My extra disturbing, latest piece published today at AlterNet:
Just after midnight on May 16, 2010, a SWAT team threw a flash-bang grenade through the window of a 25-year-old man while his 7-year-old daughter slept on the couch as her grandmother watched television. The grenade landed so close to the child that it burned her blanket. The SWAT team leader then burst into the house and fired a single shot which struck the child in the throat, killing her. The police were there to apprehend a man suspected of murdering a teenage boy days earlier. The man they were after lived in the unit above the girl’s family.
The shooting death of Aiyana Mo’Nay Stanley-Jones sounds like it happened in a war zone. But the tragic SWAT team raid took place in Detroit.
Shockingly, paramilitary raids that mirror the tactics of US soldiers in combat are not uncommon in America. According to an investigation carried out by the Huffington Post’s Radley Balko, “America has seen a disturbing militarization of its civilian law enforcement over the last 30 years, along with a dramatic and unsettling rise in the use of paramilitary police units for routine police work.” In fact, Balko reports that “the most common use of SWAT teams today is to serve narcotics warrants, usually with forced, unannounced entry into the home.”
Some 40,000 of these raids take place every year, and “are needlessly subjecting nonviolent drug offenders, bystanders and wrongly targeted civilians to the terror of having their homes invaded while they’re sleeping, usually by teams of heavily armed paramilitary units dressed not as police officers but as soldiers,” says Balko. And as demonstrated by the case of Aiyana Mo’nay Stanley-Jones, these raids have resulted in “dozens of needless deaths and injuries.”
How did we allow our law enforcement apparatus to descend into militaristic chaos? Traditionally, the role of civilian police has been to maintain the peace and safety of the community while upholding the civil liberties of residents in their respective jurisdiction. In stark contrast, the military soldier is an agent of war, trained to kill the enemy.
Clearly, the mission of the police officer is incompatible with that of a soldier, so why is it that local police departments are looking more and more like paramilitary units in a combat zone? The line between military and civilian law enforcement has been drawn for good reason, but following the drug war and more recently, the war on terror, that line is inconspicuously eroding, a trend that appears to be worsening by the decade.
The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 is a civil war-era law that prohibits the use of the military for domestic law enforcement. For a long time, Posse Comitatus was considered the law of the land, forcing militarization advocates to come up with creative ways to get around it. In addition to assigning various law enforcement duties to the military, such as immigration control, over the years Congress has instituted policies that encourage law enforcement to emulate combat soldiers. Hence, the establishment of the SWAT team in the 1960s.
Originally called the Special Weapons Attack Team, the Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) units were inspired by an incident in 1966, when an armed man climbed to the top of the 32-story clock tower at the University of Texas in Austin and fired randomly for 90 minutes, shooting 46 people and killing 15, until two police officers managed to kill him. This episode is said to have “shattered the last myth of safety Americans enjoyed [and] was the final impetus the chiefs of police needed” to form their own SWAT teams. Soon after, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) formed the country’s first SWAT team, which acquired national prestige when used against the Black Panthers in 1969.
Use of these paramilitary units gradually increased throughout the 1970s, mostly in urban settings. The introduction of paramilitary units in America laid the foundation for the erosion of the barrier between police and military, a trend which accelerated in the 1980s under President Reagan, when the drug war was used as a pretext to make exceptions to the Posse Comitatus Act.
In 1981, Congress passed the Military Cooperation with Law Enforcement Act, which amended Posse Comitatus by directing the military to give local, state and federal law enforcement access to military equipment, research and training for use in the drug war. Following the authorization of domestic police and military cooperation, the 1980s saw a series of additional congressional and presidential maneuvers that blurred the line between soldier and police officer, ultimately culminating in a memorandum of understanding in 1994 between the US Department of Justice and Department of Defense. The agreement authorized the transfer of federal military technology to local police forces, essentially flooding civilian law enforcement with surplus military gear previously reserved for use during wartime.
“Between 1995 and 1997 the Department of Defense gave 1.2 million pieces of military hardware, including 3,800 M-16s, 2,185 M-14s, 73 grenade launchers and 112 armored personnel carriers” to law enforcement around the country, according to Diane Cecilia Webber. But this was only the beginning.
In 1997, Congress, not yet satisfied with the flow of military hardware to local police, passed the National Defense Authorization Security Act which created the Law Enforcement Support Program, an agency tasked with accelerating the transfer of military equipment to civilian police departments. Between January 1997 and October 1999, the new agency facilitated the distribution of “3.4 million orders of Pentagon equipment to over 11,000 domestic police agencies in all 50 states. By December 2005, that number increased to 17,000, with a purchase value of more than $727 million of equipment,” says Balko. Among the hand-me-downs were: “253 aircraft (including six- and seven-passenger airplanes, and UH-60 Blackhawk and UH-1 Huey helicopters), 7,856 M-16 rifles, 181 grenade launchers, 8,131 bulletproof helmets, and 1,161 pairs of night-vision goggles.”
The military surplus program and paramilitary units feed off one another in a cyclical loop that has caused an explosive growth in militarized crime control techniques. With all the new high-tech military toys the federal government has been funneling into local police departments, SWAT teams have inevitably multiplied and spread across American cities and towns in both volume and deployment frequency. Criminologist Peter Kraska found that the frequency of SWAT operations soared from just 3,000 annual deployments in the early 1980s to an astonishing 40,000 raids per year by 2001, 75-80 percent of which were used to deliver search warrants.
Balko cites Kraska’s research from 1997, which observed that close to “90 percent of cities with populations exceeding 50,000 and at least 100 sworn officers had at least one paramilitary unit, twice as many as in the mid 1980s.” He correctly points out that “the trends giving rise to SWAT proliferation in the 1990s have not disappeared, so it’s safe to assume that these numbers have continued to rise and are significantly higher today.”
Then there are the effects of the war on terror, which sparked the creation of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the introduction of DHS grants to local police departments. These grants are used to purchase policing equipment, although law enforcement is investing in more than just bullet-proof vests and walkie talkies. DHS grants have led to a booming law enforcement industry that specifically markets military-style weaponry to local police departments. If this sounds familiar, that’s because it is law enforcement’s version of the military-industrial-complex.
By instituting public policies that encouraged the collaboration of military and domestic policing, the US government handed a massive and highly profitable clientele to private suppliers of paramilitary gear. Following the breakdown of Posse Comitatus in the 1980s and ’90s, Peter Cassidy writes in Covert Action Quarterly that “gun companies, perceiving a profitable trend, began aggressively marketing automatic weapons to local police departments, holding seminars, and sending out color brochures redolent with ninja-style imagery.”
Private suppliers of military equipment advertise a glorified version of military-style policing attire to local police departments and SWAT teams. One such defense manufacturing company, Heckler and Koch, epitomized this aggressive marketing tactic with its slogan for the MP5 submachine gun, “From the Gulf War to the Drug War—Battle Proven.”
Today’s latest in paramilitary fashion sweeping through local police departments is the armored tank, which is making appearances all over the country at an increasingly alarming rate. The police department in Roanoke, Virginia paid Armet Armored Vehicles, a private company that specializes in military vehicles, $218,000 to assemble a 20,000-pound bulletproof tank with a $245,000 federal grant.
Not to feel left out, the Special Emergency Response Team (SERT) in Lancaster, Penn., was recently seen sporting the Lenco BearCat, a camouflage colored Humvee-styled tank that can “knock down a wall, pull down a fence, withstand small-arms fire and deliver a dozen heavily armed police officers to a tense emergency scene.” The BearCat was purchased a year and a half ago with a $226,224 grant from DHS, yet it has spent nearly two years sitting in a garage at the county’s Public Safety Training Center.
The most widely used justification for the purchase of heavily armored war machines is that violence against police officers has increased exponentially, necessitating the tank for protection of the men and women who serve our communities. But examination of the FBI’s annual Uniform Crime Report, a database that tracks the number of law enforcement officers killed and assaulted each year, reveals that this is simply not true. According to the UCR, since 2000 an average yearly toll of about 50 police officers have been feloniously killed, the highest reaching 70 in 2001. So the notion that militarization is a necessary reaction to a growth in violence against police officers is absurd, considering that violent crime is trending downward.
Others argue these tanks are needed in case of a terrorist attack or a natural disaster. But on September 11, 2001, I do not recall the NYPD complaining that a lack of armored tanks was impeding its policing efforts. And during the catastrophic tornado that tore through Joplin, Missouri earlier this year, heavily armored vehicles weren’t present nor were they needed to assist in the aftermath.
The majority of paramilitary drug raid proponents maintain that military-style law enforcement is required to reduce the risk of potential violence, injury and death to both police officers and innocents. The reality is that SWAT team raids actually “escalate provocation, usually resulting in senseless violence in what would otherwise be a routine, nonviolent police procedure.”
Just consider your reaction in the event of a SWAT team breaking down your door in the middle of night, possibly even blowing off the hinges with explosives, while you and your family are asleep. Imagine the terror of waking up to find complete strangers forcing their way into your home and detonating a flash-bang grenade, meant to disorient you. Assuming nobody is hurt, what thoughts might be raging in your mind while the police forcefully incapacitate you and your loved ones, most likely at gunpoint, while carrying out a search warrant of your home. Assuming you were able to contain the mix of fear and rage going through your body, consider how helpless you would feel to know that any perceived noncompliance would most certainly be met with lethal force.
Training and technology-sharing between the defense and civilian law enforcement seems responsible for the pervasive culture of militarism plaguing domestic law enforcement. In fact, an estimated 46 percent of paramilitary units were trained by “active-duty military experts in special operations.” Lawrence Korb, a former official in the Reagan administration, famously said that soldiers are “trained to vaporize, not Mirandize.” As police officers continue to emulate soldiers in their weaponry, language, tactics, uniform, and mindset, it won’t be long before they vaporize instead of Mirandize as well.
We have created circumstances under which the American people are no longer individuals protected by the Bill of Rights, but rather “enemy combatants.” The consequences of such a mindset have proven time and again to be lethal, as we now rely on military ideology and practice to respond to crime and justice. For some insight into the implications, one needn’t look any further than minority communities, which have long been the victims of paramilitary forces posing as police officers. Black and Latino communities in the inner-cities of Washington DC, Detroit and Chicago have witnessed first-hand the deadly consequences of militarization on American soil. Military culture now permeates all aspects of our society. Does anyone really believe that heavily armed soldiers trained to kill are capable of maintaining an atmosphere of nonviolence?
It’s important to remember that police officers are not responsible for instituting these policies. Over the last three decades local police departments supplied with military uniforms, weaponry, vehicles, and training, were told they were fighting a war on drugs, crime and terror. The politicians who instituted these policies are responsible for the militarization creeping into civilian law enforcement. What might the end result be if the distinction between police and military ceases to exist? The answer is a police state — and certain segments of our society are already living in one.
and we have this—I think all cops are having a more “SWAT Team” mentality
http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-man-dies-after-being-tased-san-bernardino,0,3301328.story
July 6, 2011 at 10:07 amsounds more n more like the wild wild west out here….do the ends always justify the means??
July 6, 2011 at 10:29 amYou are right and know what you think.
This blog is great, great photography and attitude. you would like it.
https://youngprotester.wordpress.com/
Young revolution
July 6, 2011 at 11:13 pmGood summary. ‘Follow the dollar’ is the bottom line on this, of course. But the bottom line of ‘follow the dollar’ is the inherent institutional (‘corporate’) will to expand itself in capability and power. This seems to be intrinsic to institutional structures and is neither the result of, nor under the control of any individual ambition within the structure. It is part and parcel of the inference in Greenspan’s “apology” for being wrong about his lifetime estimate and promotion of the idea that corporations, if left to themselves, will do what is right or good for the economy and the marketplace. The sociopathy is that aggregate structures (institutions, governments, corporations…) are only prompted to do right for themselves. All other considerations of responsibility, justice, equity and purpose are subordinate to that will, and not under the control of anyone within the structure; nor the aggregate itself (cf. Mumford, 1956). In any individual, this would be quickly identified as aberrant and dangerous psychopathic behavior. With aggregate structures, it is not only dismissed, it is defended, both within and without, as ‘normal’ and even desirable behavior. The pathology of the corporate mind has been entirely mythologized and is presumed by its stewards and victims alike as a “healthy” aspect of the corporate mind.
One area which was not touched upon in the article is the role of law enforcement and police in creating law which extends their power, expands their size and capability and perpetuates their hegemony over domestic life. Now, the police will be the first to assert that “We don’t make the laws; we only enforce them,” in any case where their obsession with expansive power is challenged. In fact, they do make the laws. We may say it is the “politicians” who make these laws, but the laws they make are aggressively promoted and prepared by law enforcement as “tools they need to do their job,” or “the dangers of not cracking down on these scum,” and such. In this, they (spokespeople for law enforcement) are no different than the health insurance industry that fiercely lobbies for laws it has written, right in the offices of Medicare and the legislators who merely put their names on these pre-scripted institutional and corporate bills.
In this, the behavior of law enforcement is even more reprehensible. It is a public institution (for the moment) and ought be strictly holding to the public interest rather than its own institutional interests. Yet, in statehouse after statehouse, hearing room after hearing room, the spokespeople for law enforcement (along with their unions and agents) will sit there and unashamedly say things like, “We need tougher drug laws and must keep drugs criminalized to protect our children,” even though they know full well that decriminalizing drug use by adults (and letting its “problems” be entirely the social and medical problems they may be) would knock the stuffings out of the reasons drugs are even peddled to kids. Time and again we find them arguing for the necessity of everything from camping-ordinances to the Patriot Act for the sole reason that it expands their powers and fills their coffers. Make no mistake, police do make the laws; and they do so to extend the power and wealth (weaponry and capital improvements) no different that any private corporation does; and, as the article points out, often in collusion with the industries that will profit from that expansion.
In short, there ought to be a law (one which law enforcement would do everything it can to prevent) that constrains any member or agency of law enforcement from giving testimony before public officials that promotes (lobbies) or advances any particular law or attempts to define for those bodies social behaviors that ought to come under their enforcement regime. Indeed, police and their representatives should never appear before such bodies except to provide specific statistical and performance data as it is requested and required to consider some particular law that the people, through their representatives, wish to have enacted. They might also be permitted to report on their ability to enforce a particular law and its impact on their capabilities. However, on the matter of whether the law is desirable or not, whether it should be a matter of concern or not, whether it is a proper use of police resources to assign enforcement powers to them, or not; they should be entirely constrained to silence and leave it to legislators and civilian responsibility to decide what and how needs to be legally constrained in our society. It is really none of their business, not if they are really here to “enforce the laws; and, not make them.”
a side-note: Some may say this a ridiculous ‘gag rule’ and roll their eyes. However, we already constrain public servants from speaking out in a myriad of ways: from postal employees wearing campaign badges, to whistleblowers leaking public information. But those gag rules are one-sided; keeping those who are supposed to serve the public from letting the public know certain things about them and their doings. I see no reason the constraints should not work the other way as well: from public institutions and their employees speaking to government on matters that are entirely to their own interest and advantage and for the purpose of influencing other public bodies that are also supposed to serve the people, not the agencies of government. Nothing strange there, just reasonable constraints to prevent undue influence by aggregate structures.
July 6, 2011 at 1:16 pmYou are right and know what you think.
This blog is great, great photography and attitude. you would like it.
https://youngprotester.wordpress.com/
Young revolution,,
July 6, 2011 at 11:13 pmI’m old enough to remember when PR for SWAT teams began with a fictional tv show in the mid-1970’s. It was one of the spearheads of the media strategy that eventually led the the “Reagan Revolution”. If unspecified “criminals” can be demonized enough, there’s no room for civil discourse. Is anyone surprised at this?
July 7, 2011 at 12:52 pmAccording to a May 16, 2011 preliminary statistics released today by the FBI, 56 of our nation’s law enforcement officers were feloniously killed in the line of duty during 2010. By region, 22 victims were killed in the South, 18 in the West, 10 in the Midwest, three in the Northeast, and three in Puerto Rico. The total number of officers feloniously killed in 2010 was eight more than the 48 officers slain in 2009.
Of these 56 felonious deaths, 15 officers were killed during ambushes (13 during unprovoked attacks and two due to entrapment/premeditation situations), eight were investigating suspicious persons or circumstances, seven were killed during traffic pursuits/stops, six of the fallen officers interrupted robberies in progress or were pursuing robbery suspects, and six were responding to disturbance calls (four of them being domestic disturbances). Three of the officers interrupted burglaries in progress or were pursuing burglary suspects, three died during tactical situations, two were conducting investigations, one officer was handling or transporting a prisoner, one was killed during a drug-related conflict, and four of the officers were attempting to make arrests for other offenses.
I have been in law enforcement for over 15 years and in the past three years I have seen a change to where criminals who used to try to flee are now attacking law enforcement officers instead of running. A difference of eight may not seem like a lot when speaking about numbers but when you have personaly worked with four who were ambushed and killed you can see why having every advantage is important.
I have also personaly seen where these special training and equipment have saved both law enforcement and the criminals lives.
The military is now looking to law enforcement SWAT teams to train them in order to avoid civilian casualties in Afganistan and Iraq.
July 11, 2011 at 5:26 pmThis militarism of the domestic police force is in line with the ever-increasing militarism of America’s foreign policy. The world is now treated as a battle field by America who disregards the rule of Law and carries out summary execution by remote-controlled drone aircraft. And the lower class in this country will be treated no different than those in South America, the Middle East and the rest of the Third World who have been exploited by U.S. neo-colonialism over the last century. As the economy fails to ‘improve’ and global unrest continues, with perhaps another major terrorist attack in the offing, the brutality of a fascist corporate state will reveal itself right here at home in more overt ways via the security apparatus of which you speak.
Rania,
Are you interested in a political/social cartoonist who could perhaps add an interesting drawing to your brilliant essays? I’d do it at no charge; if you are interested, contact me.
July 19, 2011 at 2:30 am[…] I would say _very_ rare instead and I do believe that this response is typical. Even though it wasn’t a SWAT operation, over-the-top responses are the norm rather than the exception in this country of police-gone-mad: https://raniakhalek.com/2011/07/06/why-do-the-police-have-tanks-the-strange-and-dangerous-mi… […]
August 5, 2011 at 6:14 pm[…] https://raniakhalek.com/2011/07/06/why-do-the-police-have-tanks-the-strange-and-dangerous-militarizat… […]
August 21, 2012 at 6:06 pm[…] don’t have to “blame the police” to recognize this. Talking about it – doing something about it – does not have to […]
February 10, 2013 at 7:40 pm