Pubdate: Sun, 04 Aug 2002 Source: Johnson City Press (TN) Copyright: 2002 Johnson City Press and Associated Press Contact: http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1983 Author: Jim Wozniak, Press Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) AREA OFFICIALS DEFENDING SWAT TEAM An appellate court might not like how the Washington County SWAT team handled a raid on a local business in a 2000 drug case, but those who oversee and work with the unit are coming to its defense. "Quite frankly, the Washington County SWAT team is as good as any other special operations team in the area," District Attorney General Joe Crumley said Friday. "I've observed the training of the SWAT team, and they're very well-trained, very well-organized, and quite frankly, I feel safer in the community by having them around. Sergeant Keith Sexton is a very experienced operator and an excellent team commander." On April 28, 2000, the SWAT team entered The Weed, 116 Claude Simmons Road, with machine guns and shotguns. Team members spread out and had their weapons ready to fire. They ordered people to the ground and handcuffed them. Agents with the 1st Judicial District Drug Task Force then came in and executed a search warrant. Jack Roger Norton, 57, same address, was charged with possessing 5.2 grams of cocaine with the intent to sell or deliver it and having drug paraphernalia. Criminal Court Judge Bob Cupp suppressed the evidence, ruling the SWAT team should have announced its presence before entering the business. The state Court of Criminal Appeals overturned that decision, saying officers had the right to enter the business without announcement, but the judges were critical of the tactics used by the SWAT team. "Under the facts of this case, we consider the conduct of the SWAT team to be dangerous and an unduly frightening experience for the several innocent persons present," the court said. " . . . And we note that the record is also devoid of proof that anyone else present in the tavern during the raid was armed. "We are concerned, along with the trial court, about the inherent danger to officers and the innocent bystanders alike when methods of the type employed by the SWAT team in this instance are utilized." One of the appellate judges, Jerry Smith, wrote a concurring opinion in which he said he was "astonished and dismayed" over what happened. "I am dismayed because Officer Sexton . . . was not only unremorseful for this sorry business but indicated that he and his team would do the same thing again," he said. " . . . Those actions (by the SWAT team) as they relate to the bar patrons do merit the condemnation of anyone who believes that this country is not, at least for the moment, a police state." Crumley said he does not believe the appellate court knew what type of business The Weed was at the time of the raid. He said officers found .223 ammunition, which is used in an M-16 rifle, in the business. "There had been a motorcycle gang (at the tavern) earlier the evening of the raid, several of whom were displaying fixed-blade knives," he said. "We had rumors that there was going to be a sawed-off shotgun or a submachine gun. I truly believe the way they conducted the raid was done according to standards for SWAT teams nationwide. I think any deviation could cause a risk of life." Sheriff Fred Phillips said last week that reports about the weapons inside were the reason the SWAT team was used. "We're going to go in and meet force with force, and if we get that information tomorrow or next week or tonight that our officers face weapons, we're going to go in," he said. Norton was arrested again July 26 at The Weed on drug charges, but the SWAT team was not used that night because there were no advance reports of weapons inside. Officer later discovered two guns inside, one loaded. Phillips said he has participated in raids in which officers used the same procedures that were employed in 2000. He also has learned that the tactics his team uses are universal. Still, he said, the team's policies are under review. After reading the appellate court's ruling, Crumley said officers might need to treat commercial businesses different than residences. But he said each case should be handled on an individual basis and be based on the risk for everyone involved. He said, though, that some situations are fairly easy to determine. "It's obviously different if you got a suspect at McDonald's as opposed to a bar that caters to underworld type of people," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake