A SWAT Team Blew Up This Innocent Woman's House and Cost Her Over $50,000. The City Tried To Stop Her From Suing.
A federal court wasn't having it.
![Unknown | Institute for Justice](https://d2eehagpk5cl65.cloudfront.net/img/c800x450-w800-q80/uploads/2021/11/Unknown-800x450.jpeg)
A SWAT team destroyed an innocent woman's house after a fugitive barricaded himself inside. Last week a federal court ruled that she can sue the government for damages.
In July 2020, Wesley Little—who Vicki Baker had terminated as her handyman about a year and a half prior—arrived at Baker's home in McKinney, Texas. Baker's daughter answered. Recognizing him from news reports that he was wanted for the abduction of a 15-year-old girl, she left the premises and called the police.
SWAT agents soon arrived. They set off explosives to open the garage entryway, detonated tear gas grenades inside the building, ran over Baker's fence with an armored vehicle, and ripped off her front door, despite being given a garage door opener, a code to the back gate, and a key to the home. The house was unlivable when they were through.
She sued. So the city asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit.
"In its pursuit of the fugitive and pursuant to its police powers, Baker alleges the City caused significant economic damage—over $50,000—to her home. Then, the City refused to compensate her for the damage," writes Judge Amos L. Mazzant III of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. "Baker has alleged damage to her private property—and the City's refusal to compensate for such damage—that plausibly amounts to a Fifth Amendment violation."
The fact that this needed to be spelled out is a commentary on how difficult it has become to get meaningful accountability from the government. At the center of Baker's case is the Takings Clause of the 5th Amendment, which is supposed to provide recourse to those who had their property taken or destroyed by the government. But this protection has been weakened by a series of court cases creating carveouts for actions taken under the broad scope of "police powers."
"They're forcing unlucky individuals to shoulder the burden of doing something that's good for society," Jeffrey Redfern, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, the public interest law firm representing Baker, told me in March. "Taking dangerous criminals off the street is good for society. If the city decides that it really needs to put a road through your house, that might be the right call. It might be something the community really needs. But that doesn't justify making one unlucky owner bear the cost of doing something that's good for everyone."
It's not unheard of for SWAT teams to destroy innocent peoples' homes in pursuit of fugitives unrelated to them or because the police didn't verify they had the correct address. The Supreme Court rejected a case brought by a Colorado family who tried to sue after SWAT agents mutilated their $580,000 home while pursuing a shoplifting suspect. And a group of more than two dozen police officers received qualified immunity after throwing explosives into the wrong man's home during a drug raid—meaning the 78-year-old victim, Onree Norris, could not sue them.
Baker will likely still have to overcome an appeal from the city. But if her suit meets a more fortunate fate, she may recuperate some of the financial costs incurred as she battles stage 3 cancer and tries to leave the state for retirement. Yet some things will not be replaceable. An antique doll collection was damaged by tear gas, for example. Worse yet, her daughter's dog was left deaf and blind.
"I've lost everything," Baker told Reason last March. "I've lost my chance to sell my house. I've lost my chance to retire without fear of how I'm going to make my regular bills."
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[Defendant] Didn't Want To Get Sued
Why is this in the headline? I get the whole SWAT team blowing people's houses up is a bit unsettling in the early stages of the great reset, but trying to not get sued is pretty stock standard for anyone.
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That's the whole point here. This woman shouldn't have to sue. The government should just pay for damages it caused. It claims to serve the people, so it should just serve the people without the federal government having to get involved.
This should have caused an uproar in this locality, but I guess people aren't paying attention to what their government is doing to random citizens.
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If the city didn't want to get sued, all they had to do was immediately compensate Ms. Baker for the damages done to her home. Had the not "failed to do right" they would have had no exposure to litigation.
Housing boom.
fixer-upper.
Look at all the code violations in that picture! This woman is a nuisance to the community!
especially for McKinney. can't believe they're not also fining her.
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She would have been safer with the fugitive.
In July 2020, Wesley Little—who Vicki Baker had terminated as her handyman about a year and a half prior
She escalated the situation by not giving a dangerous convicted felon a second chance at employment.
"Taking dangerous criminals off the street is good for society.
That's not an agreed upon premise.
The real dangerous criminals are the unvaxxed.
/Schmoe Tuesday
And those white folks that attack a black man driving a nice SUV.
Yeah, I remember the OJ low speed chase, too.
If they hadn’t stopped him, he would have found the real killer!
Worse yet, her daughter's dog was left deaf and blind.
Holy crap! The police continue to hit new lows in canine cruelty and abuse of homeowners. A deaf and blind dog is basically a dander factory that you have to buy food so it can poop in your home. Better off to shoot it so the HO doesn't have to put it down themselves.
At the center of Baker's case is the Takings Clause of the 5th Amendment, which is supposed to provide recourse to those who had their property taken or destroyed by the government. But this protection has been weakened by a series of court cases creating carveouts for actions taken under the broad scope of "police powers."
Which SCOTUS did that abomination?
The exact same scotus that still has Korematsu for controlling precedent.
Come here illegally and you get $450,000. SWAT burns down your house you get a fuck you. Sounds about right.
Where are the legislators to stand up for this woman and prohibit SWAT raids and remove qualified immunity and require repairs to be paid out if the police retirement fund?
You might as well ask where the Jedi are.
I imagine her HOA fines are stacking up too.
If this woman has a terminal disease I would not want to be any part of telling her to screw off. If she decides to "go postal", what does she have to lose?
Be careful what you wish for. If cops can't blow shit up, shoot dogs and strangle people selling loosies nobody will want the job.
I wish for a government where the government employees don't feel they can or should violate our rights, and instead protect us from others who'd harm us.
Is that careful enough?
Wishing is VERY different from voting. Voting is action... action that transmits specific information to the looters that make the laws. They act on that information promptly instead of waiting till someone you like is elected and deigns to try to grant your now most publicly and explicitly expressed wish. Remember economics class? The difference between effective and ineffective demand? Effective demand is backed by spoiler votes, money or force.
You know who else blew up innocent people’s houss?
Bounce House party rental employees?
They don't rent many of those anymore because of inflation.
People doing gender reveals?
Who else blew up innocent people’s houses?
Most air forces since the 1920's. Field artillery since the 1860's - if not since the 1620's.
Thank you. That really helped to shorten what would otherwise have been a VERY VERY long list.
I trued investing in artillery but lost some money. Turns out is is a shell game.
Well that’s the free market for ya’ Clearly we need a government ordnance here!
Prevent others from getting bent over the barrel like I did. It could turn violent of it happened to someone with a short fuse.
I ended up my sister, who first introduced me to this. My parents stepped in and said they can’t see howitzer fault.
Indeed, that violates the cannons of decency!
And Charles II, trying to contain the Great Fire of London in 1666 by blasting a firebreak across the city. Now, that's Sovereign Immunity.
I’m telling ya—give a guy named Charles the English crown, and he’ll completely lose his head over the first crisis that comes along!
Something of the sort was tried in San Francisco, 1906, when Kyle Rittenhouses were in heated demand and short supply.
That’s how my Nana’s family lost their home.
Putting the mortar in brick-and-mortar.
Meanwhile the video scroll is about a man in France who blew up his house trying to kill a fly. So there's more than enough of this to go around.
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Protect and serve has become maim and kill.
My grandparents lived in McKinney, and gave me my first firearm at age 10. After Nixon took office we got these George Wallace Ku-Klux Klan type cops as part of the package deal.
Damn, she gives them the key to the door and the garage door opener and they still bust doors open! Keystone cops!
The city has now spent about $542,673.98 to avoid paying $50,000. Must have studied the new common core math.
Nah, they're acting like typical city politicians. Wasting the taxpayers money is what they do best.
Maybe their motives were altruistic...
More likely the city's liability insurer is out those legal fees, not the city. Speaking of insurance, I suppose the homeowner didn't have any? Likely it would have covered the damages, less the deductible.