Sunday, February 17, 2019

De Facto Death Squad

Foreword: This commentary is about to be very blunt. Current/former LEOs and people who are blindly back the badge might think this bluntness means I'm against law enforcement in all circumstances or that I'm personally attacking them. People who are anti-LEOs in all circumstances might think that I backing their twisted and idealized version of anarchy. I can't control what reactions people have I can merely advocate that people apply logos to a topic that pathos all too often reigns in.

Some of you might remember the Houston Chief of Police a week or two ago using the shootout which killed or injured police officers conducting a raid and though nobody felt it worthy of mention at the time resulted in the deaths of the home's lawful occupants to attack the Right to Keep and Bear Arms.  It now appears that either due to his own confirmation bias or trying to preemptively cover up for his department murdering two people he should have waited for what the late Paul Harvey would have called "The Rest of the Story":


A confidential informant didn't buy drugs at the southeast Houston home where a botched police raid turned into a deadly shootout last month, according to a new search warrant.

The shocking new information was revealed today after ABC13 obtained two of several search warrants executed as part of the ongoing investigation following the deadly raid.
The search warrant clearly shows the initial information used to obtain the no-knock search warrant involved a number of lies.
The details don't improve things here. Also notably lacking is any form of apology from the Chief of Houston Police for the character defamation he tossed out both upon the deceased citizens and others who keep and bear arms. Not only were the firearms used to resist this illegally obtained warrant not the evil back semi-automatic rifles, but as it would appear that the firearms used to kill innocents in this case belonged to his department.

People are going to point out that "18 grams of marijuana and about 1.5 grams of cocaine" were found after the raid, which if valid is illegal. However at this point neither of the house's occupants are alive to dispute such evidence. This is NOT the type of drugs sworn to in the search warrant request. Some other media sources are citing this narcotics unit having drugs in their own cars so after such a spectacular botch in which we already have one "bad apple" we are forced to ask how much pressure there was to not come up empty handed on the follow-up search. Again it has come out that the entire basis of this invasion was fraudulent which leave me disinclined to believe good faith findings in the rest, particularly findings from the same department:


Instead, Bryant said, he retrieved two bags of heroin from Goines’ own police car after another officer told him to do so. Bryant eventually admitted that he had no idea where the two bags of heroin came from and that he had never seen the bags before retrieving them from Goines’ car.
 Smarter people than I are going to need to be involved in the nuts and bolts of how we begin to bring better accountability to our LEOs. My own inclination would be a radical refocusing of resources to crimes that directly affect people and property since the worst of this type of behavior seems tied to times and places that attempt to police morality.

Update:

To nobody's suprise:

Even before the deadly drug raid that left two civilians dead, Houston Police Officer Gerald Goines had a troubling history of allegations against him.

4 comments:

  1. I admire your outrage. But I have finally come to understand that this is the normal action of every PD and "law enforcement" agency. We will never know what petty reason some badge holder had to have this family murdered. But it will happen again. Maybe to you or me. Maybe to someone we know. The evil and corruption has metastasized until there is only one way to stop it. That day is long overdue. It isn't "a few bad apples". It is every one of them. If they are not directly involved in felony crime of the worst kind. They are helping to cover it up. Just in my home state of Kentucky in the last ten years we have had detectives arrested with TONS of drugs. We have had departments doing contract murder. We have had dozens of local and state officers involved in a ring that kidnapped girls under 13 and gang raped them to make kiddy porn. Worse in many of these "cases" innocent's were murdered as part of cover up's, and not a single cop has been punished or even reprimanded. EVEN HAVING CONFESSED UNDER OATH. I wish I could share your outrage. But I have become numb to this. Until we the people take up arms and administer real Justus, this will never end. --Ray

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm with you on this Odysseus: My own inclination would be a radical refocusing of resources to crimes that directly affect people and property since the worst of this type of behavior seems tied to times and places that attempt to police morality."

    Ray's comments above make sense too. In a big "L" Libertarian world, the story from KTRK wouldn't have occurred, and that's how it should be.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The police do not police their own!! The "bad apple" is a ruse. It's all about power in their "us against them" world. This is why the need by the power hungry to eliminate the private ownership of guns is front and center in today's political arena.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Like it or not....admit it or don't but the ugly reality is there are NO GOOD COPS. There are only
    the bad cops who break the law, assault people, lie,
    plant evidence and commit murder. And the OTHER bad cops that witness this criminality on a regular basis and DO NOTHING. The ONLY reason ANYTHING of note is happening regarding the murders committed in Houston by the PD is POLITICS. The "optics" are such that the department cannot sweep it under the rug, make it go away or distract people from the crime the officers engaged in. Because if they could....THEY WOULD.

    ReplyDelete