Questionable SWAT Raid Leaves a Toddler Injured and His Father Facing Attempted Murder Charges
The Pensacola Police Department has launched an internal investigation into how a 1-year-old boy was injured in police custody following the pre-dawn raid.

A Florida man faces attempted murder charges for shooting at a police officer during a pre-dawn SWAT raid in Pensacola earlier this month. The raid is now the subject of an internal police investigation after the man's 1-year-old child was injured in custody.
Corey Marioneaux, Jr., was arrested on February 3 on charges of attempted murder on a law enforcement officer for firing a gun at a Pensacola detective as police executed a search warrant on his house. His family and friends tell local news outlets that he's a licensed gun owner with no criminal record who thought he was shooting at intruders.
The case is the latest in a string of volatile police raids—most notably the police killing of Breonna Taylor in 2020—that have led to scrutiny and reforms of search warrant tactics in several states over the past several years.
At approximately 5 a.m. on February 3, a Pensacola Police Department SWAT team executed a search warrant on Marioneaux's house. According to the department, police were searching for evidence related to a January shooting that injured two people. (The police would later tell local news outlet WEAR-TV Channel 3, which has reported extensively on the case, that Marioneaux was not a suspect in that shooting. His family said the search warrant was for electronics.)
The arrest report filed in the case says officers knocked and announced that they had a search warrant for approximately 10 seconds before breaking through Marioneaux's door with a battering ram.
As the lead officer entered the doorway, Marioneaux fired a single shot at him with a handgun. The round ricocheted off a shield the detective was holding. If the detective "had not been equipped with the ballistic shield he would have been struck in the face/head," the report said.
The officer returned fire at Marioneaux, but didn't hit him. Marioneaux dropped his gun and surrendered.
"While being taken into custody, Marioneaux made spontaneous statements in the presence of Detective Skipper (#185) that he was sorry," the report said. "Marioneaux also made spontaneous statement in front of Sgt. Stockpile #63 that he was sorry for shooting at officers."
What happened after Marioneaux's arrest, though, has also outraged his family and friends. As he was taken into custody, his 1-year-old and 3-year-old children were put in the back of a police cruiser until their mother could arrive to pick them up.
Moiya Dixon, the mother, told local news outlets that she was woken up by a phone call that morning telling her what had happened. When she arrived at the scene, she found her 1-year-old son had scrapes, scratches, and bumps on his face and head. The child allegedly fell out of the backseat police car and onto the pavement when an investigator opened the door.
3 INVESTIGATES - A mom speaks for the first time after she says her baby boy was injured in the custody of Pensacola Police.
All of this came after PPD arrested the father who shot at police — believing they were intruders when executing a search warrant.
Story at 6. @weartv pic.twitter.com/l8cD5LUBaZ
— Olivia Iverson (@OliviaIversonTV) February 9, 2022
Police called EMS to check out the toddler's injuries, but he was not taken to the hospital. Dixon further alleges that Pensacola police tried to dissuade her from taking the child to the hospital.
"So many red flags went up when they said that," Dixon told the Pensacola News Journal. "Why would I not take him to the hospital when he clearly had an injury to his head?"
In the wake of the allegations, the Pensacola Police Department launched an internal investigation into the raid and the injuries to the child. A department spokesperson declined to comment, citing the pending investigation.
However, in a February 7 statement to Channel 3, the department said:
After the search warrant was served, two children who were inside the residence were in the backseat of a car with a PPD investigator while they were waiting on family members to arrive to pick them up. A large vehicle approached that needed assistance navigating through the vehicles that were in the road. The investigator got out of the backseat to assist the driver. One of the children was leaning on the door of the car when the investigator opened it to get back in, and fell out of the car. The investigator wasn't aware that the child was leaning on the door. The child was checked by EMS for injuries. Both children were later released to family members.
Dixon also told local news outlets that the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF) is investigating the incident as well. DCF did not immediately respond to a request to confirm this.
Several states and major cities have tightened their rules for if and when police can use no-knock and late-night search warrants in the wake of the Breonna Taylor killing, but fatal raids have continued.
Earlier this month, a Minneapolis Police Department officer shot and killed 22-year-old Amir Locke during the execution of a no-knock raid. Locke, who was not named in the search warrant, appeared to be asleep under a blanket on a couch. As police entered the room, he put his hand on the barrel of a handgun, and an officer shot him three times.
The government insists that its citizens have a Second Amendment right to defend their homes, but it also insists that armed agents of the state may break down one's door in the middle of the night with little to no warning. So if a groggy, scared citizen, jolted out of bed by the sound of men shouting and the front door coming off its hinges, exercises that right against what he or she could reasonably assume to be violent intruders, the homeowner can be held criminally liable—and that includes capital punishment. In 2006, former Reason writer Radley Balko detailed the case of Cory Maye, a Mississippi man sentenced to death for fatally shooting a police officer during a no-knock drug raid. As Reason has argued continually over the years, these sorts of raids, especially when used for narcotics search warrants and non-violent offenses, put both officers and civilians at needless risk, occasionally with tragic results.
Marioneaux was released on a $50,000 bond. His attorney, James Bryant, says he will plead not guilty if the state attorney ultimately pursues charges against him. Marioneaux's arraignment was scheduled for Friday but has been continued, Bryant said.
Marioneaux and his family have yet to say if they will file a civil rights lawsuit, but Bryant said it is on the table. "I mean that is really kind of up to the city of Pensacola and the Pensacola Police Department," Bryant, told the Pensacola News Journal. "If they want to talk about how they're going to compensate these children for what happened to them, then we can avoid a civil action, but if they choose to dig in and refuse to accept liability, I will most certainly be bringing a civil action against them."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
The raid was for electronics. Probably a cell phone. Why not just wait for the guy to leave his house, pull him over, and then seize the phone? If it was for a home computer, same thing. Wait for him to come out, serve him, and go get the items. Unless they have reason that he knows of the warrant and is actively destroying the items, there's no reason to bust down the door at 5 am. But then there's no shooting that way, which is half the fun!
But, he might have flushed his PC down the toilet!
Wouldn't surprise me if some cop did this on purpose so he could joke to his buddies "There's a kid who was dropped on his head! Har har har!"
Release the video! I mean, sure, they likely didn't have a physical warrant issued to them in 10s* between issuance and execution and the footage of the kid getting injured while in custody is probably on a department cam but let's critically reframe this case around a piece of evidence that might show officers walking behind someone with a gun. For justice!
*FFS, no wonder so many wrong houses get raided. There isn't even time to check for typos.
As the lead officer entered the doorway, Marioneaux fired a single shot at him with a handgun. The round ricocheted off a shield the detective was holding. If the detective "had not been equipped with the ballistic shield he would have been struck in the face/head," the report said.
The officer returned fire at Marioneaux, but didn't hit him. Marioneaux dropped his gun and surrendered.
This whole thing is a joke, right? The whole point of a no-knock raid is to have the element of surprise. The whole point of the element of surprise is to bring superior skill and firepower to bear on your target. This result could've been achieved by having a 60 yr. old, overweight desk jockey walk up with a plastic shield at 3 in the afternoon.
So a trained police officer, ready for armed resistance, couldn't hit the target at all, and a surprised civilian scores a headshot.
Can we have a conversation about what real gun control is?
Damn straight. I totally want to buy that dude a beer.
Can we have a conversation about what real gun control is?
Fired one shot, realized "Oh shit! It's the police!", and put his gun down.
About once a year we get a situation where cops mistake a green pickup truck for a silver sedan, ventilate it and the surroundings with a dozen magazines' worth of ammo, and issue a statement "Anyone could've made the same mistake, these guys are heroes, no charges."
I guess both the homeowner and the cop are lucky he picked a handgun for home defense. The "attempted" wouldn't be on that murder charge if he had a bigger gun and that cop would be missing even more brain matter.
The obvious questionable raid aside, I really can’t think of a logical reason this would need to be done at 5 in the morning. Do they think a bunch of evidence would disappear if they waited 3 more hours?
...the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF) is investigating the incident as well.
Uh-oh.
Why have a no-knock warrant for ‘electronics’ at all? What’s he going to do? Flush his computer down the toilet? I fully understand his reaction. If I’m asleep in bed with my wife and someone kicks in my door in the middle of the night, I’m not going to just assume it’s the police, I’m going to grab my gun. I have a legal right to defend myself, my family and my home. There is an old saying, ‘Better to be tried by twelve than carried by six.’ I support the police but there are very, very few instances where a no-knock warrant is justified.
"there are very, very few instances where a no-knock warrant is justified"
Name one... I am interested but could not for any reason come up with a reason why they would be justified.
I know the excuse given to SCOTUS, but I don't buy it.
Name one... I am interested but could not for any reason come up with a reason why they would be justified.
I'm split. Take away the no-knock warrant and reasonable suspicion shootings skyrocket. Maybe cops are held more directly responsible and more respect is restored to the judiciary. I'm dubious as to the impending decline in the number of wrongful shootings or payouts though.
Hell, even in this case, there's no reason to assume the toddler doesn't still fall out of the car on his face without a no-knock warrant.
The only reason the toddler was put in the car was because dad shot at the cops.
The warrant wasn't for him. It was for electronics.
If they had asked politely with the warrant and he gave them his cellphone, the toddler is never touched by a cop.
The only reason a cop was ever in the house is because of the no knock warrant. This should all have been handled at the front door and in about 5 minutes.
Re this fiasco, putting it politely, judges really need to more closely examine search warrant requests than they seemingly do. The citizenry need to put pressure on their lawmakers to limit these No Knock Warrants, and the referenced lawmakers need to enforce obviously needed changes in the law governing search warrants and the issuance thereof. That nobody was killed in this screw-up was good fortune, good fortune that should not be counted on for a repeat.
Yeah, ~10s between official go and dynamic entry is 'foreign terrorist in a foreign land' bullshit. No-knock to collect evidence from a non-suspect is abject bullshit.
The police's own search warrant damns them the hardest:
"Officers proceeded to the front entrance of the residence where Detective Skipper (#185) loudly knocked on the front door numerous times while also announcing loudly, "Pensacola Police, search warrant!". Detective Skipper continued to knock loudly on the front door and announce "search warrant" for approximately ten seconds. Upon no response, Officer Roedel (#120), who was equipped with a door ram, struck the front door of the residence."
Got that kids? Ten seconds. You have just ten seconds and exactly one use of the word "police" before the door comes down and you get a gun pointed at you.
When I lived in Jacksonville Florida in the 80's. A group of thieves were finally arrested. They would wear dark jackets with the word "Police" on them and act as if they were cops with a warrant. They beat several people and raped at least two women. I'm pretty much on Marioneaux's side here.
How many times have we heard they knocked several times and announced who they were....when NONE of that happened.
What a sick statement. I love how police get to investigate themselves. What a joke this country is.
VH 032-linker 6
VH 032-linker 5 is a von-Hippel-Lindau protein ligand (VHL) conjugated to an alkyl linker with terminal carboxylic acid for PROTAC technology.
https://ptc.bocsci.com/product/vh-032-linker-5-cas-2172819-74-6-285287.html
Update to this story: The State Attorney dropped the charges against the father. https://www.pnj.com/story/news/2022/03/23/corey-marioneaux-jr-speaks-out-after-ppd-swat-case-charges-dropped/7149360001/
[JOIN NOW] I am making a real GOOD MONEY ($200 to $300 / hr.) online from my laptop. Last month I got cheek of nearly 30,000$, this online work is simple and straightforward, don’t have to go office, Its home online job. fbg You become independent after joining this job. I really thanks to my friend who refer me this:-
..
SITE….., http://moneystar33.blogspot.com/