Pubdate: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2000, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Contact: 414-224-8280 Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Forum: http://www.jsonline.com/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimate.cgi Bookmark: MAP's link to Wisconsin articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/wi Author: Tom Kertscher, staff writer NO RESOLUTION IN BOTCHED 1998 DRUG BUST County Offered $1,100 For Door, But Property Owner Wants $10,000 For Damage, Stress Jennifer Switalski says it's outrageous that the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Department busted down her door, albeit by mistake, and hasn't sent her a check. The county thinks it's outrageous that Switalski demanded $10,000 - for the door damage and for "personal and emotional stress" - even though she wasn't home when the SWAT team broke in. So the parties are stuck in Milwaukee County Circuit Court, a full 2 1/2 years after the incident, with the next hearing in Switalski's lawsuit still six months away. The county clearly is at fault for its deputies breaking into the wrong home, several Milwaukee lawyers said Thursday, but Switalski's chances of collecting much money are slim. "The tort system is not designed to provide a remedy for every wrong," said Nathaniel Cade Jr., who mostly defends people who get sued. "It's probably a silly suit. The woman should have taken her money and run." Howard Eisenberg, dean of the Marquette University Law School, was more sympathetic, if not more optimistic. "I think people are entitled to their day in court," he said, adding, "This could be a short day." As part of a drug investigation, sheriff's deputies obtained a search warrant for a home in the 300 block of N. 31st St. in the Merrill Park neighborhood, on Milwaukee's west side. They showed up at Switalski's duplex about 6:30 a.m. on Feb. 2, 1998. No one answered a knock at the door, so the SWAT team smashed it open, handcuffed Switalski's two tenants and threw them to the floor, as a crying 2-year-old girl watched in horror. A few minutes later, the deputies realized that the house they really wanted to search was three doors to the south. Switalski, who lived in the upstairs unit but wasn't home at the time, rushed to the duplex. She got an apology and a promise from Detective John Hepp that the county would pay for the damage. But Switalski felt she deserved more and filed a claim with the county for $10,000. It was denied. In February, the 26-year-old real estate agent filed her lawsuit, alleging that she had lost rental income after her tenants moved out because of the incident; she was embarrassed in front of her neighbors because deputies had come to her duplex looking for drugs; and she suffered "lost sleep and peace of mind," fearing that her home would again be broken into, either by deputies or "other parties" seeking drugs. "I was ready to have a nervous breakdown that day," Switalski said of the incident in an interview this week. The mistake may have been honest, but not excusable, she said. "I'm not here to say police aren't here to serve and protect," said Switalski, who has a criminal justice degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. "But get it right. Use a map." There's no doubt the deputies had raided the wrong house, though they did serve the search warrant at the right property later that morning, said Louis Elder, the county attorney who is working the case. But the county did try to make things right by offering Switalski $1,100, based on an estimate she provided for the door repair, he said. If anyone had the right to sue for emotional trauma, it would be the people who were handcuffed, but they never did, Elder said. Switalski, he said, has "grandiose ideas" if she thinks she can claim trauma but didn't even witness the incident. "If it happened to me, I would be upset, too," Elder said. "But the taxpayers should not have to pay for hurt feelings because those deputies inadvertently entered the wrong home." Elder predicted that Judge Stanley Miller will dismiss Switalski's case after Elder files additional court papers later this year. But even if the case is dismissed, the county might pay for the door damages, he said. Switalski's lawyer, Stephen Needham of Milwaukee, told the county at one point that Switalski would drop her case for $5,000, but the county balked. Perhaps a settlement for something around the actual damages of about $1,100 could yet resolve the case. Switalski said she is open to a settlement, but is still in the mood for a fight, given that she's brought the case this far: "I'll take my chances, because I think a jury will be in my favor." - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst