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DEA raids innocent families' home, 13 year old girl held at gunpoint...

http://www.lohud.com/article/201101...d-Spring-Valley-man-says-no-one-contacted-him

SPRING VALLEY — The day after a Rockland family said they were terrorized by heavily armed police who burst into their home looking for someone who didn't live there, the federal agency that organized the drug raid apologized for the incident.

John P. Gilbride, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration, issued a statement Friday clearing Spring Valley resident David McKay and his family of anything to do with the series of drug raids that took place early Thursday in Westchester and Rockland counties.

"We sincerely regret that while attempting to execute an arrest warrant for a member of this drug trafficking organization, the innocent McKay family was inadvertently affected by this enforcement operation," Gilbride said.

McKay had demanded an apology from police Thursday, but did not wish to comment on the matter Friday evening. He said that he was at a doctor's office with his daughter and was more interested in tending to his family.

McKay did say, however, that he had no knowledge of the apology statement issued by Gilbride and had not been contacted by any representatives from the DEA.

The raids broke up what police said was a ring that transported marijuana from the West Coast and resulted in the arrest of 26 people.

One of the suspects lives at 46 Sharon Drive in Spring Valley.
McKay lives with his wife, their 13-year-old daughter, brother-in-law and two dogs at 36 Sharon Drive.

At 5:30 a.m. Thursday, the family said police officers — their weapons drawn — barged into the house and pointed guns at the family.

McKay said he recognized some of the officers as Spring Valley police. Spring Valley officials referred questions to the DEA.
The officers were screaming for someone named Michael, McKay said. When he tried to explain that no one named Michael lived at the house, McKay said the police pulled him outside his home in his underwear in the freezing cold.

McKay said officers yanked his eighth-grade daughter out of her bed at gunpoint. The girl later vomited, fainted and had an asthma attack.

The McKay family has owned their home since 1998 and David McKay, who works for the Rockland sewer department , is listed in property records as the owner. Both he and his wife voluntarily submitted to extensive background checks in order to become certified foster parents.

"Though we take many precautions to prevent this type of incident from happening, drug investigations are very complex and involve many fluid factors," Gilbride said. "DEA will continue to pursue these criminal organizations to protect the public from the scourge of drug trafficking."

Botched police raids at the wrong address are on the rise nationwide as law enforcement agencies become more aggressive in their pursuit of drug suspects, said a policy expert who has studied the phenomenon.

"The 30-year-long war on drugs uses war rhetoric, outfits police in war gear and gives them military weapons and instills in police officers a war mentality," said Radley Balko, who wrote a report, "Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America" in 2006 when he was an analyst at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.

"Now the police have an increasing willingness to take the metaphor literally."

His study found that reports of so-called "wrong-door" raids in which police — often heavily armed — enter the wrong home have increased dramatically over the past 20 years.

Similar incidents have occurred in other places in the Lower Hudson Valley.

Ivamae Green of Mount Vernon sued the city a year ago after she said police officers mistakenly raided her home and performed invasive body searches. The status of the case is unclear.
Yonkers settled a lawsuit with a building superintendent whose apartment was the scene of a police raid in 2007. Two police officers fired 15 shotgun rounds and killed three pit bulls in the small apartment where the 49-year-old man and his children were sleeping. Details of the settlement were unclear.

Another Yonkers family this week was awarded a $20,000 settlement from the city after a woman sued, claiming that police burst into her apartment in 2007 with weapons drawn in search of drugs.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Lucreshia Amory, her two children and a friend, accused the police of trespass, assault, false arrest, intimidation, extortion and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Similar cases have occurred across the nation.

A Michigan couple won a $215,000 settlement last month against the city of Ecorse and the police after officers charged into the wrong house during a drug raid in 2008.

Wrong-door raids have had deadly consequences. Last year, the city of Atlanta was ordered to pay a $4.9 million settlement to the family of a 92-year-year-old woman who died in a botched drug raid in 2006. The woman fired an old pistol thinking that someone was breaking into her home. Police returned fire and killed her.
In May, a 76-year-old woman had a heart attack after police came to her home with guns drawn to serve an arrest warrant in Polk County, Ga., although it was the wrong house.

Balko said more people are beginning to look critically at such raids.

"Maybe the public is finally getting fed up with these tactics and the use of SWAT teams for pot smokers and poker games," he said. "The problem is that it's going to continue because no politician wants to look soft on crime."
 
I

idoreallytry

that lil girl was gonna go commando on them they had to hold her at gunpoint,,,thank god the guy that killed the old man by accident wasnt there,,peace
 
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knowhere

Member
where did the article go I cant find it, does anyone have a link that works ? looks like DEA paid PR caused this to be pulled I want a copy for evidence of government abuse
 
G

greenmatter

why would a cop feel threatened enough by a sleeping 13 year girl that he would feel the need to pull her out of her bed and point a gun at her? when was the last time you read a headline about an eighth grade girl going GI Jane on a police assault team. these guys do have a dangerous job but... WTF?
 

mean mr.mustard

I Pass Satellites
Veteran
I'm thankful I considered where my money would come from when deciding on a career choice.

I truly wish more people would.
 

BPJR

Member
You would think they would take the time to check their facts and then check them again for good measure. This is serious stuff. Awful situation I would not want to happen to anyone.
 

Zen Master

Cannasseur
Veteran
I wonder what straw is gonna break the back.

how much has to happen before its considered a 'police state' anyways?
 
C

CANNATOPIA

McKay said officers yanked his eighth-grade daughter out of her bed at gunpoint. The girl later vomited, fainted and had an asthma attack.
I bet when cops call begging for money every year this guy dosen't give anything but lip and lots of em.
 

paladin420

FACILITATOR
Veteran
Think it would have been ruled an accident if dad had slipped and shot a cop? I have gone legal.If they pass all the notices and warnings I have posted why are they different than any other ripper?They still want to rape us,no matter how legal we try to b. Just because I'm sometimes called Hippy don't bet ur freakin life (officer sir or mam!!!) I am a peacenik.
 

pearlemae

May your race always be in your favor
Veteran
One word LAWSUIT.
One way to slow, but probably not stop this type of police action, is to make them pay. Winning from or settling for large sums of money is the only way to get the attention of the police. When the department or city,town,villages insurance carrier jacks their rates or says we will no longer insure you because of repeated screw ups, then the people in charge get replaced or voted out. But finances is one big way to make them at least pay attention to what the fuck the cops are doing,Governments hate to pay big sums it hurts the budget.

SO :smoweed:
 

Grass Lands

Member
Veteran
"Though we take many precautions to prevent this type of incident from happening, drug investigations are very complex and involve many fluid factors," Gilbride said. "DEA will continue to pursue these criminal organizations to protect the public from the scourge of drug trafficking."

to bad they do not follow the 7P's...

Prior
Proper
Planning
Prevents
Piss
Poor
Performance

If they did, shit like this would not happen...

and I'll bet dollars to donuts that not one of those fuckheads will be reprimanded...
 

headband 707

Plant whisperer
Veteran
Yeah that makes me feel a lot safer knowing these guys are out there looking for potheads or anyone that has anything to do with cannabis LOL ... Perhaps the so-called laws of this land will take a closer look at "conscious party's" .. I tell you what ,,go after the real criminals like the ppl hurting ppl for crack instead of potheads.. I would have more respect for ya then.. peace out Headband707
 

David762

Member
Thanks for this posting, ThingsHappening.

It is important to note that the War on|of Drugs IS a War on People, regardless of protestations of the Obama regime, and especially Drug Czar Gil Kelikowske, to the contrary.

FWIW: I see no real progress being made towards liberalization of the draconian persecution of cannabis and cannabis users by any politicians, Democratic or Republican. Even MMJ laws set into place by State legislatures or voter referendums are being steadily chipped away by fascistic prohibitionists at every level of government. The only short term recourses that I see are (1) jury nullification, and (2) punitive civil lawsuits. Take away Their legal judicial victories, and enough of Their money, and they "might" get the correct message. Of course, the longer term solution is to vote each and every prohibitionist politician out of office, any office, permanently.

:tiphat:
 

Yes4Prop215

Active member
Veteran
i wanna hear more about the operation they ran..26 arrest in 3 eastern seaboard states over 1000 kilos of marijuana being shipped....anyone got alink? mentioned the marijuana was from california but didnt mention any california arrests...sounds like mexican cartel..but how would the DEA run an investigation since 2006 thats a hell of a time to run a case....usually in the news with weed we see a month or two tops then BOOM, raid, on to next case....
 

silverhazefiend

"Aint no love in the heart of the city"
Veteran
That's messed up ...I had a friend who won over 20 stacks for an illegal search where they opened his cast ..in nyc this is regular ..breaking doors ..the whole 9 ..I'm very close to yonkers so u could imagine ..all it takes is a statement and a judge to sign it ..the snitch could be lying ..doesn't matter ..one of the scariest things in life is being raided
 
C

CANNATOPIA

There are good cops too but it takes a decent human being to be one. I think serious checks are in order to weed out the bad people before they become a cop. I believe many of these cops now were BAD People to begin with and should have been let no where near a badge. That said, I am not sticking up for the government,cops nor many of the unjust laws they protect or crimes they commit. I also believe cops should be held responsible for their actions same as anyone else with no room for error just because they wear a badge. Just something to think about. LOVE TO IC!
 

David762

Member
Ahh, LEOs ... winning hearts and minds of the people.

Ahh, LEOs ... winning hearts and minds of the people.

gee, why do so many people hate cops?

I can't imagine why.

Ahh, LEOs ... winning hearts and minds of the people since the inception of the first Prohibition, against alcohol. It's not as if they don't have a vested interest in being jack-booted thugs, from continued employment to "extra benefits" on the side due to corrupt practices.
Example: Both criminal and civil asset forfeiture laws invite LEO abuse. http://www.fear.org

We are already seeing a systemic attack on the civil rights of citizens, from warrant-less searches to invasion of privacy to unjustified asset forfeiture -- and patient privacy rights in MMJ States under Federal HIPPA laws, non-existent. The War on|of Drugs has become joined at the hip with the War on|of Terror -- the DHS has 1,700 Fusion Centers scheduled to be opened all across the country, for All LEO use.

"Innocent until proven guilty" has been replaced by "innocent until investigated", requiring little more than a corrupt Confidential Informant and the victim(s) having a fat bank account or desirable|coveted property. Even politicians that inspire retribution from the Powers That Be have no standing under the Rule of Law.
Example: Former Governor Elliot Spitzer of New York, who was investigated under the auspices of the Patriot Act, confidential information illegally leaked to the Press, and without formal criminal charges ever being brought against him, he was forced out of office.

It is not a War on Drugs or War on Terror; it is a war against people, specifically designed to control us and suppress our will to oppose Them.

Sic semper tyrannis.

:tiphat:
 

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