Late last month, Berwyn Heights, Md. Mayor Cheye Calvo took the unusual step of filing a civil rights lawsuit against the police department of his own county. The suit stems from a 2008 SWAT team raid on Calvoโs house that resulted in the shooting deaths of his two black Labrador retrievers. In pushing back against the abuse he suffered at the hands of the Prince Georgeโs County police department, the mayor is helping expose a more widespread pattern of law enforcement carelessness and callousness throughout the state of Maryland.
Prince Georgeโs police originally obtained a warrant to search Calvoโs home after intercepting a package of marijuana sent to the mayorโs address. Calvo and his family were innocentโthe package was intended to be picked up by a drug dealer. But instead of first investigating who lived at the residence, or even notifying the Berwyn Heights police chief, the county police department immediately sent in the SWAT team. In addition to having his two dogs killed, Calvo and his mother-in-law were handcuffed for several hours, and questioned at gunpoint.
To his credit, the mayor concluded early on that if this could happen to him, it was probably happening to others. โIn some ways, we were lucky,โ Calvo said at a University of Maryland event this April. โWe had the support of our community, who knew we werenโt drug dealers. It didnโt take long for me to realize that many people this kind of thing happens to donโt have that kind of support.โ
Calvo also learned just how obstinate and unapologetic police and government officials can be, even (or especially) when theyโre clearly in the wrong. Prince Georgeโs County Police Chief Melvin High actually praised his officersโ conduct, insisting that if they had to do it again theyโd conduct the Calvo raid the same way. โOur investigators went in and showed both restraint and compassion,โ he told a local TV station.
Prince Georgeโs County Executive Jack Johnson told a local newspaper that Calvo would get no apology for the slaying of his dogs. Johnsonโs puzzling explanation: โWell, I think in America that is the apology, when weโre cleared. โฆ At the end of the day, the investigation showed he was not involved. And thatโs, you know, a pat on the back for everybody involved, I think.โ
It took nearly a year for the Prince Georgeโs police department to release its report on the incident. The conclusion: Officers did nothing wrong.
Within a few weeks of the raid, other victims of botched search warrants in Maryland began contacting Calvo. One couple was raided after their teenage son was found with a small amount of marijuana during a traffic stop. Another elderly couple had their dog shot and killed by Prince Georgeโs officers in a mistaken raid. And in Howard County, police broke down a door in front of a 12-year-old girl, battered a man with a police shield, then shot and killed the manโs Australian cattle dog. They were looking for someone suspected of stealing a rifle from a police car. The suspect didnโt live at the residence.
There were more:
โข Eleven days before the raid on Calvoโs home, Prince Georgeโs police raided the home of a Secret Service agent after receiving a tip that he was distributing steroids. They found no drugs or incriminating evidence.
โข In August 2007 police raided the home of a Prince Georgeโs County couple to serve an outstanding arrest warrant for their son. The parents were handcuffed at gunpoint. Police later learned that the coupleโs son had already been in police custody for 12 days.
โข In November 2007 Prince Georgeโs police raided the wrong home of a couple in Accokeek. Though the couple presented the police with evidence that they were at the wrong address, the police still detained them at gunpoint, refusing even to let them go to the bathroom. The couple asked the police if they could bring their pet boxer in from the backyard. The police refused. Moments later, the police shot and killed the dog.
โข In June 2007 police in Annapolis deployed a flash grenade, broke open an apartment door, and kicked a man in the groin during a mistaken drug raid. When they later served the warrant on the correct address, they found no drugs.
Most victims of these mistaken raids experienced the same callousness and indifference from public officials that Calvo did. When police in Montgomery County conducted a mistaken 4 a.m. raid on a Kenyan immigrant and her teenage daughters in 2005, the county offered free movie passes as compensation. When police in Baltimore mistakenly raided the home of 33-year-old Andrew Leonard last May, the city refused to pay for Leonardโs door, which was destroyed during the break-in. When Leonard called the cityโs bulk trash pick-up to come get the door, no one came. Days later, city code inspectors fined Leonard $50 for storing the broken door in his backyard.
Just last month, Baltimoreโs ABC affiliate reported on another mistaken raid, and noted that city officials generally make no effort to compensate homeowners when police trash their houses in search of contraband that doesnโt turn up. โIf youโre searching for drugs or unlawful firearms, these things are not left out in plain view on the living room table,โ City Solicitor George Nilson explained. โYou often will have to do some damage to the premises and โฆ the police department doesnโt and we donโt pay for those kinds of damages.โ Even if the police find nothing, Nilson said, the city has no obligation to pay, because, โit may have been the stuff that youโre looking for was there three hours earlier, but somebody got it out of harmโs way.โ
At least none of these raids ended with the loss of human life. In January 2005, police in Baltimore County conducted a 4:50 a.m. raid on the home of Cheryl Lynn and Charles Noel after finding marijuana seeds and cocaine residue in the familyโs trash. After taking down the front door and deploying a flash grenade, SWAT officers stormed up the steps and broke open the door to the Noelsโ bedroom. Because their daughter had been murdered several years earlier, the couple kept a gun near the bed. When the police entered the bedroom, 44-year-old Cheryl Lynn Noel stood with the gun, clad in her nightgown. She was shot and killed by an armor-wearing SWAT officer, who fired from behind a ballistics shield. Police found only a misdemeanor amount of illicit drugs in the home. Shortly after the family filed a civil rights lawsuit in 2006, Baltimore County gave the officer who shot Noel an award for โvalor, courage, honor, and bravery.โ
In March, a federal jury returned a verdict in favor of the police. The winning argument in the Noel case is a common oneโbut itโs also paradoxical. Police argued both that these volatile, confrontational tactics are necessary to surprise drug suspectsโto take them off guard before they have a chance to retaliate, or dispose of the contraband. At the same time, police argued that Cheryl Lynn Noel should have known the armed men storming her home at 5 a.m. were police; therefore she had no right to be holding a gun, and the police had every right to shoot her. Unfortunately, under the law the jury (and the police) was probably correct. The police didnโt appear to violate any department policy.
Itโs the policy thatโs the problem. Drug war hysteria has so twisted our sense of right and wrong over the last 30 years that weโve come to accept the idea that sending SWAT teams after minor potential drug offenders is an acceptable police tactic. The occasional wrong house, murdered pet, or police killing of a mother of two are regarded as regrettable but acceptable collateral damageโthe price we pay to keep drugs illegal.
Maryland is hardly unusual. The last 30 years have seen a massive increase in the use of SWAT and paramilitary police tactics. High-profile botched raids like the Calvo incident occur all over the country. They inevitably get reporters digging and activists lookingโand generally findingโother victims who were too frightened or embarrassed to come forward earlier. Thatโs usually followed by promises for reform โฆ then a return to business as usual once the attention dies down.
But something good may yet come out of Maryland. Mayor Calvo was able to get first-in-the-nation legislation passed in his state that will bring some transparency to how police agencies use their SWAT teams. Every department will be required to submit a quarterly report detailing each SWAT deployment.
That at least is a start. It will enable some honest assessment of just how often these tactics are used, and what theyโre actually turning up. Terrible as it sounds, it may well take more mistaken raids on high-status victims like Calvo to generate real debate over the wisdom of using violent, high-risk police tactics to serve warrants for nonviolent crimes.
Radley Balko is a senior editor of Reason magazine where this column originally appeared. The JFP Daily features his column every Tuesday.
Previous Comments
This is a great column. How can such tactics be justified in pursuit of small amounts of marijuana?
#149879 | Author: Brian C Johnson | Date: Jul 21 2009
My mother has a client for counseling who suffers from severe PTSD after a swat team mistakenly forced their way into her home. Turns out they had the wrong address.
#149885 | Author: Izzy | Date: Jul 21 2009
This kind of thing is a natural extension of government intruding into people’s private lives. The only way the government can enforce laws that are commonly disregarded is by force. They simply have no other way to do it when the people choose to resist the kind of control government would impose. No one is perfect and there will be mistakes, so there you go. It’s easy to say something like marijuana should be illegal, but to make it illegal and then try to stop it’s use and distribution you will have a para-miltary police unit kicking in citizens doors, shooting their pets and even the citizens themselves. Of course, they feel like they have done nothing wrong they are simply following the law we, through our government, decided we wanted enforced. We should think about that before we say this or that should be illegal. Before we decide we will bend others to the will of the mob we should ask ourselves, how much force will we use to bend them and do the ends justify the means? The land of the free is becoming more and more of a joke everyday.
#149919 | Author: WMartin | Date: Jul 22 2009
Good grief, you’d think we’d suddenly become a nazi state. How many more SWAT raids are successful, rather than the four or five cases mentioned here? If you want to argue that a law enforcement tool should be used carefully, fine. If you want to argue that because it can be misused it should be banned, then you have problems.
#149926 | Author: Ironghost | Date: Jul 22 2009




