Pubdate: Tue, 25 May 1999 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 1999 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/observer/ Author: Kerry Prichard CONCORD FAMILY SUES OVER SEARCH BY POLICE CONCORD - -- A family whose home was raided by Concord police using a mistaken search warrant has filed a federal lawsuit charging police with negligent judgment and with targeting African Americans. City officials say the raid was legal and was based on information provided by a reliable informant whose tips had led to at least nine drug and gun arrests in the past two years. Attorney Sharon Jumper of Charlotte is representing Concord residents Leonard Mackin, Charlene Howie and four children, who are African Americans. The suit was filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina in Greensboro. It alleges members of the Concord Police Department, including Detective Larry Welch, violated Mackin, Howie and the children's "federal and state constitutional rights when they burst into the plaintiffs' home brandishing weapons on the evening of May 22, 1998." The city of Concord is named in the suit "for the actions of its agents and employees, as well as for negligent training and supervision of its agents and employees." The suit asks for unspecified damages and also alleges trespass, false imprisonment, assault, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Jumper said Mackin and Howie fear they may lose their jobs as a result of their lawsuit. Mackin is a sanitation worker for the city of Concord, and Howie is a bus driver for the Cabarrus County Schools, Jumper said. Concord police say they sought and received a search warrant for the house at 66 Powder St. N.W. because they had been informed cocaine was being trafficked there. According to the lawsuit and police reports of the incident, 11 police officers entered the house about 7:55 p.m. with guns drawn and ordered the residents to lie down on the floor. It was not until several minutes had passed, and after Howie had repeatedly told officers they had the wrong house, that Welch recognized Mackin as a fellow city employee. "Leonard, is that you?" Welch asked. Welch then told officers to release Howie and Mackin. Welch said police had to be in the wrong house because he knew Mackin was not involved in trafficking drugs, according to police reports. Police apologized immediately, then returned later in the evening and apologized again. Concord Police Chief Robert Cansler said the search warrant was accurately based on the informant's tip, but the informant was confused between the house at 66 Powder St. N.W. and a similar-looking residence at a similar address on Powder Street Southwest. "We don't contend that there wasn't something that could have gone better," Cansler said. "The legal standard for doing a search is probable cause. The very nature of the word `probable' -- it just doesn't mean you are right 100 percent of the time." Jumper said she intends to prove that the Concord Police Department targets African Americans. "It is something that we're seeing -- a pattern of negligent judgment - -- when you see police going regularly to the houses of African Americans in Concord," Jumper said. On April 13, a 15-year-old African American boy was shot in the buttock by Concord police Officer Lennie Bryan Rivera during a search of a home for drugs. Thomas Roosevelt Edwards Jr. told police he was getting down on the floor as ordered by police when he was shot. Rivera is on administrative duty pending the investigation's outcome, Cansler said. Cansler said he and his department would stand up under any scrutiny of the way officers execute search warrants and of the way they treat people of all races. He said there have been problems with fewer than 1 percent of search warrants during his nine years as chief. "You can't tell me this was racially motivated, either. (Detective) Welch also is an African American," Cansler said. "We don't contend that there wasn't something that could have gone better." - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry