Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Knocking down no-knock warrants

Group that includes activists, academics pushing to curb use

- By Claudia Lauer

PHILADELPH­IA — After a year marked by police killings of Black men and women and mass civil unrest over racial injustice, some activists are taking aim at police tactics that can lead to deadly middleof-the-night raids they say are used overwhelmi­ngly in communitie­s of color.

Rather than waiting for direction from lawmakers, a group of academics, policing experts and activists called Campaign Zero has created model legislatio­n around so-called no-knock warrants they hope will be attractive to cities, states and President- elect Joe Biden, as they work to curtail police tactics that lead to both civilian and officer casualties. While Bid en has said his administra­tion will support criminal justice reforms, it’s unclear where he will focus.

SWAT team and tactical drug raids — in which heavily armed police teams bust down doors — have ballooned from about 3,000 in the early 1980s to more than 60,000 annually in the last few years, mostly because of drugs and drug task forces, according to Peter Kraska, a criminolog­y professor at Eastern Kentucky University who has studied police raids for decades. The data include no-knock and other warrants.

Generally, under the law, police must knock and announce their presence when serving a warrant, meaning they must wait before entering a property. But with no-knock warrants, officers don’t have to say anything and don’t have to wait. That’s because the warrants are reserved for extraordin­arily dangerous moments

or if suspects are likely to destroy evidence if they are alerted to officers’ presence, but critics say not always.

“There has been an historic issuance of no- knock warrants for inappropri­ate purposes, basically for fishing expedition­s for drug evidence,” said Kraska, who helped Campaign Zero write its recommenda­tions. “There are very few situations where Timothy McVeigh is standing behind that door when it gets knocked down.”

McVeigh carried out the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people.

Kraska said the raids happen disproport­ionately in communitie­s of color. Officers were executing such awarrant in Kentucky when 26-year- old emergency medical technician Breonna Taylor was fatally shot.

“The rest of us got to see that level of militariza­tion

with the protests ... but it’s happening literally every night in these communitie­s,” Kraska said. “Youhave to think there’s going to be some lasting trauma from that.”

But just banning the warrants isn’t enough, because the raids would only continue in other ways, said Campaign Zero manager Katie Ryan.

She says that’s why the group has included in its legislatio­n a complement of reforms: requiring officers to be in uniforms that make them easily identifiab­le, requiring warrants to be served between 9 a.m. and7 p.m. and requiring the officers to know when asking for the warrant who lives at the residence, including whether there are children, older people or anyone with a disability.

“We had to create something comprehens­ive to cut off flimsy legislatio­n and get real change,” Ryan said.

The model also mandates officers use body-worn cameras and fill out within 72 hours a warrant execution report that is reviewed by an independen­t board. It would also require any property seized during those raids to be returned if a person isn’t convicted of a crime.

Campaign Zero was started by police reform activists in 2015 after Michael Brown was fatally shot by a Ferguson, Missouri, police officer, triggering protests nationwide.

Capitalizi­ng on this year’s resurgence of police reform protests following the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, they worked with at least 315 cities and eight states that adopted portions of their recommenda­tions to reduce fatal force, including banning officers from putting their knees on the neck or head of suspects to restrain them.

The group is working

with 37 cities and states to introduce legislatio­n on no-knock warrants. A bill filed this month in New York by Democratic Sen. James Sanders is among the first to include all 15 of the campaign’s recommenda­tions.

Sanders said Taylor’s death brought the practice to people’s attention, but his district has its own examples of dangerousl­y executed raids.

The family of Alberta Spruill, a 57-year-old grandmothe­r who died of a heart attack in 2003 after police officers fired a flash-bang grenade into her apartment, has given Sanders its support. Officers had been looking for a drug dealer who lived in a different apartment and who they already had in custody.

Sanders said the bill will work its way through the legislativ­e process after the newyear. He’s heard a lot of support from other legislator­s, and he’s hoping to hear support from law enforcemen­t, too.

Officers are often injured in such raids.

“I’m a Marine, and I think (the police officers) know I would never do anything to endanger their lives,” Sanders said. “We’re talking about the majority of these warrants being served in non-violent situations for non-violent crimes. There’s a safer way to do this for everyone involved.”

In Charlotte, North Carolina, when police Chief Johnny Jennings took over his post in July he dug into the issue of no-knock warrants and ended their use for the department’s 1,800 officers.

“We found that if there is something that is so dangerous that it requires a no-knock search warrant, that we did not need to take that risk. We use other means to try to get someone to come out of a structure,” he said.

Some law enforcemen­t advocates have cautioned that department­s need warrants for situations like human traffickin­g or kidnapping, andothers have said a recommenda­tion that officers wait 30 seconds to enter after announcing their presence could open a window for suspects to fire on police.

Mark Lomax, a retired major with the Pennsylvan­ia State Police and the past executive director of the National Tactical Officers Associatio­n, worked with the campaign to make sure there are exceptions insome of the recommenda­tions.

“When it comes to narcotics, knocking down doors to go in and get a pound of weed can be dangerous not only to people on the other side of the door but to the officers also,” he said. “I’m thinking of Breonna Taylor losing her life, but I’m also thinking of the officer who was shot in the leg.

“Neither needs to happen.”

 ?? JOHNMINCHI­LLO/AP ?? Police and protesters converge in Louisville, Kentucky, in Septemberd­uring a demonstrat­ion. Six months earlier, BreonnaTay­lor was fatally shot by Louisville police while serving a no-knockwarra­nt.
JOHNMINCHI­LLO/AP Police and protesters converge in Louisville, Kentucky, in Septemberd­uring a demonstrat­ion. Six months earlier, BreonnaTay­lor was fatally shot by Louisville police while serving a no-knockwarra­nt.

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