Extensive records from SWAT team raids in northeastern Massachusetts released today by the American Civil Liberties Union corroborate what police reform advocates have long insisted: that “Special Weapons And Tactics” units spend a majority of their time responding to low-risk situations that do not require SWAT’s quasi-military approach.
The documents include after-action reports from 79 SWAT operations between August 2012 and June 2014 by the Northeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, or NEMLEC, a consortium of police departments covering 925 square miles in Middlesex and Essex Counties outside Boston. According to NEMLEC, its SWAT team exists to respond to “critical incidents,” mainly “active shooters, armed barricaded subjects, hostage takers, and terrorists.”
However, an examination of the records by the The Intercept demonstrates that such critical incidents are few and far between in Northeast Massachusetts. Nonetheless, SWAT teams frequently roll out in “NEMLEC Communities,” carried in BearCat armored response vehicles and armed with flash-bang grenades.
Just one of the 79 SWAT deployments in 2012-14 — assistance with the search for the perpetrators of the Boston Marathon bombing — involved terrorism. Other SWAT actions during that period show no hostage situations, no active shooters and only 10 non-suicidal barricaded subjects.
About half of the remaining cases involved everyday and often mundane police activity, including executing warrants, dealing with expected rioting after a 2013 Red Sox World Series game, and providing security for a Dalai Lama lecture. In one mission, 15 SWAT team members roved through Salem’s Halloween celebrations looking out for unspecified “gang-related activity,” but were warned by their commanders to maintain a “professional demeanor” given that “everyone has a camera phone and you don’t want to be on YouTube or the news later.”
The remaining 37 SWAT actions were either proactive drug operations, initiated by local police, or suicide response operations.
Pete Kraska, a professor at Eastern Kentucky University who has spent his career studying the militarization of police, argues that the use of SWAT units in drug operations unnecessarily exposes poor communities to paramilitary forces.
“It is really significant to remember that SWAT teams prior to the 1980s drug war were confined strictly to reactive, dangerous situations,” Kraska told The Intercept. “But in our research today we find that over 80 percent of the time police departments are using SWAT teams for proactive cases. These deployments are generally targeted at low-level drug dealers … and usually they’re just doing it for collecting evidence — not necessarily to even arrest a well-known, armed, dangerous drug dealer.”
Indeed, of the 21 SWAT narcotics warrant operations detailed in the documents, only five of them even mention recovering drugs. And the largest of these finds was five ounces of cocaine and 61 grams of heroin — hardly the stash of the next Sinaloa Cartel.
And despite the pettiness of their operations, the NEMLEC SWAT teams’ forceful tactics would make one think they were on the hunt for Osama bin Laden.
More than half of the SWAT teams’ drug operations were initiated at 3:30 or 4:00 a.m. Furthermore, of the 22 narcotics operations detailed in the documents over the two years, 14 included warrants authorizing SWAT teams to conduct “no knock” raids and four authorizing “knock and announce” raids — both of which are forceful entry options that have made national headlines for the accidental killings, injuries, and trauma they can produce.
In one February 2013 operation, 18 SWAT team members descended on a residence thought to be a site of illegal drug activity in Lowell, Massachusetts. In conjunction with local police, the unit conducted a no-knock raid despite pre-raid intelligence showing the possible presence of a child. Finding a woman who “appeared to be preparing illegal drugs for use intravenously,” the unit arrested all five adults in the residence for unspecified drug charges.
The team also found not one child but three, escorted them out of the house, sent them to the hospital, and filed a child abuse and neglect report with the Department of Children and Families. The only “events/items of note” in the case report summary are the five arrests and unspecified amounts of narcotics and cash.
Tom Nolan, an associate professor of criminology at Merrimack College and a former Boston Police Department lieutenant, similarly believes that SWAT units’ focus on areas like suicide response are a waste of limited public resources and can make fraught situations worse.
“I was a Boston police officer and was on some of the first SWAT deployments in the 70s. Those were only for armed barricaded subjects in buildings, the reason we were deployed were for hostage situations or threats to harm others,” Nolan said. “That’s why they were established. What we’re beginning to see is that in small towns like where NEMLEC has jurisdiction, their officers want to be on SWAT teams, so they’re looking for any justifiable way to get on.”
“It’s certainly counter-productive to have a fully-armed militarized SWAT team respond to potentially suicidal suspects who are looking for ways out like suicide-by-cop situations,” contended Nolan. “I don’t know why you couldn’t just have someone respond who knows negotiation strategy techniques, without the tanks and the body armor.”
Some of the NEMLEC documents illustrate this problem. In one August 2012 SWAT operation, team members came to the home of a man who had told his father that he wanted police to kill him and barricaded himself in his bedroom. And with the arrival of 18 SWAT officers, referred to as “operators” in the reports, he almost got his wish. Fearing that he had hung himself, they broke into his room — and finding him instead “holding two large knives and hiding behind the headboard of the bedframe,” they immediately tased him, hitting him in the chest twice. The man then jumped out his glass window, lunging at outside SWAT team members with his knife. An operator then subdued him as he attempted to cut himself, covering several operators with blood.
In both the drug raids and operations dealing with potential suicides, the actions involved a startlingly large number of officers:
NEMLEC’s non-drug or suicide SWAT actions often show similar apparent overkill. “There’s certainly a need for SWAT teams to accompany officers if it has been proven that there are verified armed suspects,” said Nolan. “But far too often officers come in with SWAT teams on a hunch or what-if feeling that there are weapons present.”
In fact, though police departments often cite dangerous armed threats to justify SWAT involvement in seemingly low-level warrant operations, data from the NEMLEC documents suggest this danger is exaggerated. Of the 33 search or arrest warrant operations conducted by NEMLEC’s SWAT units between 2012 and 2014, only four found any firearms — all of them pistols, handguns, or revolvers.
And even in these four cases the response sometimes appears disproportionate to the risk. For example, in a December 2013 “emergency call-out,” a 28-person SWAT team used a BearCat vehicle in an operation to “contain” a disabled, wheelchair-bound man who had been accused of shooting at a woman’s car with a revolver in a dispute over pain medication.
Armed with tasers, long arms, a shotgun, 40mm less-lethal rounds, shields and battering rams, the SWAT unit rolled up to his apartment and were let in by one of the suspect’s associates. When the suspect did not open his bedroom door despite promising to do so, a shield team smashed their way in, only to find the suspect having difficulties getting up from his bed due to physical disabilities. The report reads, “The suspect was contained by the team and given the opportunity to get dressed and remove his catheter.” (The team later found the revolver between the head of the bed and the wall.)
NEMLEC did not respond to several requests for comment. In a peculiar twist, when the SWAT documents were first requested by the ACLU in 2012 under Massachusetts’ open government laws, NEMLEC claimed it was a private corporation and hence beyond the laws’ reach. The ACLU filed a lawsuit last year, and in a recent settlement NEMLEC reversed its position and released the records. According to Kade Crockford, director of the Technology for Liberty project at the ACLU of Massachusetts, “It’s critical for the public to have reports like this on a routine basis. There’s been a pretty robust debate about the militarization of the police, but it’s very difficult for the public to have an accurate picture of raids because we don’t hear about the day-to-day grind of SWAT teams in the drug war. Transparency is absolutely critical for oversight.”
Illustrations: Josh Begley
Photo: Members of a NEMLEC SWAT team arrive at a location in Cambridge to take part in a simulated injured officer training exercise inside a building. (Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe/Getty)
I have an idea. Everyone join the police dept and become cops- then there will be no public, and with no public, no need for cops, then everyone can quit the dept and become the public again without cops.
The truth is we need cops- we just need control over them the right way. Not the way it is now with rouge governments, but by the people as it is suppose to be- and they answer to US.
honestly, I think these stormtroopers are scarier than the criminals. You can’t give a bunch of type a personalities military weapons and carte Blanche to use them day in & day out without unwanted effects to their psyches. These types of weapons & tactics should only be authorized on a case by case basis from an ELECTED official who’s head goes on the chopping block if it goes wrong.
Actually their idea of criminals barely scares me at all.
THEY scare me.
And I’m not sure much else can scare me, so what’s that say?
Why do they scare you? Is that why you don’t use your real name?
“About half of the remaining cases involved everyday and often mundane police activity, including executing warrants..” nothing mundane about it.. Take a ride sometime before spewing rhetoric, you might learn something.
Take a ride. Seriously.
You might learn something.
Crickets…
U$A imperialism fascist pigs!
I’ve heard that many of these SWAT teams and equipment are funded by federal dollars and with that is a requirement to use it or lose it. So they SWAT for trivial things to meet a quota. Also, I believe another contributor is the mentality of “we have cool stuff, so let’s use it”.
S. W. A. T. stupid – warrantless – attack – tactics.. o.k. they like their toys – the modern day Eliot Ness’ carrying around machine guns – driving the super armoured vehicles. The would be hero’s …. supermen armed to the hilt – go anywhere do anything.. Unfortunately there is no call for them in reality. Can anyone come up with an everyday situation that the normally armed police really can not handle?? Is Law & Order a matter of beating into submission?? Bigger-Badder-Rougher-Tougher-meaner – – isn’t in Law & Order – there is no shoot first count the bodies after…
> > there was a picture – a couple of years back of a local SWAT team/squad (whatever you wish to call them) posing with the special weapons they have access to – all with grins on their faces – – waiting for the opportunity to be able to use them…..Would you describe that as Law & Order?? ( oh the leader was – demoted?? suspended?? fired?? relieved of duty??). over-armed to over-kill…militarized (yes) police(no)
Interesting. SOF personnel are called operators, but, so are bus drivers
That’s okay, the military likes to call its own ‘warfighters’. Clearly the ‘modern warfighter’ has no other purpose other than be in/at war. Vocabulary provides us lots of clues.
Operator is taking pretty much from the military and spy worlds, anyway: further encroachment of milspeak on civilian policing.
From the Desk of Mr Christian C Holmer
RE: Providing Clarity Where Required
Mr Useful Idiot: Is there some reason you’d be expecting a SWAT raid on your farm?
MR CCH: Nope – As you know from our previous exchanges I don’t think they’d have the balls at this point. Getting it?
Mr. Useful Idiot: Wouldn’t you, I don’t know, notice the incoming traffic, given your apparently somewhat rural location?
Mr. CCH: RIght next to town and the Sheriffs Office. Standup guys.
Mr. Useful Idiot: Or are your hypothetical SWAT invaders hiking in from several miles away? Mr. CCH: Nope. Right down the street. Similar scenario for our Haight Ashbury condo which sit at the intersection of three police station districts Richmond Northern and Park.
Mr. Useful Idiot: ADT seems a strange choice, and your threat model seems poorly thought out.
Mr. CCH: Ah my original question. Cool. Go back and read it again. Or not. Can ADT turn off our equipment if we hardwire the whole system and pull the wifi card. As mentioned before we bought the equipment outright. I asked you because I valued you opinion.
Mr Useful Idiot: That is, of course, if this is even a real question and not just some sort of way to try to provoke me into replying to the stuff about HT.
Mr. CCH: Provoke you? Into what?
Seems like I’ve touched a nerve. Mea culpa. Your postings are very illuminating and I look forward to reading them.
crickets…
Oh yeah, 3 hours == crickets. I forgot, we live in an instant response at all times society. Clearly I’m not allowed a day off, either. Or sleep.
Hey lets take this exchange offline for an encrypted chat…Not.
*rubs legs together*
They don’t need to pull the system, they only need to cut your power and/or phone lines depending on how it’s wired. As I don’t know the specific ADT system you’re using I’m not going to go slogging through documentation and providing point-by-point ways around your security system. Generally speaking, all commercial security systems have weaknesses. One should never rely upon them to prevent entry, only to prevent less sophisticated incursions. I have no idea how sophisticated the people you’d be expecting would be able or willing to be to bypass your security, and I don’t think you do either; it’s conceivable that the people who might want to get through your security system don’t know either. Is this a local SWAT team? Or a federal one? This matters. You’re attributing equal resources and commitment to unequal ‘enemies’. Again, is there some reason you’d warrant the exertion?
Wifi can be cut off or duplicated depending on how you have it wired, btw.
No nerve touched, whatsoever — I’m just not very pleased that you’re using a veritable cornucopia of ‘names’ on here then burying topics, repeatedly replying to yourself and repeating posts across multiple comment sections. It seems distracting at best, to me, somewhat dubious if I go middle of the line, and somewhat suspect if I take it further. Not that it’s for me to say what’s okay or not okay on here, because it isn’t, but it is less likely to warrant my reply. Especially when you’re trying very hard to get a reply to a post across multiple comment sections and then directing it directly at me. Just so you know why I’m reluctant to continue this thread.
If you’re really concerned, you should by all means hire a professional to do a real threat assessment if you’re worried — someone who’ll take an hour or two to help you figure out what your threat model might be. I can’t.
You bury threads. Every hour of every day. Your reading comprehension is improving. I rarely if ever use aliases and use my real name. Why dont you use your real name. How come other folks on this board call you a narc. Why are you always inviting people to go into encrypted chsts with you but they all turn you down. What are you scared of? You spout off here all day ever day. Some of your observations are cogent but most of it especially your multiple responses to yourself seem odd . I havent come across you anywhere else. Has anyone else?
BTW, chances are if anybody were to want to get past your security, they’d be rather unsophisticated and random, and even then your odds are that it’s probably a stretch. Most people really think they’re more threatened than they actually are — by criminals and (yes, I’ll say it) by police.
Which is why I asked why you’d think you’d have the latter to worry about in the first place. If you’re an avid gamer who hangs out with people who enjoy swatting people… then THAT is a valid reason for concern. If you’re not, and you believe that your sole reason for concern is, say, you posting on here — then you’re just feeding into the same paranoia that post-9/11 fears foisted upon most people, just in another arena. That’s not healthy either.
I dont have anything to worry about sweetpea. I use my real name. You dont. What are you so worried about that you’re afraid to use your real name?
I’ve even given the locations of my two homes in California. Guilty Paranoids wouldn’t do that. Innocent and brave people will. Whats your name and where do you live?
Here in Chicago we have a similar regional police SWAT organization that can be called out by any police chief if they think it’s necessary. They’re called the “Northern Illinois Police Alarm System” or “NIPAS” and have among their military toys a helicopter! We wrote about them on our website a couple of years ago: http://wp.me/p2pWGj-we They cover 93 cities and towns in 5 counties in northern Illinois. Only the police chiefs of member local police agencies can call out these death squads, without first obtaining the permission to do so from any elected official. “Whether faced with a natural disaster [“or” – IWPCHI] the unexpected results of a special event, [our emphasis again – IWPCHI] a member agency may request assistance for any situation its command staff believes the agency cannot handle with its own resources. The requesting agency’s incident commander contacts the system’s dispatching center, Northwest Central Dispatch System, and identifies the level of response needed. There are ten levels, each one calling for an additional five officers to respond according to a pre-determined alarm plan. Thus, Level 1 requires five officers to respond; Level 10 requires fifty.”
So, why do we say we need a workers socialist revolution here in the USA as soon as possible? Are we imagining a growing lethal threat to the lives and welfare of the working class and poor of this country? The capitalists are scared of the potential for social explosions that they have created by driving down wages and standards of living, then taking the proceeds and filling their offshore bank accounts with them. These heavily armed police agencies that answer to no elected official are their private armies, ready to be used against the working class the moment the class struggle heats up. They already re-legalized torture and the assassination of US citizens. How much longer can we afford to wait to organize opposition to this vicious, racist US capitalist police state?
Workers of the World, Unite!
Independent Workers Party of Chicago
They fight against thugs who throw things and shoot at them, they go up against terrorist sympathizers, so yeah, let’s take away their protective gear and see who sticks around to get hurt… The police are the only thing between normal citizens and anarchist who want to burn it all down cause they can’t figure out how to get what they want legitimately.
Get a grip! Our country is not so batshit out of control that we need a militarized police force.
HOW TO FRAME EVERY GUY ON THE PLANET
http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/07/massive-leak-reveals-hacking-teams-most-private-moments-in-messy-detail/
“Security researchers have also scoured leaked Hacking Team source code for suspicious behavior. Among the findings, the embedding of references to CHILD PORN IN CODE related to the Galileo.”
https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/hacking-team-code.png
The thing to remember is, that, it’s vitally important to get a receipt.
You must get a receipt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSQ5EsbT4cE
Its better to have. Have ready. But not use. Than to not have, wish you did, and have many officers die. I say keep them on a very short leash…….not using them for everyday events. If you overuse them……it will anger the public. In most instances they are not needed.
I don’t know if we literally have to eliminate the excessive SWAT teams. After all, there’s something to be said for specializing police to deal with even potentially violent situations. A person on the brink of committing suicide, by definition, is (a) insane, and (b) at least claims to have some method of killing a human being. It’s easy to say that cops shouldn’t turn out in heavy armor and riot shields but the minute I would actually think of going down to talk to bozo my feet and hands would start sweating and the idea of a tank would suddenly seem awfully appealing.
Maybe the better way to go, or at least, a parallel approach, is simply to secure the weapons that cause so much harm, especially the ones that aren’t treated as weapons. “Flash bangs” can cause lasting damage to hearing, and sometimes even land in a baby crib and send the little one to the next world. So instead of treating them like party favors, maybe we insist the cops treat them like explosives and keep them in a safe that requires them to get a time-sensitive code from central command, after explaining the reason they need to use them, before they get thrown in. Do the same with other problematic weapons. But let the cops have their armor, why not?
This is actually pretty sensible. They face danger, let them keep the defensive stuff, aka protective padding. But they don’t need all the lethal and “non-lethal” toys they have. It only increases their curiosity to test them out, often with undesired consequences, such as burning a baby in a crib.
There is no day to day grind for swat team members when it comes to the drug war! It is really colorful speech filled with nothing but MSM BS! What a BS Article!
BS, just so. There’s deep seated psychosis involved with, mostly male, humans that thrive on ‘full spectrum domination’ to feel ‘truly alive’. It’s especially telling what a cowardly instinct it is when, for ‘security’ purposes, head sock masks are part and parcel of attire for bloody fashionable, bone crunching, projectile spewing aggression.
These people are creeps servile to bigger more anonymous creeps who, too, are psychotics in league with their brash brothers of IS. Same mental state of power lust.
Fantastical action movies and realistic shooter video games create images in peoples’ minds that certain types of people want to live out in real life, which feeds into the media, which feeds into the desire to live the same way and so forth. Vicious cycles, game transfer effects, fantasies, and wanting to be ‘badass’, despite there being no enemy to fight that’s bad enough to warrant it.
Maybe what the world needs is a big-ass island to turn into a mil-police version of Jurassic Park and just let people go there and live out their fantasies with full-on effects including death. But then who’d want to be the innocent victims?
How can a consortium of police agencies claim to be a private corporation? If they are performing law enforcement duties, that is an essential government function. How many other consortiums are out there thumbing their noses at the public’s right to know what they are doing?
Heh I think it went from ‘social justice’ to ‘local justice’ to ‘Pinkerton’ to ‘federal’ and is now pretty much almost midway on the see-saw, ‘federal’ and ‘Pinkerton’. Same goes for the prison systems and the military. IMHO none of this stuff should ever be privatised.
Follow the OVERTIME $$$$$$$$$$.
I agree. Ramp up the fear among the citizenry, and then cash in.
The alcu has been enabling criminals for years. No surprise they want cops to raid houses with water guns
Well thats one of the three primary reasons we installed a state of the art commercial grade ADT system. They show up to serve a warrant for some unpaid state fee or to check on a nonexistant grow operation and you shake their hand and point at the cameras. At first we figured why generate any more data for the government and private sector to steal but the way things have been going for “them” the last few years – why not?
I’m pretty sure the cops, in many cases, call companies like ADT ahead of time before SWAT teams get to the battering ram stage.
ADT isn’t monitoring our system. We bought the equipment outright point of sale. System hardwired to and from every camera. We rarely even enable remote Wifi monitoring of the farm livestock and domestic pets (raccoons, mountain lions etc.) now that we’ve found a trustworthy ranch hand.
What did you think about this Useful Idiot? Thanks in advance.
Keeping it Brief
08 Jul 2015 at 8:32 pm
HOW TO FRAME EVERY GUY ON THE PLANET
http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/07/massive-leak-reveals-hacking-teams-most-private-moments-in-messy-detail/
“Security researchers have also scoured leaked Hacking Team source code for suspicious behavior. Among the findings, the embedding of references to CHILD PORN IN CODE related to the Galileo.”
https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/hacking-team-code.png
“of the farm livestock and domestic pets (raccoons, mountain lions etc.)”
Well, that’s a new interpretation of domestic pets. Or do you mean pests? I actually can’t tell. :P
Monitoring livestock pets and predators. What about our current ADT configuration (what I asked you about) – Is Hardwiring the system and leaving the Wifi off good enough to prevent remote access?
I think whoever named it Galileo should be given a stern talking-to for the unintentionally bitter irony.
Uncomfortable with the subject material? Who isnt? Especially those of us WITH children I’d venture to say.
Lets make it easier and replace CHILD PORN with ISIS PLOT in that linked Hacking Team .png file above. Does public knowledge of the Hacking Teams capability to frame ANYONE for participating in an ISIS PLOT or having advance knowledge of an ISIS PLOT make us US citizens safer?
That has nothing to do with my reply.
“Does public knowledge of the Hacking Teams capability to frame ANYONE for participating in an ISIS PLOT or having advance knowledge of an ISIS PLOT make us US citizens safer?”
Stuff like this is why I think you’re either deliberately or unknowingly trolling the comment sections. I accept if you’re not highly technically literate but coming here to spread FUD doesn’t benefit anybody. Honestly, if someone wanted to do that they wouldn’t need to shell out big bucks for stuff like HT’s piece of crap code, either.
I’m more technically literate than easily 90% of the people on most lists. Define trolling. I use my real name you don’t. You post 10 to 20 messages for every one of mine. You try to start separate threads with almost everyone you come across. I chime in occasionally and post links to related materials. Your exchanges tend to push threads down constantly in most stories and in my case its only my exchanges WITH you have done the same. Why are you scared of SWAT teams?
As to why I thought the name Galileo was rude — do a bit of research on Galileo Galilee.
Is there some reason you’d be expecting a SWAT raid on a farm? Wouldn’t you, I don’t know, notice the incoming traffic, given your apparently somewhat rural location? Or are your hypothetical SWAT invaders hiking in from several miles away? ADT seems a strange choice, and your threat model seems poorly thought out — that is, of course, if this is even a real question and not just some sort of way to try to provoke me into replying to the stuff about HT you’re splooging all over the place under multiple names.
OOPS POSTED THIS ON THE WRONG SUB THREAD
Christian C Holmer 09 Jul 2015 at 3:05 pm
From the Desk of Mr Christian C Holmer
RE: Providing Clarity Where Required
Mr Useful Idiot: Is there some reason you’d be expecting a SWAT raid on your farm?
MR CCH: Nope – As you know from our previous exchanges I don’t think they’d have the balls at this point. Getting it?
Mr. Useful Idiot: Wouldn’t you, I don’t know, notice the incoming traffic, given your apparently somewhat rural location?
Mr. CCH: RIght next to town and the Sheriffs Office. Standup guys.
Mr. Useful Idiot: Or are your hypothetical SWAT invaders hiking in from several miles away? Mr. CCH: Nope. Right down the street. Similar scenario for our Haight Ashbury condo which sit at the intersection of three police station districts Richmond Northern and Park.
Mr. Useful Idiot: ADT seems a strange choice, and your threat model seems poorly thought out.
Mr. CCH: Ah my original question. Cool. Go back and read it again. Or not. Can ADT turn off our equipment if we hardwire the whole system and pull the wifi card. As mentioned before we bought the equipment outright. I asked you because I valued you opinion.
Mr Useful Idiot: That is, of course, if this is even a real question and not just some sort of way to try to provoke me into replying to the stuff about HT.
Mr. CCH: To provoke you? I was simply interested in hearing your take on the Hacking Team the FBI the DEA and the CIA can FRAME innocent people for anything they want. Example: FRAMED for either participating an ISIS PLOT or rendering material assistance required to foment ISIS PLOTS.
Anyhow seems like I’ve touched a nerve. Mea culpa. Your postings are very illuminating and I look forward to reading them
Replied above. Unrelated, but Haight-Ashbury condo — fancy. And considering it’s urban and in a rapidly developing and increasingly rich area — far more criminal concerns. I’d worry far more about someone breaking into that.
We’re not worried. We’re thorough. We took out insurance on our insurance and even Lloyds of London to protect future rental income streams if either propertys leveled by a natural calamity. Our threat model is probably just far mir inclusive than yours because…well, just because. My problem with you, I guess, is that you give voice to what you perceive to be the the “fears” of others encouraging people not to click links to reputable articles, go to encrypted chats or steer clear of subject material unless they do. This is the type of cowardly advice one gives to discourage the people from expressing how they really feel openly. Its the kind of advice i’d expect to see coming from someone discouraging the free and open exchange of ideas. In another part of this thread you nothing much could scare you but Being confronted by a SWAT team would. I said they wouldnt have the balls to frame me for something at this point and you said…?
My wife and father, who supported my work on carbon emissions mitigation, were fired from their private sector jobs on the same day, on Earth Day. The government increased our property taxes 10,000% and then tried to seize our home because of our work and documents posted on the Internet. Our lawyers advised to take down the web pages and we complied. So I scheduled a press conference to get the message out. Two days prior to the conference the government sent out 50 heavily armed SWAT, landed a helicopter, shot our dogs, smashed windows, doors, fire bombed our home, and bloodied me on the hood of an SUV. There was no crime and no records of past crimes. This was pure intimidation and character assassination. The press conference was cancelled. I will never talk to the press again. The experience gave us PTSD.
The authors here read and sometimes answer comments, so unless George Joseph isn’t checking his responses, you’re talking to the press. Since you’ve come this far, why not email the author, especially since he’s shown interest in the topic?
The threats have proven credibility. I can not tell the whole story. Way too dangerous.
The participants of SWAT do it for fun, like a fox hunt.
If any of these secret surveillance databases are set up to do anything but deliver insider stock trading tips, then from the information you gave they ought to be able to figure out who you are in a few minutes. So… why not?
I’m sure they do plenty of interesting stuff with the proceeds from those stock trading tips Wnt. Everyones threat models are different. First you have to make sure the family is secure and safe. Then you need to know enough of the technical details about what has been released in the press and/or submitted in open court to make your own decision to say…why not? The threat level for being framed using Equation Group firmware malware Stingrays Drtboxes GCHQ JTRIG spoofs and Hacking Team Tools (citizenlab 2014) first for those that could get to discovery and now trickling down to public defenders nationwide. That’s one of the reasons (spooking them into shutting down Hemisphere is another) Obama and Holder have been stressing leniency and forgiveness while suggesting the modification of sentencing guidelines to assuage their own guilt for those the DOJ FBI DEA SOD convicted via parallel construction targeting the same demographics as the NYPD stop and frisk.
The SWAT war against antiwar dirty hippies…
Our photos shot April 19, 2015
http://www.harbornet.com/sunflower/mp1.jpg
http://www.harbornet.com/sunflower/mp2.jpg
http://www.harbornet.com/sunflower/mp3.jpg
A neighbor had a lawsuit against police for harassment. He eventually lost his house. It was slated to be torn down. That day police, off duty assembled across the street to watch from lounge chairs. He lost everything except what he could carry out.
Just another leg of the Corrupt Police State we live in
Thank you for this analysis. It’s been frustrating seeing the expansion of SWAT uses since the 80s when we were promised they would only be used for extreme situations. It’s been plainly obvious, but nice to have numbers from real data to show it. Sad it takes an ACLU lawsuit to even get the records to analyze.
How many ex soldiers who have experienced horror in the Middle East come home and find a home in the SWAT team family? Could these teams be part of a undisclosed national police force?? I wonder.
Guess The Intercept doesn’t want to cover the San Fran illegal immigrant story, huh?
Most “police officers” in the U.S., including these violent SWAT thugs, don’t give a damn about protecting the people that pay their salaries. They are, for the most part, insecure meatheads who are trying to prove something to themselves and others. Is it any wonder that the rate of domestic violence in police families is 2 to 4 times that of the general population?
“Domestic violence is 2 to 4 times more common in police families than in the general population. In two separate studies, 40% of police officers self-report that they have used violence against their domestic partners within the last year. In the general population, it’s estimated that domestic violence occurs in about 10% of families.”
http://www.purpleberets.org/about.html
If you don’t want a SWAT team breaking down your door at 3am remember to pay off the local precinct sergeants.