not to mention, the neighbors corroborated that they had no idea it was the police either.
And why would they! That’s why no knock warrants shouldn’t be a thing. Many of us would like to think if someone invaded our home we would open fire on them.
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not to mention, the neighbors corroborated that they had no idea it was the police either.
"But if you get rid of no-nocks, the drug dealers will flush the evidence."
- Morons with jacked up priorities.
Stop using logic. Door kickers wanna kick.Send a robotic rat up the sewer, find their outlet into the sewer and stuff a screen over it. Then knock, raid, flush, recover, prosecute, incarcerate, early release for covid or overcrowding.
Artist's conception.Send a robotic rat up the sewer, find their outlet into the sewer and stuff a screen over it.
The reality is that if they think you are a truly dangerous bad dude, they will grab you quick and clean when you are leaving the house."But if you get rid of no-nocks, the drug dealers will flush the evidence."
- Morons with jacked up priorities.
Former Cop Found Not Guilty of Wanton Endangerment in Raid That Left Breonna Taylor Dead | The Gateway Pundit | by Cristina Laila
Brett Hankison Former police officer Brett Hankison on Thursday was found not guilty of endangering neighbors during a raid that left Breonna Taylor dead in 2020.www.thegatewaypundit.com
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Neither Kenneth Walker or Breonna had a criminal record. The cops say they knocked and announced but there is no body cam footage. We can trust the cops.
Where's the body cam? Raid in the middle of the night and no body cam?I believe a neighbor confirmed they knocked.
Where's the body cam? Raid in the middle of the night and no body cam?
The knock thing is a red herring. Whether they break down the door in the middle of the night without knocking or announcing or knock and say “police” a second or two before they break down the door in the middle of the night, it’s the exact same thing.
CSI effect § TrialsWhere's the body cam? Raid in the middle of the night and no body cam?
(Here's another "wait 'til"):I honestly could care less if Breonna Taylor was an angel or somehow complicit in her boyfriends activities. It is not hard to do surveillance to determine when he wasn't home and snatch him up then.
Remember, cops gathering intelligence look a whole lot like guys casing a joint for a burglary or home invasion.
Some of the neighborhoods I did surveillance, there was no WAY 99% of the people didn't know a cop was in the area. Best vehicle I ever had was a mid 2k teens Honda Insight. Only real giveaway, if there was one, was the DARK tint all the way around. I had an older Crown Vic for a while with DHS plates. I pulled the plates and it looked like a decommissioned cruiser you see running around.CSI effect § Trials
Remember, guys casing a joint for a burglary or home invasion
look a whole lot like cops gathering intelligence.
Like they give a single f*** about the person or the cop knocking down the door. They are both pawns of the holier than thou elites. They don’t give a f*** about either party. The crown will get what the crown wants no matter the human cost.You will never convince me that it’s safer for cops to raid a persons home in the middle of the night than it is to pick them up on the street.
I only watched the first few minutes, but he spent most of that setting up how it wasn't HIS fault, it was everyone else's.He stays pretty neutral on fault throughout.
The warrant team I was on with the Marshals had a very simple process. Surround the house, lock it down, a team in armor with shields go up and knock on the door. The trick is having a team make sure at least someone is moving in the house. Get someone to talk to and work it from there.The reality is that if they think you are a truly dangerous bad dude, they will grab you quick and clean when you are leaving the house.
Whitey Bulger was a known killer in his 70s. They knew that he would rather die than go to jail. This was as high a risk guy as it gets. He had no reason to ever give himself up. So they faked a call from his storage locker company and. said he had to come down. When he stepped outside the house, they grabbed him.
The problem here is that serving high risk warrants this way
1) doesn't require the cops to get out the expensive toys.
2) Doesn't require the cops to dress up like soldiers
3) requires some actual intellect and good police work
4) minimizes the chance that the cops get to shoot someone or a dog.
So its too logical.
In all seriousness, it is also much more time consuming. They couldn't serve 10 warrants per night doing it this way.
But so whaat. Better a warrant go unserved than someone dies because the cops kick in the door and the resident dies in a hail of gunfire thinking his home is being invaded by criminals.
The warrant team I was on with the Marshals had a very simple process. Surround the house, lock it down, a team in armor with shields go up and knock on the door. The trick is having a team make sure at least someone is moving in the house. Get someone to talk to and work it from there.
We would then just sit on the house until someone came out, or when the 'shift' was over, they'd call in a SWAT team. Generally it was around the 16 hour mark before they called in the SWAT guys. In 6 months, there was a single SWAT roll and even that one ended up with the guy coming out on his own, it was a weird self induced hostage situation. I had a guy try to come out my window once, I persuaded him to exit via the front door. Other than that, it was actually pretty boring work. They did have some 'Hollywood' stuff happen before and after I was on the unit, but my tenure was seriously almost boring.
Even doing it that way, we'd take in 4 or 5 'bad' guys in a typical day if the cards fell into place.