Pubdate: Wed, 07 Apr 1999 Source: Kansas City Star (KS) Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Author: Richard Espinoza RAID TAPES SHOW RESCUE EFFORT Osawatomie Man Was Fatally Shot In Home By Officer Officers identified themselves as they raided an Osawatomie, Kan., house in February and tried to use plastic wrap to save a man who was shot by an officer, tapes of the drug raid show. On Tuesday, Miami County Attorney David Miller let reporters hear an audiotape and see a videotape from the raid, part of the evidence he used to determine that officers broke no laws in the Feb. 13 shooting that left Willie Heard, 46, dead. Investigators said a Paola officer fired his gun when Heard pointed an unloaded rifle at officers who had run into his bedroom. Heard's family said that the raid woke him, and that he grabbed the rifle before he knew what was going on. The tapes start with officers' driving to Heard's house at 721 Walnut St. About 1:25 a.m., they turned off their lights as they approached the house, where police said an informant hours earlier had bought a substance thought to be cocaine. ``All right, I think we ought to roll,'' said an officer on the team, which was made of police from Osawatomie and Paola, and Miami County sheriff's deputies. Officers detonated a flash-bang device and rushed through the door, shouting, ``Police search warrant, police search warrant! Get on the ground, get on the ground! Police search warrant! '' While the screen door was swinging shut 11 seconds into the raid, there was a pop on the audiotape, which was recording from the pocket of one of the first officers in the house. ``Shots fired, shots fired! '' a man shouted. ``Get out of here and I'll help him! '' An officer shouted for a woman to lie face down on the ground while another officer asked her where to find Saran Wrap. She asked someone to call an ambulance and then said there was Saran Wrap on an upper shelf. ``Oh, my God, what are they doing? '' the woman asked. An officer told her that an ambulance was already there, but it was seen on the tape arriving about four minutes after the shooting. The tape showed Heard lying on his left side with blood around him. ``You're all right,'' an officer told him. ``Lie on your back so I can stop the bleeding. '' Another officer picked up the rifle, which was fitted with a scope, from the bedroom floor. The officer who was videotaping the raid moved outside. The tape ended with paramedics rolling Heard past yellow police tape and loading him on an ambulance while they administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The search turned up a small amount of what police think is marijuana, but no cocaine. A few hours after the shooting, police arrested Heard's 23-year-old niece at her home next door, and then released her, pending results of lab tests on a substance that officers said she sold as cocaine to an informant on her uncle's porch. A field test indicated that it was cocaine, Miller said. Lab tests had not come back by Tuesday, and the woman had not been charged, Miller said. To reach Richard Espinoza, Johnson County police reporter for The Star, call (816) 234-7714 or send e-mail to --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry