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-Land of the Free
Have police departments gone too far with SWAT units?
2014-06-26
[LATIMES] At the end of the 1960s, the Los Angeles Police Department decided it needed a better way to handle situations, such as confrontations with barricaded gunmen or hostage takers, that presented a high risk of deadly violence. So it created Special Weapons and Tactics units, known thereafter as SWAT.

In the decades since, these units have spread nationwide, contributing to a startling militarization of local police agencies. The American Civil Liberties Union now raises troubling questions about the blurred lines that come with arming and training domestic law enforcement officers as though they are an extension of the U.S. military.

In a report released this week, the ACLU analyzed more than 800 incident reports from 20 police agencies in 2011-12 and found that eight of 10 SWAT deployments were not to confront barricaded suspects or to negotiate the release of hostages but rather to serve search warrants, primarily in drug cases. Two-thirds of the deployments involved breaking down doors, and many included tossing flash-bang grenades and rousting occupants at gunpoint.

The ACLU study looked at a tiny fraction of police agencies, so its conclusions should be treated with caution. Still, the routine use of SWAT units to serve warrants has been documented elsewhere and constitutes a worrisome example of mission creep: If police departments have the units, they tend to use them, even in scenarios for which they were not initially envisioned. Militarized teams were deployed about 3,000 times a year in the 1980s; by the mid-2000s, annual deployments reached 45,000.
Posted by:Fred

#4  Ditto Ship.
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-06-26 20:04  

#3  During the horror at the University of Texas it was 2 cops climbing the tower has soon as they could get there. Whitman would have killed another 90 people with todays get to get started, call the swat team to get ready lets plan. Some times, you gotta get your damn gun and climb the tower and kill the SOB. When the time comes you need a damn cop doing his job, if it's more than that you call the National Guard.
Posted by: Shipman   2014-06-26 17:27  

#2  Put them under the 'militarized' state office of the National Guard. Once the chiefs and sheriffs lose control, they'll also lose interest.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2014-06-26 08:31  

#1  Yes. Next question.
I've always subscribed to the notion of: If the job's too difficult or unsafe, why don't you look for a different job?
Posted by: ed in texas   2014-06-26 07:36  

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