Pubdate: Thu, 15 Mar 2007 Source: Hour Magazine (CN QU) Copyright: 2007, Communications Voir Inc. Contact: http://www.hour.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/971 Author: Jamie O'Meara NOT-SO-DYNAMIC EXIT "It was a really, really stupid thing to do," said a family friend who lives a few streets over from where Laval morality and drug squad officer Daniel Tessier, 42, was shot and killed March 2 during a botched raid in an affluent area of Brossard on the South Shore. "[The police] were looking for trouble." Constable Tessier was part of a 13-man team attempting a pre-dawn raid on the Rimouski Crescent home of Basile Parasiris, part of a co-ordinated effort timed with simultaneous raids in Laval, the result of a nine-month investigation into a drug trafficking ring. While the exact sequence of events has yet to be made public, it is alleged that Parasiris shot Tessier in the head after police stormed the house. Parasiris's wife Penny and two young children - aged 6 and 15 - were in the home at the time. She was wounded in the exchange, as was Constable Stephane Forbes. No drugs were found. Parasiris - whose gun was registered, albeit stored illegally (loaded) - - has since claimed self-defence, saying that those who entered his home did not clearly identify themselves as police. All of which is enough to make a sane person wonder: What were 13 heavily armed police doing smashing down the door (called a "dynamic entrance" in police parlance) of a residential home where it had to have been known that, apart from the target, two children and a spouse were also sleeping? A home that was also known to have a weapon in it? While none of us folks sounding sour notes in the growing chorus of second-guessers with perfect 20/20 hindsight and a Favre-ish dedication to Monday-morning pigskin passing can come close to claiming knowledge of all the facts, it's hard not to wonder just what the hell the people who planned this raid were thinking. It has since been suggested that this kind of raid would have been better handled by highly specialized SWAT, or tactical, teams rather than regular uniforms or even members of special units, such as Tessier's (the Laval SWAT team was assisting in the simultaneous raids in Laval at the time). This is open to debate. Tessier, despite being assigned to the drug squad a mere two weeks before his death, was a 17-year veteran. Like all police officers in Montreal now, he had very likely received extensive training in tactical team procedures, part of basic training here since the Polytechnique massacre where police were accused of taking too long to engage shooter Marc Lepine. You saw the fruits of that training at Dawson College last fall, when regular police officers were able to "locate, isolate, neutralize," as they are taught, gunman Kimveer Gill. And they did a heroic job, in large part due to SWAT-inspired "active attacker" and "rapid deployment" programs that have sprung up in police forces across North America as a direct response to school shootings, now part of basic training for Montreal police recruits. Dynamic entrances, usually the turf of tactical teams, would likely be a component of this training. (Montreal police were unable to respond to questions relating to the use of dynamic entrance as of press time.) But is this really what we want from our local 5-0? Paul Craig Roberts was assistant secretary of the Treasury during the Reagan administration and an associate editor of the Wall Street Journal. An unapologetic Reagan conservative, he is nevertheless a staunch opponent of the creeping militarization of local police forces, and recently penned a scathing indictment of the use of SWAT teams and SWAT-style police tactics titled "The Empire Turns Its Guns on the Citizenry." "There is no reason for SWAT teams to be used to deliver warrants to drug users or dealers," Roberts told me in response to questions about the Tessier shooting. (Tessier's team was not a SWAT team, but was employing similar techniques.) "There is no reason to conduct the raids at night while people are sleeping and police cannot be identified... If police are concerned about delivering a warrant to a dangerous drug dealer, they can wait until he comes outside. If he never comes outside, they can cut off power, water and food deliveries to the house. "There is no excuse for SWAT teams to deliver warrants or to arrest suspects," Roberts reiterates. "SWAT teams were formed in order to deal with dangerous hostage situations. Their use for nighttime arrests is simply police state behaviour." We know that Parasiris, whatever else he was doing, was not about to bomb a train station or gun down a classroom. That morning he likely wasn't about to do anything more dangerous than wake up and take a piss. But somewhere higher up the chain of command a plan had been hatched, and now this plan would cost the life of an experienced police officer, by all accounts a highly respected family man and generally excellent guy. While there's no absolving the person who pulled the trigger, let's be sure that the measure of Tessier's sacrifice is high enough that it reaches those who put him in harm's way in the first place. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek