EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

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chasfm11
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Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#16

Post by chasfm11 »

PUCKER wrote:chasfm11: OK, you've piqued my interest...you've gotta share some more details! Will be fun to share the story on the docks this weekend! :tiphat:
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texanjoker

Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#17

Post by texanjoker »

EEllis wrote:The story really doesn't give much detail but the only indications that it was a swat team seem to be that they had body armor and wore jackets that said "police" on them and shockingly enough they all had side arms. So basically the SWAT team thing is nonsense and the real problem is using cops for what many thing should be an administrative issue. It's hard to argue that you should send unarmed inspectors in to check locations that may be hazardous. If they were "escorted" by anyone we would here the same basic claims and if the feds LEO's are qualified why not have them do the job themselves instead of escorting.

I read leo's were wearing body armor and carry a sidearm when working. That is what one does. Then the story spins. Who knows what they were doing but this doesn't read as a swat team.

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Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#18

Post by chasfm11 »

The title came from Drudge who is obviously biased in his own right. But I do agree with his characterization of the group.

I completely understand that the police have their own very technical definition for what SWAT is. It includes rifles and probably a lot more specific assets, usually even a special vehicle.

But, for me, the definition doesn't stop there. When there is an overwhelming force (8 officers in a town of 17) and their body armor is visible to all, they fall under the SWAT umbrella, regardless exactly which weapons they are carrying. The core issue is that a significant force was used for a situation that doesn't appear to call for it. I certainly hope that the Clean Water act enforcement isn't driven by similar tactics.

It is the fact that the combined Federal agencies believe that they need to kind of action against otherwise law abiding citizens that I hope we will focus on. Compliance with the 100s of 1000s of pages of regulations is difficult enough without trying add intimidation to the mix.

And yes, I think it was intended to be intimidation. The absence of an EBR doesn't change that.
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Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#19

Post by Diesel42 »

IMO, the most damning "fact" in the news story was that the regulators stated the village "...had rampant drug use and human trafficking." To justify intimidation tactics, these incompetent regulators alleged extreme criminal behavior while investigating violations normally handled under civil statutes. To me this incident is criminal.
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jimlongley
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Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#20

Post by jimlongley »

philip964 wrote:Swat team to check for dirty water.

Pretty much says it all.

How bout the poor old man later on in the article that failed to stop mid stream for a safety inspection and when he got to shore to discuss it with them, they arrested him and took him a 100 miles to jail.
If he had simply stopped the boat and it drifted into them, they would probably have charged him with assault on an officer, etc. My wife likes to watch COPS on tv from time to time and I still get chills when some guy gets told: "Hands in the air"; "Hands behind your back"; "Walk toward me, no backwards you idiot"; "Kneel Down"; and "Get on the ground" all in 2.46 seconds. I find myself wondering why we don't have more Erik Scott situations, and recently when three or four cops were piling into a water heater closet to tackle a perp who was already down with his hands behind his back, the officer in the very back was covering every one of the with his gun, and his finger was within the trigger guard.
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EEllis
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Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#21

Post by EEllis »

chasfm11 wrote:The title came from Drudge who is obviously biased in his own right. But I do agree with his characterization of the group.

I completely understand that the police have their own very technical definition for what SWAT is. It includes rifles and probably a lot more specific assets, usually even a special vehicle.

But, for me, the definition doesn't stop there. When there is an overwhelming force (8 officers in a town of 17) and their body armor is visible to all, they fall under the SWAT umbrella, regardless exactly which weapons they are carrying. The core issue is that a significant force was used for a situation that doesn't appear to call for it. I certainly hope that the Clean Water act enforcement isn't driven by similar tactics.

It is the fact that the combined Federal agencies believe that they need to kind of action against otherwise law abiding citizens that I hope we will focus on. Compliance with the 100s of 1000s of pages of regulations is difficult enough without trying add intimidation to the mix.

And yes, I think it was intended to be intimidation. The absence of an EBR doesn't change that.

I got to say I think that is wrong. When you lie, and the whole SWAT thing is a lie, then everything you say is questioned and rightfully so. This was obviously no swat team, heck you don't even need to go past special weapons to know these guys don't meet that definition. You want another example? The repetition of it being a town of 17. There are 17 permanent residents. !7 that stay there year round thru the freezing winters with nothing to do and nowhere to go. There are many more than 17 there in august when this happened but by repeating 17 it makes it look worse even if it purposely distorts the facts. During the summer the population is usually over 100. Why bother to try and have a conversation when someone has already shown they couldn't care less about the truth and just wants to push an agenda. As bad as the lefties.

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Re: EPA SWAT Team enforces Clean Water Act

#22

Post by chasfm11 »

The other day in San Antonio, three guys slung rifles over their backs and sat at Starbucks, drinking coffee. Members of the public called police. The consensus on the thread was that the reason was context. While it is legal to open carry rifles, it isn't a norm and when three of them did it at one time, it had a tone of intimidation. They did not have to do anything but show up with the rifles to have an intimidating effect.

The police arrived. After some discussion with the three men, disorderly conduct charges were issued against them. I personally believe that is a big stretch but I understand two aspects of that action.
1. The men where responsible for alarming the public and since they were knowingly doing it, their conduct could be termed disorderly.
2. The purposed of the charges was intimidation. It is possible that those charges may be dropped but the reasoning behind them was to disperse the men and it worked - the men left.

Relevancy to this thread?

The context argument runs both ways.

I've always believed that SWAT has two purposes
1. To deploy specific assets and personnel with specific training to situations which may require them
2. To display a show of force and thus intimidation to the BGs involved. Demonstrating that the BGs are out-manned and outgunned has been a factor in the resolution of SWAT standoffs.

Were #2 not a factor with SWAT, the number of situations resolved without killing the BGs would be much different. I won't hazard a specific guess as the the number of SWAT deployments versus the number of SWAT usages of the special firepower that they have but I'm going to guess that it is near a 10 to 1 ratio. Most of the time SWAT is called out, someone doesn't die at their hands.

Perception is reality. Most people who haven't been around guns won't recognize an AR-15. They just understand it as a scarey looking rifle. So, too, is body armor perceived. Officers can wear bullet proof vests all the time under their uniforms and, because it isn't visible, it will not raise public concern Put the armor on the outside and the context changes. The perception becomes that the officers involved are there specifically expecting trouble or have come to generate it. If enough officers show up with body armor, even if they didn't have a weapon of any kind on them, there is a perception of force and intimidation. To me, this exactly the argument between concealed handguns and OC. We haven't been able to get the latter passed in Texas because of the same perception.

My immediate area is more than 50,000 people. It is rare for us to see police deployed more than 1 or 2 at a time. Three patrol cars at one location draws a lot of attention. Eight officers in body amour, even in my area, would be a newsworthy event. In a much smaller circumstance, as was the remote town in the OP, such a show of force has a high level of intimidation. That intimidation exists, as it did with the 3 guys and their rifles, whether or not those involved wish it to be so or understand that it is so.

I'm not a purist. For me if looks like a duck and quacks like a duck - it is a duck Just as it isn't necessary to arrive in a turret mounted APC in order to perceived as SWAT, it isn't necessary to to display Brown Tactical Elite to convey that perception.

I don't ask others to share my perceptions. But one of those perceptions is that in far too many cases minor matters are being handled in an extremely heavy handed and intently intimidating manner.

I'm personally furious of the boating incident in the OP. I will always be furious when an otherwise law abiding citizen has an interaction with a police like authority over an minor matter (in this case boating safety) and ends up in jail. Why? Because the rationale for releasing violent offenders is that there isn't enough jail space for them. A violent felon is a much greater threat to society than some 60+ guy who took umbrage at a Federal boarding party. What that says is that compliance in more important the crime and that is ABSOLUTELY WRONG!. The guy made a mistake. But go to an inner city and watch how the public reacts with the LEOS. If they similarly locked up every citizen who gives police a hard time, many times the current jails space would not be enough to house all the "criminals". The difference is that those involved were Federal officials and they have no tolerance for disrespect. Locking people up for disrespect should never be part of our legal system. The man had no weapons and was not a threat to anyone.

So I personally want to challenge every example of what I perceive to be heavy handed tactics. I believe that if we don't all start challenging them, the number and severity of them will continue to grow, particularly among the Federal agencies who seem to be expanding the number of such units at an exponential rate. For me, it is another case where absolute power corrupts absolutely. The check and balance is the outrage of citizens. There really is nothing else to even retard the trend.
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