Pubdate: Sat, 18 Mar 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 Author: Mike Soraghan LEGISLATORS SEEK 'NO-KNOCK' CURBS Mar. 18 - State legislators want to clamp down on "no-knock" raids by police, such as the botched bust in September in which Denver police killed a 45-year-old Mexican national. Sen. Jim Congrove, R-Arvada, will introduce a bill Monday requiring prosecutors to approve police requests for no-knock warrants and making it harder to get a judge to issue one. "The way they do this is unbelievable," said Congrove, a former police officer who used to run an undercover narcotics unit. "With the passage of this legislation, a key component of accountability would be put in place." Critics have warned that Denver's noknock warrant process is littered with oversights and omissions that could lead to a fatal tragedy. A Denver Post review of 162 warrants earlier this year found judges rarely denied requests for a no-knock raid and police usually found no guns where they said guns would be. Congrove's bill appears to have enough support to pass the Senate, with a majority of senators signed on as cosponsors. But the state's prosecutors, a powerful lobby at the Statehouse, are planning to fight the bill. They say it could end the use of no-knock warrants, which they see as a useful law-enforcement tool. "There's every reason for us in Denver to look at our process," said Denver District Attorney Bill Ritter, president of the Colorado District Attorneys Council. "This is going way too far and ending the use of no-knock warrants. And I think that is inappropriate." Ritter is one of three Denver officials asked by Mayor Wellington Webb to review the city's process for issuing no-knock warrant process in the wake of the botched September raid. Ismael Mena was killed by Denver SWAT officers Sept. 29 during a raid on Denver's northeast side. Mena, who police said fired a gun at them, died in a hail of bullets after he refused demands to lower his weapon. Police later admitted they'd gone to the wrong house. Police Officer Joseph Bini has been charged with perjury for allegedly lying to get the warrant that led to the raid on Mena's home. The city is negotiating a settlement with Mena's family. Ritter said that making prosecutors an official part of the search warrant process means they'd be called as witnesses any time a warrant is challenged. He said the bill would require prosecutors to talk to confidential informants before approving the warrant. "Confidential informants are not going to talk to prosecutors," Ritter said. The bill also would raise the legal standard of proof that law enforcement must meet to get a noknock warrant. Currently, police must demonstrate probable cause for a judge to issue a search warrant. To make it a no-knock, they must have a "reasonable basis" to show that if police knock, their safety could be in jeopardy or evidence could be destroyed. But Congrove's bill raises that reasonable basis to a much higher standard - - "clear and convincing" evidence. That standard is too high, Ritter said. "There may be times when officers need to go in on a warrant where there is not clear and convincing evidence," he said. "Their inability to do that may put their safety in jeopardy or they won't run the warrant." Congrove said he simply wants someone to go over the warrants, and the supporting information, with a fine-tooth comb. He said he'd like to put in specific questions, like "how long have you known the snitch" into the law, but he can't. Errors in no-knock warrants risk not only the lives of residents, he said, but also the officers who help carry out the raid. A slack system also can ruin careers of good officers, Congrove said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart