Pubdate: Sat, 01 Nov 2003 Source: Town Talk, The (Alexandria, LA) Copyright: 2003sThe Town Talk Contact: http://www.thetowntalk.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1027 Author: Mandy M. Goodnight Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) POLICE AWAKEN COUPLE FOR AT WRONG HOUSE FOR DRUG SWEEP In the wee hours of the morning on Oct. 24, Ethel and Joseph Welch were awakened by the sound of banging on their door. "I heard a boom, boom, boom, boom at my door," Ethel Welch said. The couple peeked out of their Wise Street home to see their yard full of armed police officers. "We didn't know what to do or what they wanted," Ethel Welch said. "We were scared and confused." The Welches say state, local and federal officers participating in "Alexandria Narcotics Winter Sweep" served an arrest warrant at their house, although the suspect being sought didn't live there. The Police Department issued a public apology Thursday to the Welch family for the mistake. But the Welches said Friday that the whole incident could have been avoided if the Police Department had listened to them two and a half months ago. The couple said they went to the department and told an officer that nobody lived at the house except the two of them and offered for police to come see for themselves. In addition, they talked to another officer on the phone about the situation, they said. "They (police) had plenty of time to check out our story and make sure where the guy lived before coming" during the drug sweep, Joseph Welch said. Assistant Police Chief Jimmy Hay confirmed the couple came to the department and that a mistake was made by the department. He said the department is doing all it can to ensure that a mistake like the one on Oct. 24 does not happen again to the Welches or any other family. Police said there is no foolproof way to ensure an arrest warrant is being served at the proper home. Hay said the department goes through several measures to try to keep a mistake from occurring. Officers check drivers' licenses, identification cards and prior arrest reports to link a suspect with the correct address, Hay said. In addition, officers get information from street informants on suspects' locations and try to verify it. "Alexandria Narcotics Winter Sweep" was a nine-month undercover drug operation that led to more than 20 arrests of suspected mid-level and street-level drug dealers, police said. Ethel Welch said she and her husband know the suspect who was being sought, but he has never lived at their house. She added they do not know where he is. Police are still attempting to find him. A couple of months ago, the Welches noticed a car slowing and stopping near the house. It did it twice. Concerned, they went to the Police Department with the car's license number. Upon speaking with an officer, they learned the car was part of a narcotics investigation. The couple, who has lived in their home for 35 years, told officers no one lived with them. A suspect had provided police with their address. They asked for their address to be removed from the suspect's record. They had hoped everything would be taken care of, but then came the morning of Oct. 24. The couple said they were already startled after federal agents served a search warrant the day before at the Harris Street home of Sean Molette. Harris Street runs behind Wise Street. Molette was arrested on charges of five counts of distribution of crack cocaine. The Welches were awakened by pounding at their door about 4:30 a.m. To their surprise, officers were in their yard and almost surrounding the house. A K-9 dog also was there. They were not fully dressed when they answered the door, they said, and one of the officers pushed the door completely open, placing them in the spotlight. They were told the officers had a warrant and asked if the suspect lived there. Ethel Welch said she and her husband were confused and did not know what the officers were talking about. She said they insisted they were the only two people living there, and the officers left. Ethel Welch said she and her husband were rudely told to go back to bed as the officers left. "It was humiliating," Ethel Welch said. The pair said they have never had any trouble with the law, and their "record is impeccable." They were bombarded with questions from neighborhood residents about what had happened and what the police wanted with them. After they met with Police Chief Gary Moore, Alexandria Mayor Ned Randolph and City Councilmen Charles Fredrick Smith and Everett Hobbs this week, a public apology was issued, and the couple's address was removed from the suspect's record. "This wouldn't have happened if someone had listened to us," Ethel Welch said. "It was very traumatic for us." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin