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LIVES
INVASION OF SWAT TEAMS LEAVES TRAUMA AND DEATH
Alberto Sepulveda is no Elian Gonzalez. When 11-year-old Sepulveda
was shot and killed last week by a SWAT team member during an early morning drug raid on his parents' Modesto home,
the story barely made the papers. Yet, as did the Immigration and Naturalization Service raid on the Gonzalez home in
Miami in May, the killing of Alberto Sepulveda highlights a troubling trend in law enforcement: stealth raids on the homes
of sleeping citizens by heavily armed government agents.
Such raids are the hallmark of police states, not free
societies, but as a growing number of Americans can attest, the experiences of these two boys are by no means isolated
incidents.
Just ask the widow of Mario Paz. She was asleep with her husband in their Compton home at 11 p.m. in
August 1999 when 20 members of the local SWAT team shot the locks off the front and back doors and stormed inside. Moments
later, Mario Paz was dead, shot twice in the back, and his wife was outside, half-naked in handcuffs. The SWAT team had
a warrant to search a neighbor's house for drugs, but Mario Paz was not listed on it. No drugs were found, and no member
of the family was charged with any crime.
And then there is Denver resident Ismael Mena, a 45-year-old father of nine,
killed last September in his bedroom by SWAT team members who stormed the wrong house.
Or Ramon Gallardo of Dinuba,
Calif., shot 15 times in 1997 by a SWAT team with a warrant for his son.
Or the Rev. Accelyne Williams of Boston,
75, who died of a heart attack in 1994 after a Boston SWAT team executing a drug warrant burst into the wrong apartment.
SWAT
teams, now numbering an estimated 30,000 nationwide, were originally intended for use in emergency situations, hostage-takings,
bomb threats and the like. Trained for combat, their arsenals (often provided cut rate or free of charge by the Pentagon)
resemble those of small armies: automatic weapons, armored personnel carriers and even grenade launchers.
Today,
however, SWAT units are most commonly used to execute drug warrants, frequently of the "no-knock" variety, which are issued
by judges and magistrates when there is reason to suspect that the 4th Amendment's "knock and announce" requirement,
already perfunctorily applied, would be dangerous or futile, or would give residents time to destroy incriminating evidence.
California
is one of few states that does not allow no-knock warrants. But the fate of Alberto Sepulveda--who was shot dead an estimated
60 seconds after the SWAT team "knocked and announced"--suggests the problem is not the type of warrant issued but the
use of military tactics.
The state's interest in protecting evidence of drug crimes from destruction, or even in
preventing the escape of suspected drug felons, does not justify the threat to individual safety, security and peace of mind
that the use of these tactics represents. On this, the now-famous image of a terrified Elian facing an armed INS agent
speaks volumes. Even when no shot is fired, these raids leave in their wake families traumatized by memories of an armed
invasion by government agents.
Police officers, too, are shot in these raids, barging unannounced into homes where
weapons are kept. These shootings may appear to confirm the dangerousness of the criminals being pursued, until one realizes
that they are committed when people are caught by surprise by intruders in their own homes and not unreasonably, if
unfortunately, grab a weapon to defend themselves. (Suspects also die in these shootouts. Troy Davis, 25, was shot point
blank in the chest by Texas police who broke down his door during a no-knock raid in December 1999 and found him with a
gun in his hand. Police had been pursuing a tip that Davis and his mother were growing marijuana. His gun was legal.)
Using
paramilitary units to enforce drug warrants is the inevitable result of the government's tendency to see itself as fighting
a "war on drugs." This rhetoric makes it easy to forget that the targets in these raids are not the enemy but fellow
citizens, and that the laws being enforced are supposed to ensure a safe, peaceful, well-ordered society. If lawmakers
in Washington and Sacramento are genuinely committed to defending the right of the American people to be safe and secure
in their own homes, they would demand an accounting for the thousands of drug raids executed by SWAT teams every year
all over the country, raids that get little media attention but nonetheless leave their targets traumatized and violated.
Assuming, that is, that they leave them alive.
Sharon Dolovich Is an Acting Professor at UCLA School of Law

FAMILY DESTRUCTION
By William Claiborne Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, March 24, 2000; Page A02
CHICAGO, March 23 –– A sixth-grade student who said he wanted to join his mother in jail held his classmates
and teacher at bay with a handgun in an eastern Ohio elementary school today until another teacher persuaded him to give up
his weapon, authorities said.
The 12-year-old boy was taken into custody and no one was injured in the brief confrontation at the McKinley Elementary
School in Lisbon, Ohio, the latest gun incident in a public school. Other incidents have heightened demands for more gun controls.
Police Chief John Higgins said the youth, whose name was withheld because he is a juvenile, pulled his father's loaded
9mm semiautomatic handgun from a trouser pocket when his class bell rang about 8:45 a.m. and ordered his 25 classmates and
teacher Dan Kemats to lie on the floor. The weapon had 10 cartridges and the boy had another magazine with four rounds, Higgins
said.
A pupil passing by in the hallway overheard the outburst and alerted another teacher, Linda Robb, who stood in the classroom
doorway and told the boy with the gun, who by then was sitting quietly at his desk, that she wanted to speak with him. The
youth went into the hallway, where he and Robb hugged each other and he handed over the weapon, Higgins said.
"I don't know if he understood the magnitude of what he had done. He just knew he wanted to go to jail and be with his
mother," Higgins said in a telephone interview. He said the boy's biological mother is serving a drug-related sentence in
a state prison in Marysville, about 150 miles away.
EDUCATION
We are building prisons instead of colleges. With the billions of dollars that we are spending
on a war against our own citizens we could be building more schools and paying teachers a decent enough wage so they wouldn't
have to leave teaching for work that paid enough to live on.
Watch the clock for just a few minutes, and know that everytime that the incarcerated number goes up one
that it is very likely that there is a family attached to the one being incarcerated. Like the boy in the story above!
And look at the amount of money we are spending on a drug war that has failed miserably. Studies have shown that after 30
years the percentage of drug users is about the same as it was when they started this war.
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