Drug Warriors Say They Use Mutilating Grenades for Safety
ProPublica exposes cops' promiscuous use of flash-bangs.

A devastating new ProPublica story presents disturbing evidence that the promiscuous use of SWAT teams by police across the country is accompanied by the promiscuous use of flash-bang grenades, explosive devices that are designed to distract and disorient targets by creating a deafening noise and blinding light. When recklessly deployed, flash-bangs also can cause serious injury or death. ProPublica reporters Julia Angwin and Abbie Nehring found that "at least 50 Americans, including police officers, have been seriously injured, maimed or killed by flashbangs since 2000." That number "is likely a fraction of the total," they add, "since there are few records kept on flashbang deployment."
The story opens and closes with the case of Treneshia Dukes, a Georgia woman who suffered second-degree burns during a 2010 raid in which Clayton County police deployed three flash-bangs and turned up "about a tenth of an ounce of marijuana." An internal investigation concluded that the cops had done "nothing wrong." Dukes is trying to prove otherwise through a federal lawsuit that charges police with using excessive force.
Angwin and Nehring also discuss the fruitless 2014 drug raid in Habersham County, Georgia, that left 19-month-old Bou Bou Phonesavanh horribly injured by a flash-bang tossed into his crib in the middle of the night. Bou Bou's family is stuck with medical bills that total $1.6 million so far, and the little boy has undergone a series of surgeries that will continue into adulthood. "Because his skin grafts won't grow as he grows," Angwin and Nehring write, "Bou Bou will need reconstructive surgery every two years for the next 20 years." A local grand jury concluded that the officers who carried out the raid that burned and mutilated Bou Bou had conducted a sloppy investigation but had not been criminally careless. The Justice Department is investigating, and the Phonesavanhs are expected to file a civil suit.
Angwin and Nehring suggest that flash-bangs are overused, often without adequate training. They cite data collected by the American Civil Liberties Union showing that "between 2011 and 2013, Little Rock police tossed flashbangs into homes on 112 occasions, or 84 percent of raids—nearly all of them in predominantly black neighborhoods." A police department spokesman defended that record, telling ProPublica, "You may see a large number of flashbang deployments, but what we see is a large service of warrants without gunfire." But Angwin and Nehring point out that "no weapons were found at three-quarters of the homes during this period."
One of those Little Rock raids involved a grandmother accused of illegally selling beer and food from her home—a misdemeanor that triggered the use of a battering ram and a flash-bang, which started a fire in a pile of clothing. "If she hadn't been selling illegal items out of the home, no warrant would have been served," the police spokesman told ProPublica. "What you call extreme, we call safe."
To my mind, tossing explosive devices into the homes of nonviolent offenders is decidedly unsafe; in fact, it is inherently reckless, especially since there is always the possibility that innocent bystanders like Treneshia Dukes or Bou Bou Phonesavan will be injured or killed. Even if the police had found the drugs they were expecting in those cases, that would hardly justify their paramilitary assaults. Flash-bangs, like SWAT tactics generally, should be reserved for life-threatening situations involving hostages, barricaded shooters, and the like. They should not be casually tossed into the mix of techniques for busting unauthorized sellers of bud or beer.
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As long as they go home safely at night. Why do you people hate our working-class heroes?
Because McCartney was the better Beatle.
Sadistic politicians specifically should be targeted by these pages since the brutality starts with legislation.
As much as law enforcement continually stands in need of rebuking and leashing they are beasts of burden engaged in a mostly violent task laid out by macabre overseers- who often move on into the cushy corporate sector.
"If she hadn't been selling illegal items out of the home, no warrant would have been served,"
No need for a trial then, since you already know who's guilty and innocent.
For the children. THEY DID IT FOR THE CHILDREN!
They had to burn down the child to save it.
yep
Like Bou Bou! The world is a safer place for his scarred body now.
Fucking sadistic scumbag pigs.
exactly this
The thing is, think about this: you do a raid, and horribly burn a child. Do you 1) apologize profusely, offer to do anything you can to help, and possibly resign, or 2) cover your ass and to hell with the little shit?
We know what the pigs in this case did, and that tells us everything we need to know about them. In spades.
That's the thing. I'm not sure how I could live with myself if I did such a thing. They seem to laugh it off and think they did nothing wrong.
this (rather long but really interesting) video contains interviews with an escapee from a north korean prison camp as well as interviews with former north korean prison guards who could basically kill with impunity while working in the prison camps. essentially, these guards felt they had done nothing wrong (at the time) because of the power the state had given them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihUOHARC_Og
It's the blue wall of silence, Epi. Until they fear the consequences of misconduct more than the retaliation of their fellow cops we're fucked.
I think it's what happens when people receive their sense of morality externally from authority rather than internally from a value system and code of conduct that does not divorce basic human decency from "the job".
I wonder how the use of these, essentially, bombs in private residences comports with the Fifth Amendment and then I think of four reasons they might be necessary:
For officer safety
You don't know who's inside
Thankfully the police are here to serve us
Want them to go home to their families
BOOYA! WE ARE WINNING!
Libertopia is upon us!
A devastating new ProPublica story
Uh, devastating to who? Police, politicians and soccer moms give exactly zero shits.
toddlers and minorities hardest hit
Yeah, and you would think that the burned toddler would have made the soccer moms look up from their cud-chewing long enough to express...something.
Will someone please blame the children?
Fucking babies should be beaten with steaks and jelly sandwiches!
gonna keep posting til everybody has seen it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWiiWUyt69w
Fucking awesome. KITH...
When recklessly deployed, flash-bangs also can cause serious injury or death.
When properly deployed, they can and do cause permanent hearing loss.
http://reason.com/archives/201.....under-fire
Lets hit em up dude, I mean like for real.
http://www.Web-Privacy.tk
Be careful now, anonbot. Ross Ulbricht is on trial right now for saying stuff like that.
On a related note, I really with anonbot's username was Donny, then whenever it posts we could all say, "Shut the fuck up, Donny!"
*really wish
Damn you, lack of edit button!
Anon-Bot est Charlie?
But Angwin and Nehring point out that "no weapons were found at three-quarters of the homes during this period."
Weapons being found is irrelevant. Were the weapons used against the cops, or hell, I'll even go as soft as asking if the weapons were likely to be used?
I've got a house FULL of weapons but that doesn't justify the use of a flash bang if the city finds recyclables in my trashcan.
30 yrs ago there were about 300 SWAT raids a yr across the whole USA.
They were reserved for the most extreme targets.
Now there's almost 300 a day.
What has happened since then?
It's like the there has been a military coup and the police are now channeling public funds into their own departments without any checks on their validity.
The US is a police state thanks to the drug war.
Drug-dealing infant got what she deserved?
The common cop apologia I see about the story is that even though there were no drugs found or equipment in evidence, the family was definitely cooking meth. Which means throwing in a flashbang to an active meth cook was the right thing to do.