Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 2015 Source: News Journal, The (Wilmington, DE) Copyright: 2015 The News Journal Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/1c6Xgdq3 Website: http://www.delawareonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) WHY DO POLICE SWAT-TYPE RAIDS PERSIST? Pre-dawn police raids on suspected drug houses make for dramatic television. Too often in real life, however, these SWAT-like raids turn out to be mistakes, or, to put it more diplomatically, not exactly what the police had in mind. The News Journal published a disturbing article about a lawsuit this week that raises questions about the police strategy when it comes to fighting the war on drugs. Delawareans should look at closely at the articles implications. The article reports on a lawsuit filed by Rehoboth Beach couple against the Delaware State Police over their treatment during a drug raid on a Claymont house they were staying in. The wife is a quadriplegic. Her husband is a disabled veteran. They were not the subjects of the police raid, but they claim they were terrorized and mishandled by the police raiders. We cannot comment on the federal lawsuit. Nor can we testify to the merits of the case. That is up to the justice system. However, we can note that the raid bears striking resemblance to other police actions in the war against drugs in Delaware and in other parts of the country. Some of these raids caused far more trouble than they solved. In a number of cases, police raiders banged down doors, swooped unannounced into homes and roughed up the occupants. Some homeowners, thinking the intruders were armed robbers, fought back. Homeowners and police have been killed in the exchange of gunfire. People have been killed resisting what they thought were intruders. Others have been jailed for fighting back. Here's the worst part. Far too often, the drug raid yielded little or nothing in illegal drugs or related charges. In the raid outlined in the Delaware lawsuit, an adult relative of the couple was charged with minor offensives. Police intelligence often is wrong. Wilmington police staged a raid on a Middletown home in 2012. They barged in before 6 a.m., trained weapons on the family living there and searched the house for drugs. But it was the wrong house. Elsewhere, misdirected police raids ended in violence, with innocent homeowners shooting at police or police shooting innocent homeowners they thought threatened them. These raids are part of the nation's war on drugs. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, 62 percent of police raids on homes in 2014 were related to illegal drugs. How much good did they do? Obviously, some of these raids are needed. We hope they are well-planned and based on solid evidence. Too may of them are not. They needlessly put civilians and police officers at risk. Police officers have no idea of who or what will greet them when they go through that home's doorway. The question is: Why does law enforcement persist in these raids? Why are police putting people at risk for relatively small stakes - that is, when they get the right house or apartment? And finally, why are the American people so tolerant of a practice that tramples on their rights? - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom