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-Land of the Free
Troubling new details about the violent police raid in Iowa
2014-02-06
[Washington Post] The Des Moines Register has the latest on that volatile police raid that I wrote about yesterday. The raid was apparently for suspected credit card fraud. Ankeny Police Department officials are now speaking out. But I'm not sure they're helping their cause:

Ankeny police are defending the raid, saying they needed to use that approach to protect officers' safety.

Ankeny police Capt. Makai Echer said officers knew at least one person in the house had a permit to carry a firearm. She said the department isn't currently investigating how officers handled the search, nor does the department have a written policy for executing warrants.
Unlike every other police department in the country...
So they see nothing wrong with how the raid was handled, and the department has no stated policy for executing warrants. All of that is troubling enough. (The lack of a written policy also suggests a lack of training.) As is the "officer safety" justification, as if that in itself trumps the rights of the people inside the house.

But citing the fact that one of the occupants in the house -- Justin Ross -- had applied and was approved for a gun permit is probably most disturbing of all. First, hardened criminals who are a threat to kill cops tend not to be the sort of people who bother with permits, or to register their firearms with the government. I don't think that point needs more elaboration.

Second, Ross was not one of the suspects for whom the police were looking. It seems highly, highly unlikely that had the police knocked on the door, announced themselves and waited for someone to answer it, a law-abiding citizen like Justin Ross would be a threat to suddenly decide to kill some cops. But it's much more likely that Justin Ross might feel the need to defend himself upon hearing unidentified parties break down two doors, followed by the sight of several gunnies in his home. Indeed, that's very nearly what happened.
Posted by:Fred

#6  Meanwhile elsewhere. Reason for Grand Juries.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2014-02-06 13:42  

#5  The moral of the story: you own a gun, you had it coming.

More like - you have permission to own a gun - so you had it coming.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2014-02-06 13:18  

#4  The militarization of the police for DHS is seen at big events all across the country. There is a both a surplus of war & budget cuts, with new orders one of the few successful manufacturing businesses in America.
Posted by: Flaiger Uneamp8181   2014-02-06 13:16  

#3  Our local constabulary bought 2 FN "sniper" rifles last year (local rag's verbiage not mine)... to "save lives during hostage situations". ...Of which there have been none.

n the other hand, they bought them just after a bill calling for the confiscation of most firearms hit the state senate. Some times 2+2 = 4... some times it equals .308
Posted by: Chailet Unase8653   2014-02-06 12:58  

#2  officers knew at least one person in the house had a permit to carry a firearm

The moral of the story: you own a gun, you had it coming.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2014-02-06 03:39  

#1  I've noticed OUR (Small town?) Police force have a smallish armored vehicle, similar to a small water fording vehicle, (Open top, tracked,)looks like it would be used storming Normandy.

I can't think of any use the would have for it. We have no swamps.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2014-02-06 01:21  

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