Pubdate: Wed, 24 Sep 2003 Source: Spokesman-Review (WA) Copyright: 2003 The Spokesman-Review Contact: http://www.spokesmanreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417 Author: Sara Leaming, Staff writer DETECTIVES RAID WRONG VALLEY HOME Innocent man, 72, is handcuffed after suspect is arrested in mobile home drug raid Detectives with the Spokane County Sheriff's Office entered the wrong mobile home during a Spokane Valley drug raid Tuesday morning and handcuffed an innocent bystander. No one was injured in the 9:45 a.m. incident, but detectives were offering apologies for the "major mistake" Tuesday night. "We blew it, pure and simple," said a written statement from Sheriff Mark Sterk. Detectives with the sheriff's Investigative Support Unit went to the Pinecroft Trailer Court, 11920 E. Mansfield, to arrest a man suspected of manufacturing methamphetamine. They found Elvin W. Hern, 69, standing near his trailer, and arrested him without incident, said Cpl. Dave Reagan, a spokesman with the Sheriff's Office. The detectives then proceeded with the search warrant, entering what they thought was Hern's mobile home through an unlocked door. Inside was a 72-year-old man, whom detectives handcuffed and led outside before realizing their mistake. The Sheriff's Office did not identify the man who was inside the house. "They went to the wrong place," Reagan said. "It's embarrassing and we certainly don't want it to happen again." The drug unit commander, Lt. Chan Bailey, said the lead investigator in the raid had made several undercover purchases from Hern through a confidential informant. The investigator would drive the informant to the trailer court and watch as the informant walked a distance to Hern's trailer. But he never actually saw which trailer the informant was entering and leaving, and videotaped the wrong house, Reagan said. On Tuesday, investigators had the right address, but did not look at the house number when they entered. Reagan said the suspect had been parking between the two trailers, making it even more difficult for detectives to make out precisely which house the informant was entering. "The potential for problems here was huge," Reagan said. As an example of how things can go bad, he cited a Sept. 17 incident in Okanogan County where deputies busted into the wrong house and gave the man a strong electric jolt with a Taser in front of his wife and child. On Tuesday, Reagan said, the door was unlocked, and detectives entered without force. "They didn't have to break down the door," he said. The only damage was to a closet door, which had been knocked off a track while investigators searched for other people in the house. Reagan said the sheriff will be reviewing training and procedures involving searches, including the role supervisors play in raids. "This incident might not have occurred had it been observed by someone who was overseeing the activity rather than involved and waiting to rush the front door," Sterk said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake