Pubdate: Sun, 18 Feb 2001 Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO) Copyright: 2001 Denver Publishing Co. Contact: 400 W. Colfax, Denver, CO 80204 Feedback: http://cfapps.insidedenver.com/opinion/ Website: http://www.denver-rmn.com/ Author: Vincent Carroll WHY KEEP PUBLIC IN THE DARK? So now we know that Denver officials hung their own police SWAT unit out to dry. The mayor and city attorney have known for a year that Ismael Mena had killed a man in Mexico and came to the United States to avoid possible charges. They knew he'd been arrested two weeks before his death on a concealed weapons charge inside the very crack house that the SWAT team had thought it was entering the fateful night that officers went to the wrong address. Denver officials knew, in other words, why Mena might well have confronted a posse of police in an otherwise improbable shootout that resulted in his own death. And yet they said nothing -- until last week. For an entire year, they failed to mention these facts -- even when critics ran riot with lurid accusations about what the SWAT unit had done. Mena hadn't shot three times at officers, Mena's most vocal supporters said, or so much as brandished a weapon. Why, he hadn't even owned a gun. A marauding band of paramilitary thugs with badges had simply kicked their way into the wrong house and executed an innocent man in cold blood. Police "committed an act of murder and a cover-up" is how one protester described what happened in a published report. And she was positively restrained compared to the delirious musings of retired FBI agent Jim Kearney. According to Kearney, Mena's killing was a "premeditated first-degree murder" that police tried to hide by planting a gun on him. In fact, the shooting was not an assassination. It was a tragic mistake. And that would have been a good deal clearer had all the facts been known a year ago. Make no mistake: Nothing has lessened the city's responsibility for Mena's death. The shooting was the city's fault, not his. Officials had a duty to reach a settlement with the family, as they did. They should have done more, in fact. They should have fired Officer Joseph Bini, who lied on an affidavit requesting a no-knock warrant, but predictably gave him a wrist slap instead. The point is not that Mena's checkered past alters the moral calculus of his shooting. It doesn't. But it does bolster the credibility of the story told by officers at the scene and supported by Jefferson County District Attorney Dave Thomas in his investigation of the shooting. It strips Mena of his halo and presents him as the sort of flawed and perhaps fearful individual likely to make a fatal miscalculation in picking up a gun. And yet the mayor and city attorney sat on this information despite its obvious relevance to the debate over the SWAT team's behavior. Was the mayor deliberately undermining his own department? Almost certainly not, since he did the same thing in an entirely different context just three weeks ago. He approved a $1.2 million settlement for a young burglar shot by police, and then assured a meeting of city council members that "there's a lot more to the case than was stated publicly" -- a lot more, he seemed to be hinting, to undermine the officer's tale. Meanwhile, of course, the public debates guilt and innocence in ignorance, just as in the Mena case -- even though the loudest voices in that tragedy turned out to have been wrong. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager