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midnitefarmer
07-24-2008, 12:08 PM
Radley Balko: Senseless Overkill


Wednesday, March 12, 2008
By Radley Balko

Bill Tiernan | The Virginian-Pilot


Feb. 21: Ryan Frederick, right, sits with his lawyer, James O. Broccoletti, in a Chesapeake courtroom.

Imagine you’re home alone.

It’s 8 p.m. You work an early shift and need to be out the door before sunrise, so you’re already in bed. Your nerves are a bit frazzled, because earlier in the week someone broke into your home. Oddly, they didn’t take anything; they just rifled through your belongings.
But the violation weighs on your mind. At about the time you drift off, you’re awakened by fierce barking from your two large dogs. You hear someone crashing into your front door, as if he’s trying to separate it from its hinges. You grab the gun you keep for home defense and leave your room to investigate.
This past January that scenario played out at the Chesapeake, Va., home of 28-year-old Ryan Frederick, a slight man of little more than 100 pounds. According to interviews since the incident, Frederick says when he looked toward his front door, he saw an intruder trying to enter through one of the lower door panels. So Frederick fired his gun.
The intruders were from the Chesapeake Police Department. They had come to serve a drug warrant. Frederick’s bullet struck Detective Jarrod Shivers in the side, killing him. Frederick was arrested and has spent the last six weeks in a Chesapeake jail.
He has been charged with first degree murder. Paul Ebert, the special prosecutor assigned to the case, has indicated he may elevate the charge to capital murder, which would enable the state to seek the death penalty.
At the time of the raid, Ryan Frederick worked for a soft drink merchandiser. Current and former employers and co-workers speak highly of him. He also recently had gotten engaged, a welcome lift for a guy who’d had a run of tough luck.
He lost both parents early in life, and friends say the death of his mother hit particularly hard — Frederick discovered her in bed after she had overdosed on prescription medication.
Friends and neighbors describe Frederick as shy, self-effacing, non-confrontational and hard-working. He had no prior criminal record. Frederick and his friends have conceded he smoked marijuana recreationally. But all — including his neighbors — insist there’s no evidence he was growing or distributing the drug.
According to the search warrant, the police raided Frederick’s home after a confidential informant told them he saw evidence of marijuana growing in a garage behind the home. The warrant says the informant saw several marijuana plants, plus lights, irrigation equipment and other gardening supplies.
After the raid, the police found the gardening supplies, but no plants. They also found a small amount of marijuana, but not much — only enough to charge Frederick with misdemeanor drug possession.
Frederick told a local television station that he was an avid gardener. A neighbor I spoke with backs him up, explaining that Frederick had an elaborate koi pond behind his home and raised a variety of tropical plants. He’d even given his neighbors gardening tips on occasion.
One of the plants Frederick told the local television station he raised was the Japanese maple, a plant that, when green, has leaves that look quite a bit like marijuana leaves.
So far, Chesapeake police have given no indication that they did any investigation to corroborate the tip from their informant. There’s no mention in the search warrant of an undercover drug buy from Frederick or of any extensive surveillance of Frederick’s home.
More disturbingly, the search warrant says the confidential informant was inside Frederick’s house three days before the raid — about the same time Frederick says someone broke into his home. Frederick’s supporters have told me that Frederick and his attorney now know the identity of the informant, and that it was the police informant who broke into Frederick’s home.
Chesapeake’s police department isn’t commenting. But if true, all of this raises some very troubling questions about the raid, and about Frederick’s continued incarceration.
Chesapeake’s lawyer, Paul Ebert, said at a recent bond hearing for Frederick that Shivers, the detective who was killed, was in Frederick’s yard when he was shot, and that Frederick fired through his door, knowing he was firing at police.
Frederick’s attorney disputes this. Ebert also said Frederick should have known the intruders were police because there were a dozen or more officers at the scene. But some of Frederick’s neighbors dispute this, too. One neighbor told me she saw only two officers immediately after the raid; she said the others showed up only after Shivers went down.
What’s clear, though, is that Chesepeake police conducted a raid on a man with no prior criminal record. Even if their informant had been correct, Frederick was at worst suspected of growing marijuana plants in his garage. There was no indication he was a violent man — that it was necessary to take down his door after nightfall.
The raid in Chesapeake bears a striking resemblance to another that ended in a fatality. Last week, New Hanover County, N.C., agreed to pay $4.25 million to the parents of college student Peyton Stickland, who was killed when a deputy participating in a raid mistook the sound of a SWAT battering ram for a gunshot and fired through the door as Strickland came to answer it.
So in the raid where a citizen mistakenly shot a police officer, the citizen is facing a murder charge; in the raid where a police officer shot a citizen, prosecutors declined to press charges.
Over the last quarter century, we’ve seen an astonishing rise in paramilitary police tactics by police departments across America. Peter Kraksa, professor of criminology at the University of Eastern Kentucky, ran a 20-year survey of SWAT team deployments and determined that they have increased 1,500 percent since the early 1980s — mostly to serve nonviolent drug warrants.
This is dangerous, senseless overkill. The margin of error is too thin, and the potential for tragedy too high to use these tactics unless they are in response to an already violent situation (think bank robberies, school shootings or hostage-takings). Breaking down doors to bust drug offenders creates violent situations; it doesn’t defuse them.
Shivers’ death is only the most recent example. And Ryan Frederick is merely the latest citizen to be put in the impossible position of being awakened from sleep, then having to determine in a matter of seconds if the men breaking into his home are police or criminal intruders.
How many people can honestly say they’d have handled it any differently than he did?
Radley Balko is a senior editor for Reason magazine and maintains at Web log at TheAgitator.com

Delta-9
07-24-2008, 02:59 PM
thats fucked up there must be nothing to do in that town if they have time for that bullshit. im sure theres much worse things going on that they should be looking for and investigating

Useless
07-24-2008, 03:02 PM
I read this a while back. Just goes to show that we are like a game animal during a raid. They can kill us when they break down our doors as if we are rabbits during duck hunting season. (No wabbit season!) (Sorry had a bugs bunny flashback there haha) But seriously its a shame the coppers who are invading our privacy, breaking into our homes can kill us with no repercussions. But at the same time, if we defend ourselves and our homes against an unknown intruder who seems to be breaking in, well that makes us cop killers. Not exactly fair is it.
Now let me ask this. Does anyone really think that a war on drugs should have human fatalities? I sure dont. If there is a war on drugs, then drugs should be the fatality. But obviously they cant be stopped, they are inanimate objects, so how do you win a war against that? The whole thing just boggles my mind. A made up war on an inanimate object where the only casualties (also read as victims) are the populace of the country fighting the war! Unfuckinbelievable!

Delta-9
07-24-2008, 03:12 PM
I read this a while back. Just goes to show that we are like a game animal during a raid. They can kill us when they break down our doors as if we are rabbits during duck hunting season. (No wabbit season!) (Sorry had a bugs bunny flashback there haha) But seriously its a shame the coppers who are invading our privacy, breaking into our homes can kill us with no repercussions. But at the same time, if we defend ourselves and our homes against an unknown intruder who seems to be breaking in, well that makes us cop killers. Not exactly fair is it.
Now let me ask this. Does anyone really think that a war on drugs should have human fatalities? I sure dont. If there is a war on drugs, then drugs should be the fatality. But obviously they cant be stopped, they are inanimate objects, so how do you win a war against that? The whole thing just boggles my mind. A made up war on an inanimate object where the only casualties (also read as victims) are the populace of the country fighting the war! Unfuckinbelievable!
the war on drugs LMAO they should take the billions of dollors they spend on a war that cannot be won and maybe give us free health insurance like canada. and then change laws look at Amsterdam there crime rate is so low they have thier designated spots to do your thing. and if you dont want to be around it dont go to that spot.

Useless
07-24-2008, 04:39 PM
I agree man. Shameful waste of money, resources, and human life, with absolutely nothing in return to show for it.
It reminds me of a song. A prize of some sort to anyone who can identify the band and song.


Shivers running down my spine, who's blood? I know it's mine,
I'm a moving target and I can't go home.
Chased forever and a day, of my choosing my own way,
I don't want to forget the things I've done.

Chorus

No one hurt, now I'm on the escape, no one killed and no one raped,
But I'm the monster they want to catch...
.......................


Mistical, give the other folks a chance before you tell em what it is mate! I know you could pick that song out after the first 5 words. HAHAHAHA

nowherefast
07-24-2008, 06:05 PM
id still go piss on the dead cops grave, no one forced his stupid ass to be there so fuck him.

BlowsTrees
07-24-2008, 06:26 PM
GBH- I Am The Hunted.

Good tune':thumbsup: :laugh: :woohaa:

Longleaf
07-24-2008, 11:54 PM
This fits right into their asinine "War On Drugs" propaganda. As if it isn't bad enough that they try to link drug use with terrorism, now they're doing it with murder. Put another nonviolent, hard working man behind bars and label him a cop killer. A couple of weeks ago, I saw a "documentary" on MSNBC about a murder case. The victim was a snitch, and he was killed, allegedly by the dealer he snitched on. The title was "Murder and Marijuana." It's enough to make you sick. Ranger would have loved this one.

gnarly
07-27-2008, 09:15 PM
I thought that in a nonviolent situation the police would knock, speak to the person answering the door, hand them the warrant, and begin the purposes of the warrant.

I didn't know a warrant authorized the police to destroy property (bash the door in). I also thought that the warrant must be served prior to entry (I could be wrong on this one...).

Either way, I think the decisions made by the police are responsible for the outcome. I wonder what the 'informant' will be held responsible for... nothing?

Useless
07-28-2008, 08:22 AM
Man, I wish I could smile when someone shoves a shit sandwhich in my face and tells me I should eat it.

Long leaf, you are right. Dont make me play rangerdanger advocate in his absence! LOL
Murder and Marijuana do not compute. The answer is nonsequitor (sp).

SFC
07-30-2008, 01:35 PM
That is why they are called no knock warrants Gnarly:bs: The cops are getting desperate. That is the most obvious to me. Many people realize that the war on drugs is a farce,and they are no longer willing to turn in a neighbor like they had in the past. This forces the overzealous cops to get more,and more aggressive to make it appear as if they are doing something. We are at a turning point, or at least very near it in the War. Time will tell.

Delta-9
07-30-2008, 02:09 PM
i think its fucked up when they bust a small operation 5-10 plants for your own use. and then they always describe it as a high tech setup with lights and timers and stuff LMAO they always hype it up and make it sound 100 times worse than it realy is. they need to leave us the fuck alone were nonviolent gardeners go put all that effort into getting the heroin and cocaine dealers