Pubdate: Tue, 06 Apr 1999 Source: Kansas City Star (KS) Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Author: Richard Espinoza OFFICERS CLEARED IN OSAWATOMIE KILLING County attorney says police acted in self-defense Police officers didn't commit a crime when they shot and killed an Osawatomie man in February while serving a search warrant on his house, a prosecutor said Monday. Willie Heard, 46, was shot once in the chest by a Paola police officer during a raid at 1:25 a.m. Feb. 13. Officers from the Osawatomie and Paola police departments and the Miami County sheriff's department were searching Heard's house for cocaine that they thought was being sold there. The search turned up a small amount of a green substance thought to be marijuana, but no cocaine. A few hours after the shooting, officers arrested Heard's 23-year-old niece at her home next door. She has not been charged. A lab is testing a substance found there, which police suspect is cocaine. County Attorney David Miller reviewed reports from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and tapes of the raid before he told Heard's family Monday that he wouldn't charge any officers. The Mid-States Organized Crime Information Center in Springfield, Mo., filtered the sounds on the audio- and videotapes after Miller said he couldn't understand what people were saying on them. "The investigation indicates that the officer acted in self-defense and in defense of another officer,'' Miller wrote in a statement Monday. The Paola officer was put on leave after Heard's death - a standard procedure for an officer involved in a shooting - but is back at work now, Miller said. John Kurtz, a lawyer representing Heard's family, said the family understands that there is a difference between what is needed to file a criminal homicide charge and what is needed to prove a civil wrongful-death case. The family planned to take the case forward, but had not filed a lawsuit by Monday evening. "The Heard family does not believe in any way whatsoever that the police shooting of Willie Heard was necessary or proper,'' Kurtz wrote in a statement released Monday. The task force raided Heard's house at 721 Walnut St. after an officer watched a confidential informant buy something - purported to be cocaine - from a woman on Heard's front porch, Miller said. Police think the seller was Heard's niece, Miller said. A field test indicated that the man had bought cocaine, Miller said, and Miami County District Judge Stephen D. Hill issued a search warrant. Heard's 16-year-old daughter, Ashley Heard, said she was sleeping in the living room when people burst into the house. She said she didn't hear anyone identify himself as a police officer, so she shouted for her father. The officers did identify themselves, Miller said. ``The video and audiotapes clearly document that the officers shouted 'Police search warrant,''' from the time they entered the residence until Mr. Heard was shot,'' he wrote. Officers heard a noise in Heard's bedroom, Miller said. They went in and Heard pointed a .22-caliber rifle at an officer, Miller said. Eleven seconds into the raid, the Paola officer shot Heard once in the upper left side of his chest. Heard's bolt-action rifle wasn't loaded, Miller said. A gun rack was on the floor; police think Heard had knocked it over as he grabbed the rifle. After the ambulance took Heard away, officers searched the house and reported finding the suspected marijuana, papers and a pipe. To reach Richard Espinoza, call (816) 234-7714 or send e-mail - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck