Pubdate: Tue, 06 Nov 2001
Source: Kansas City Star (MO)
Copyright: 2001 The Kansas City Star
Contact:  http://www.kcstar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221
Author: Kit Wagar

PART-TIME OFFICERS BUY MACHINE GUNS TO FORM SMALL-TOWN SWAT TEAM

BUTLER, Mo. -- Perhaps it's the courthouse square, with its cobblestone 
streets and old-fashioned storefronts, that makes this western Missouri 
town seem so hospitable.

Maybe it's the shrieks of children chasing each other on their bicycles on 
a sun-splashed afternoon in early autumn. Or maybe it's the way strangers 
call out, telling you not to use the pay phone that will take your money. 
Use the one at the laundry, they tell you.

In those and a dozen other ways, this community 65 miles south of Kansas 
City, with its single traffic light, seems a remnant of a simpler time. You 
half expect to see Sheriff Andy Taylor, Opie and Aunt Bee coming out of the 
Farm Bureau office.

In the fictional town of Mayberry, however, the deputy sheriff was limited 
to one bullet. In the real-life town of Butler, four part-time deputies 
decided they needed machine guns.

The four men -- a 72-year-old doctor, a nurse and two ambulance workers -- 
harbored dreams of setting up their own SWAT team to respond to emergencies 
throughout Bates County.

They used their own money to buy eight fully automatic weapons -- four MP5 
submachine guns and four M-16 rifles -- and a dozen 30-round ammunition clips.

The catch was that federal law prohibits the private ownership of the 
machine guns and new ammo clips with more than 10 rounds. But police 
agencies can own them. So the four men, with the acquiescence of the former 
Butler police chief, told gun dealers that the weapons were being purchased 
by the Butler Police Department -- even though only one of the four was 
properly commissioned to be a part-time Butler police officer.

When a new police chief with a background on a real-life SWAT team recently 
stumbled across the machine guns in his midst, the discovery touched off a 
debate that has split this community of 4,209.

It is a debate about the way things often get done in small towns, about 
the training of rural police officers and about a local police department 
that stretched the rules to let four buddies carry military-style weaponry.

On one side of the dispute are the four part-time deputies, the sheriff and 
much of the public -- who praise the good intentions of the four men.

On the other side are Butler city officials, who worry that placing 
automatic weapons in the hands of part-time officers with minimal training 
is courting disaster.

"If you have a SWAT team, you want a highly trained group, not part-time 
'hobby cops,' " Butler Mayor Joe Fuller said. "These guys are just thrill 
seekers."

The part-time deputies dispute that characterization, saying the machine 
guns are simply tools to help them protect their community. But the 
question they struggle to answer is this: Why would police need such 
firepower in a peaceful community, where the police chief says crime 
typically involves bicycle thefts, drunken driving or domestic disputes? To 
Bill Haynie, 72, a family physician who bought two of the machine guns, the 
answer is simple: You never know when you might need it.

That thought is echoed by his three partners -- Kelly Phillips, 41, a 
paramedic who oversees emergency services at Bates County Memorial 
Hospital; Brad McGuire, 36, a nurse at a Kansas City hospital; and Doug 
McGuire, 29, Brad's brother, who is a paramedic for the Belton Fire Department.

Police, they said, should always have more firepower than criminals.

"The stereotype of, 'It won't happen here because this is a nice, small 
town,' is what gets officers killed," Brad McGuire said.

Haynie said the need for a local SWAT team armed with automatic weapons 
became obvious after the string of school shootings throughout the country 
in the late 1990s.

"We're not going to sit around like they did in Colorado while kids get 
shot," Haynie said. "We're going in and clear the building."

Fuller, however, said he was frightened by the idea of four machine 
gun-toting, volunteer deputies storming a school to rescue hostages.

"We're talking about going into a darkened building with a gun that could 
shoot 10 or 15 bullets with one pull of the trigger and can shoot through 
walls or windows while other officers are around you," Fuller said. "The 
Highway Patrol already has a SWAT team we can call if we need them."

Jeff Blom, a former member of the Kansas City police SWAT team who became 
Butler's police chief last April, said he was shocked to learn that eight 
machine guns were registered to his 10-officer department. He said he was 
even more unnerved to learn that the guns were in the hands of four reserve 
officers who took one course in how to use them.

"There is no reason for this department to have these. You can serve drug 
warrants with pistols and shotguns," Blom said.

Several Kansas City-area police SWAT teams use fully automatic weapons. But 
Missouri Highway Patrol SWAT teams rarely use them because they are 
difficult to keep trained on a target as they fire, a spokesman said. 
Kansas City police don't use them at all.

"We want as many rounds at the target as we need," said Capt. Jesse Holt, 
who commands one of Kansas City's three SWAT teams. "But we also want to 
protect the public and other officers who are around."

Blom said the four men were SWAT officers only in their own minds.

"It was a fantasy," he said.

SWAT School

The tale of the eight machine guns began in May 1999, when Phillips and the 
McGuire brothers traveled to Des Moines, Iowa, to attend a 40-hour course 
in basic SWAT procedures.

Several months later, Phillips and Brad McGuire approached Butler's 
then-Chief Jim Henry about switching officers from shotguns to rifles.

Henry said he and Phillips then came up with a plan to start a first-entry 
team with the Sheriff's Department. He said Phillips and Brad McGuire would 
represent the police; Haynie and Doug McGuire would represent the Sheriff's 
office.

But Henry said he never got around to telling the sheriff about his plan. 
He said he decided it would be simpler to order the team's guns through the 
Police Department.

In April and July 2000, Henry used police stationery to order eight machine 
guns and 12 ammo clips. The letter directed all inquiries to Brad McGuire 
and Phillips, who could be reached on his pager.

The letters never mentioned that Phillips needed to be reached by pager 
because he worked as a police officer that year an average of four hours a 
week. Brad McGuire, police records show, worked 52 hours that year.

Phillips is the only one who was properly commissioned to be a part-time 
Butler police officer. Haynie was commissioned as a sheriff's deputy, but 
wasn't employed by the Butler police.

Brad McGuire completed basic police training in 1994. But he could not 
legally be hired as a Butler police officer for two reasons: He had not 
been licensed as a peace officer and, although he grew up in Butler, he has 
lived in Kansas for five years. State law prohibits out-of-state residents 
from being hired by any Missouri police agency.

Doug McGuire has been on Belton's critical response team since 1999 -- as a 
medic. He never completed basic law enforcement training.

The weapons arrived in September and October 2000. The men paid with three 
cashiers checks totaling $8,177.

Henry and the four buyers said they registered the machine guns in the name 
of the police department because federal law prohibits private ownership. 
The procedure, they said, was legal because the guns were used only in 
official police business. Brad McGuire said the four men kept the guns in 
locked cases in the trunks of their cars.

Blom, the new police chief, said the purchase method was a ploy to skirt 
federal law. He noted that Henry refused requests from three full-time 
Butler police officers to carry semiautomatic rifles in their patrol cars.

"These guys were out to get toys that they couldn't get as civilians," Blom 
said.

Phillips and Brad McGuire said their only interest in having machine guns 
was to meet the community's potential need to respond to a crisis.

Lenexa Police Capt. Steve Smith, who teaches SWAT courses for the 
International Association of Chiefs of Police, said first-entry teams need 
more than four officers. A standard hostage rescue requires 12 to 16 
officers, he said.

"Four guys can't do anything," he said. "You can't do a barricade situation 
because you can't cover more than two sides. And serving warrants (with 
four officers) is dangerous unless it's on a doghouse or a bird house."

In late 2000, Henry agreed to resign as police chief, effective March 31, 
because of a falling-out with Fuller. Fuller then chose Blom over three 
local candidates to be the new chief.

On March 29, two days before Henry was out as police chief, he signed four 
letters drawn up by Brad McGuire. Six months after the guns had been 
purchased, the letters outlined how the guns would be owned by the Police 
Department in name only.

But top city officials still had no knowledge of the machine guns. Fuller 
called the letters a lame attempt to make it appear the police department 
was exercising control over the weapons.

Brad McGuire said other Butler police officers knew about the weapons.

"But we tried to keep it low key," Brad McGuire said. "You don't want the 
bad guys to know your tactics and capabilities."

Surprise Package

The secret got out on May 3 -- Blom's second week as the new police chief 
- -- when a new trigger mechanism for one of the guns arrived in the mail. 
That prompted Blom to ask the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms for a 
list of restricted weapons registered to his department.

The ATF reported the eight machine guns plus a silencer and a sawed-off 
shotgun that a former police officer had been allowed to buy.

Fuller was outraged.

"What do the police in our little town need a silencer for?" he asked. "So 
when we shoot people, we don't wake the neighbors?"

Under the guise of conducting an ATF audit, Blom confiscated the weapons. 
The ATF investigated the purchases and referred the matter to the U.S. 
attorney's office in Kansas City.

But prosecutors demurred, saying the four men may have thought they were 
legitimate police officers. In that situation, prosecutors would have a 
tough time proving the men knowingly violated gun laws.

Haynie, Phillips and the McGuire brothers have asked city officials to turn 
the guns over to the Sheriff's Department, which could then return the 
weapons to the four men. The City Council voted last month to turn them 
over to a gun dealer so the city would no longer be liable for them. But 
the ATF has not yet approved the transfer.

Fuller said he wants the machine guns out of the community and into the 
hands of full-time police.

Phillips and the McGuire brothers bristle at the suggestion they are less 
capable lawmen because they work part time.

The main reason they are not full time, they said, is money. The pay for 
deputy sheriffs in Bates County ranges from $1,650 a month to $2,260 for 
the chief deputy.

They said they train as much as possible, including last summer when they 
and other police officers practiced storming the local high school to 
rescue hostages.

At 72, Haynie said his age does not affect his fitness for a SWAT team. He 
said he participates in the same training as younger officers and is in 
better shape than many of them.

The four men point out that in October 2000, as soon as they acquired their 
automatic weapons, all four enrolled in an eight-hour course: Introduction 
to the MP5 Submachine Gun.

But therein lies the rub.

SWAT experts said such a course shows the trainee how to take apart the 
weapon and how to shoot it. But the course hardly qualifies an officer to 
use the weapon in a high-pressure situation, they said.

David Klinger, a former Los Angeles police officer who is now a criminology 
professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, said a 40-hour 
introductory SWAT course doesn't turn a trainee into a tactical officer.

"Just like you don't want part-time surgeons, you can't leave emergency 
response to amateurs, and part-time officers are amateurs," Klinger said. 
"They should be commended for their concern, but that doesn't mean the way 
they chose to address their concern is the correct one."
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