💾 Archived View for gemini.spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › politics › om940405.txt captured on 2020-10-31 at 15:01:23.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
************************************************************* * Michael R. Burhans - Out Of My Mind * * A Weekly Electronic Column * * April 5, 1994 * ************************************************************* Drug War Collateral Damage Or "You have the right to remain silent... forever." Friday night the twenty-fifth of March the nation's war on drugs claimed another innocent victim. The Boston Police Department's SWAT team acting on an informant's tip, raided the apartment of the elderly Reverend Accelynne Williams. The Reverend, noted for being quiet and shy in his personal life and for his dedication to helping people get off of drugs, was understandably shocked when without warning his front door exploded open and a team of helmeted men in full body armour armed with military style weapons came screaming into the room. While for most people such a moment of sheer terror would only lead to years of nightmares, pain and therapy, for Rev. Williams it was his last moment. These ninja suited drug warriors literally scared him to death. We can only imagine what terrified thoughts ran through his mind in those last moments. His family, friends, and parishioners are left behind wondering how this could possibly happen in America. It is a valid question that we should explore. The first question that we must ask is just what lead to this bust in the first place. According to the spokesman from the Boston Police they got a tip from an informant that cocaine was being sold from that building and he mixed up the apartment number. They lay all the blame for this homicide on this unnamed snitch. I beg to differ; what kind of police department stages a full scale SWAT raid on a single uncorroborated tip? Doesn't the Boston Police Department employ detectives? Do they not bother to utilize even a token amount of investigation or surveillance? Is it standard operating procedure to stage a full scale raid on each and ever drug tip that they get? Think of the abuse such a policy is prone to. Say you break up with your lover and want to make them miserable? Call in an anonymous tip that they are dealing cocaine and sit back and watch the fun as a dozen drug warriors destroy their property and piece of mind. Hey, you might even get lucky and have Officer Rambo-wannabe accidently shoot them! You just got fired? Call in an anonymous drug tip and watch your former place of business get torn apart! It may be days, weeks, or even months before they recover, perhaps even never. Haven't we lost enough of our rights in the name of this drug war already? When I was a small boy we were taught that one of the things that made the United States great was that a person's home was their castle. In America, we were told, roaming squads of police did not kick in people's doors and drag them off without a well investigated legally issued warrant. Now it seems this view is outdated, no investigation is needed. The police act on the merest scrap of suspicion, even single uncorroborated tips. Judges turn their back on the Constitution and what is right, and simply issue any warrants the police ask for. In this unthinking bureaucratic process all semblance of justice and rights are lost. Innocents die in their own homes; victims of Drug War Death Squads who should be more at home in El Salvador or Communist China than here in America. It is time for the people of the United States to stand up and reassert our roles as the rightful rulers in our society. This war on our rights must stop before the body count rises any higher. The law enforcement community must be put back into its proper place. Our Constitutional guarantees of freedom must once again be followed, or the entire fabric of our society is doomed. So far our leaders only plan to repair the societal chaos resulting from this usurping of our rights is to limit, and even remove more of our rights. This is unacceptable. Lastly I was struck by the closing comments the Boston Police Department's spokesman made. In reference to the death of Rev. Williams he said words to the effect that they would, "...make this situation right again." We can only be amazed at this level of hubris. It seems that the Boston Police Department has become so full of itself that it has decided that not only do the rules of proper Constitutional law no longer apply to it, but it seems neither do the rules of natural law! I for one will anxiously await to see exactly how they plan on resurrecting this good man that they so cruelly and unjustly killed.