the bottle. One of my friends brought one out to the flying field the other day. That was the first one I had seen locally. His is identical to the one in the video below.
Whoever put that radio control model up in controlled airspace near JFK airport the other day violated all kinds of FAA regulations. My take on it is either he is a total idiot and scofflaw, or it was a radio control model that got away from the operator, flying out of radio range. The latter is unlikely, because when that rare event does occur, the plane usually just spirals out of control and crashes.
I have embedded a video below that demonstrates FPV. The airplane shown is similar to the one acquired by that Canadian police department; however, the police version had more than one camera, which was directionally controllable, had HD zoom, and other features that fit the mission . This video was made in Austria. I don’t know what the rules are in Austria, but if it were in the USA, the pilot violated a number of FAA rules and AMA guidelines for safe operation. This flight would have gotten him thrown out of any AMA sanctioned model club in this country. On the other hand, it is rather entertaining.
The FAA and AMA are working together on rule making regarding privacy restrictions. It is definitely uncool to use this technology to peek into private home windows, or watch someone skinny dipping in their backyard pool. One of my concerns is that rogue law enforcement will ignore such rules. Or get legislation passed that makes them exempt.
Great job Mike. I am not sure I can agree on the martial law aspect, but there is no doubt that police forces are being slowly militarized in weapons and tactics. As mentioned earlier, the NDAA could leader to worse problems. The answer to the abusive police tactics is for rogue cops and forces to be prosecuted, not promoted.
Letter to President Obama…
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/President%20Obama%203-15-2011.pdf …
Letter of Ellison…
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/Ellison%20letter%20to%20Holder.pdf ..
Letter of Congressman Gutierrez….
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/gutierrez-letter-to-AG-Holder.pdf ..
Letter of Congressman McDermott…
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/mcdermott-letter-holder.pdf …
Letter of Congressman Price…
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/Price_Letter_Holder_051411.pdf …
Shocking, true, and sadly not the biggest problem we face as united citizens.
Letter of Congresswoman Schakowsky…
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/SchakowskyHolderLetter-1_0.pdf …
Letter of Congressman Capuano…
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/Holder%20letter%20re%20FBI%20Raids.pdf …
Letter of Congressman John Lewis to. Mr. Eric Holder….
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/john_lewis_20110513_163242.pdf …
A chilling post. There is no question that police now see us all as criminals who have no right to raise any question about any issue not matter who civil our tone or reasonable our question may be. Subservience is the only response they will accept.
There is an old saying that seems to apply here: when the only tool you have or know is a hammer every problem is a nail. Having military weapons creates the need to use them for every incident no matter how unreasonable their use is.
Thank you for pulling all this information together in one place.
Does the FBIs investigation and search of homes of antiwar
activists and others simply exercising 1st Amendment rights and letter of Congressman John Conyers questioning Mr. Eric Holder investigation of this…cross this line as a borderline swat team investigation???
… http://www.stopfbi.net/sites/default/files/John.pdf …
Well…. When the military police, soldiers are trained they are trained under general military principles…… If they take that training to a local police force….. What do you really expect….. Some are trained snippets…
Don’t discount the NDAA, National Defence Authorization Act set in motion by Obama 01/01/2012, getting ready for Martial Law. ALL your rights go with this one!
If the swearing in of Brennan is any indication, it will get worse:
(Guardian, Brennan takes oath). He deliberately took the oath on the version that did not have the Bill of Rights in it.
Due process of law is void of Gods law of eternal love. It is void of do unto others. Fear is at its root. Devils fear judgment. They know they will be under Gods law having broken it a long time ago. Devils jail trying to be better. We have them following the Constitution like a shadow follows a solid object.
Then too the history of the LAPD is a rather checkered one. It was an open fact that the police in L.A. were always seen to be the “protectors” of the “White” population from first the resident Latino’s and then from the Black people who had joined the emigration to California as a land of opportunity.
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When I was in the Navy, I watched two Long Beach police officers beat the living you-know-what out of a big white guy. We almost intervened, but the big white guy told us not to.
I think that these three articles and the information they supply has proven my case, with solid evidence, that our country is fast becoming a police state under martial law. Do you think I’m wrong, if so how?
No, I do not think you are wrong (The Best Formula For “Gun Control”).
In fact, I think you are spot on Mike S.
Some of the authoritarians are itching for martial law, and have planned for it for a long time.
I am trying to find James Steele to ask him if he is training police forces here in the U.S. like he did in El Salvador and in Iraq under Petraeus (Reuters, with video).
He taught the death squads he trained in the worst torture techniques.
We have always been under a police state. There has never been any freedom in a country with jails. Jesus frees. The words home of the free exist in a deceptive song.
Excellent article and examples. I have been in these organizations most of my life and he is correct for no concern for the constitution or personal rights. It has definitely escalated in the past few years and is getting worse. When you have a government and organizations that feel they are above the law and in fact they make the law then that is the last stage before Martial Law.
USA has one abomination being the police that spill innocent blood in people, and pet’s. Martial law with the military will be yet again a worse abomination to follow the first. People need to see that nipping it in the bud stopping it by God’s merciful grace to not have a worse abomination come upon us. To be humbled to the point of not fearing to lose the body not killing to try to save it saves the soul even as Jesus saved his.