Pubdate: Fri, 11 Feb 2000 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2000 The Denver Post Contact: 1560 Broadway, Denver, CO 80202 Fax: (303) 820.1502 Website: http://www.denverpost.com/ Forum: http://www.denverpost.com/voice/voice.htm Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO) Copyright: 2000 Denver Publishing Co. Contact: 400 W. Colfax, Denver, CO 80204 Website: http://www.denver-rmn.com/ Author: Sean Kelly MAN SAYS AURORA NO-KNOCK WARRANT HAD WRONG INFO Feb. 11 - AURORA - An East Colfax pawnshop owner claims he was unnecessarily roughed up by Aurora police officers during a "no-knock" drug raid on a basement apartment below his shop. The owner, Stuart Coapland, also said he believes the immediate-entry search warrant for the Jan. 8 raid was flawed, and police should not have entered the door based on information on the warrant. "The address is wrong. The name of the store is wrong," said Coapland, whose shoulder was broken in the raid. "And I'm the only one hurt." Coapland's store, Arapahoe Pawn, is located at 9709 E. Colfax Ave. The warrant was for Aurora Pawn at 9707 E. Colfax. Aurora Pawn is located on South Parker Road. Aurora police, however, said they are confident the no-knock warrant would hold up in court. A state statute requires only that an officer unfamiliar with the case could find the correct location based on the information in the warrant, said Detective Fran Gomez. Officers entered the correct door, despite the misinformation on the warrant, because vice officers had supplied videotaped surveillance of the location. "It's unfortunate someone not involved in the warrant got hurt, but we got the right location," Gomez said. "The officers were 100 percent sure they were going in the right door." Coapland said he has received an apology from the Aurora police chief's office, and the city has offered to pay his medical bills. He is contemplating his legal options. Coapland's charge comes at a time of controversy over no-knock warrants in neighboring Denver because of a raid on a wrong house. The occupant, Ismael Mena, was killed by police. In this case, Aurora officers were looking for methamphetamine in the apartment, which Coapland owns. The suspect being sought, Alden Dunham, 23, was the boyfriend of the tenant. Dunham has an extensive criminal history is considered armed and dangerous, Gomez said. SWAT officers standing guard at the door were told by an unidentified narcotics officer that the suspect, Dunham, was returning to the apartment just 10 minutes before Coapland arrived, according to a police report. They were understandably cautious, Gomez said. Coapland says he was awakened by a report of an alarm at his store at 12:45 a.m. on Jan. 8. His security company called police but declined to check out the alarm because of previous false alarms. After a second alarm went off around 1:20 a.m., Coapland decided to check on the shop himself. When Coapland arrived, he found the lock on a door leading to the store and apartment had been blown open. No police cars were in sight. As he examined the door, it opened outward, Coapland said. He backed up, and several men dressed all in black charged out. "They said, "Who are you?' I said, "Well, who are you?' " Coapland said. "Before I had a chance to think I was on the ground." One officer took Coapland to the ground in the icy alley. Coapland said the officer twisted his arm behind his back, causing it to pop. "I was yelling, "I'm the store owner!' " he said. "When it popped, I started to lose consciousness because the pain was excruciating." After determining that Coapland was not the suspect, officers called an ambulance. Coapland was treated for a broken shoulder, an injury that may yet require surgery and months of rehabilitation. Police said they found methamphetamine in the apartment. Dunham is still at large. Coapland sometimes carries a gun for protection but said he's glad he wasn't armed that night. "If I was, I probably wouldn't be standing here today," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake