I have heard this question asked. If the risk of getting injured or killed is part of the job of being a cop, why is everyone upset when a criminal gets hurt or killed? Is it not also a risk of their job that they knew when they started on their criminal career?03Lightningrocks wrote: ↑Sat Feb 05, 2022 2:41 pmIt is a cops job to risk their lives. It is not the publics job to sacrifice constitutional freedom for them to be safe. They knew the job when they signed up for it. There are no words that disgust me more than, "for officers safety". They use those words right before violating the constitution of the united states. The one they swore to uphold in their oath they took. Too many never took that oath seriously. most probably don't even remember that they swore to this as they violate free Americans rights.
It seems to me that the big problem with "no-knock" warrants is that far to often they are used when not called for and then they are used at wrong addresses. This is the United States of America. The "good guys" are only the "good guys' when they work within the guidelines laid out by our constitution. Violating Americans rights in the name of enforcing the law is not acceptable.
But on a less confrontational note, yes, it is a police officer's job to risk his life and he knew that when he signed up for the job. But it is not his job to risk his life unnecessarily. It is not his job to commit suicide by allowing a criminal to shoot him when it could be prevented. And doing something for officer safety is completely justifiable to me. I do not agree that you only hear that when an officer is about to violate someone's constitutional rights. And along with that, I will point out that a no-knock warrant is specifically allowed in the Constitution. The Fourth Amendment does not prohibit all searches, only unreasonable ones and it specifically says warrants are allowable.
As for the claim that they are used far too often, for the wrong crimes, and at the wrong addresses, I agree in part. From the insider's viewpoint, I think police have used no-knock warrants too much and also used the SWAT or tactical teams to serve warrants too much. But I do not believe it goes bad nearly as often as many people think. Unless you work in law enforcement or know someone really well who does, you have no idea how many warrants are served by the police. What you hear of are the ones the news media decides to tell you about. And there is a known problem with the news media where you hear the same thing repeated so much that you tend to think it is much more common than it really is.
How often do you think cops really hit the wrong house? And by wrong house, I mean one that is not described in the warrant. For example, in this case how many people are thinking the cops hit the wrong house? The media is playing up the fact that the person who was shot was not the target of the search or arrest warrant. By saying that, they are deliberately misleading you into thinking the cops were wrong but, in fact, the cops did hit the right house and no one ever said otherwise. Did anyone who thought the cops screwed up stop to think that just maybe, the bad guy had a friend staying over at his house? And did anyone say the person shot was not a bad guy also? Or did they just say he was not the target of the search warrant?
And now we are back to my other question. Did the guy who was shot knowingly embark on a dangerous activity? Did he know the owner of the house was doing something wrong? Was he actually trying to help the criminal by acting as a guard against other criminals coming in? I don't know the answers to these questions, but I will present one fact that everyone needs to think about. The person shot was sleeping with a gun in his hand. Not just readily available but actually in his hand at the time. Everyone (or almost everyone) in this group likes guns and believes in them for self-defense. How many of us sleep with a gun IN OUR HAND? I have one close to me, and I am sure others may even have them closer than I do. But the only people I have ever seen sleep with a weapon physically in their hand were soldiers who dozed off while on guard duty. Even while I give him kudos for maintaining trigger discipline in his sleep, I find this behavior somewhat odd if not outright suspicious.