SWAT flash-bangs toddler in play pen - the "Baby Bou Bou" saga

Words fail me...that poor child. I will pray for this child and I pray that that picture goes viral!


ETA:

I cannot get this creep of a Sheriff's remarks out of my mine. His total disregard for humanity is so apparent. This Sheriff needs to be arrested!!!! Disgusting piece of filth. :mad:

Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell says this is exactly how he wants his raiders to perform, and has no qualms about performing identical raids on residents in his county in the future.

“The door that we entered was the door that we bought dope out of – that’s why entered at that door,” Terrell said. “Our team went by the book. Given the same scenario, we’ll do the same thing again. I stand behind what our team did.”
 
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But accountability for criminal acts committed in the name of the State simply doesn’t exist in the American Soyuz, a country in which police kick in doors at 3:00 a.m. and burn infants in their cribs.

But accountability for criminal acts committed in the name of the State simply doesn’t exist in the American Soyuz, a country in which police kick in doors at 3:00 a.m. and burn infants in their cribs.

But accountability for criminal acts committed in the name of the State simply doesn’t exist in the American Soyuz, a country in which police kick in doors at 3:00 a.m. and burn infants in their cribs.
 
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To top it all off...it was the cops who bought the drugs. It takes two to "deal drugs", a seller and a motherfucking buyer.
 
Balko: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...-critically-injured-by-polices-flash-grenade/

Sheriff Terrell says the suspects are dangerous drug dealers who are known to be armed. Hence, the SWAT team, the no-knock raid and the flash grenade. I’ve yet to see any indication that drugs were found, which usually (but not always) means that the police didn’t find any. Frequently in cases where a raid goes wrong, police tend to be quick to point out what they found to justify their actions. (The police did apparently make an arrest.)
[...]
Here’s the problem: If your drug cops conduct a raid that ends up putting a child in the hospital with critical burns, and they did nothing that violates your department’s policy, then there’s something wrong with your policy.
[...]
There are some very limited circumstances where flashbangs may be appropriate in domestic policing, such as when a fugitive has barricaded himself in a building, or during a hostage situation where lives are at immediate risk. Using them for drug raids is reckless, dangerous, and unnecessarily jeopardizes the safety and constitutional rights of citizens in the name of preventing other citizens from getting high.

Of course, that’s also a pretty good description of the drug war in general.

It's long so click on over and give Balko some hits.
 
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Lucky they didn't get to the baby earlier, I guess.

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Didn't you read the press release AF?

These heroes had to burn that baby in order to save the children....

They're proud of their behavior and intend to repeat it as often as possible...

If there is any justice on earth or in heaven, there will be a reckoning.
 
The trick used by Himmler — who apparently was rather strongly afflicted by these instinctive reactions himself — was very simple and probably very effective; it consisted in turning these instincts around, as it were, in directing them toward the self. So that instead of saying: What horrible things I did to people!, the murderers would be able to say: What horrible things I had to watch in the pursuance of my duties, how heavily the task weighed upon my shoulders!”

"You see what you awful people made me do???" - Officer Friendly.
 
From Balko:



Several years ago, CNN ran a special report about three FBI agents who suffered severe injuries when a defective flashbang prematurely detonated in an SUV. The article focused on the agents’ injuries and on the company that made the defective device.

Missing from the piece, however, was one critical bit of information: The device that caused the injuries to those agents is used by American police against American citizens every day of the year.

Worse yet, it’s primarily used during the service of drug warrants.

Which means it’s used not only to enforce laws against nonviolent, consensual activity, but it’s used against people who are still merely suspects. When a police forces uses a flashbang in this way, it is intentionally inflicting injury on someone who not only has yet to be convicted of a crime, in most cases the person has yet to even be charged — and of course anyone else who happens to be in the home at the time.
 
from Fmr. Georgia state Rep Sam Moore

From Sam Moore, the Tea Party candidate with libertarian backing who was recently ousted by the establishment:


Law enforcement recently hit a sleeping baby with a grenade. This happened here, in the state of Georgia. Unfortunately, this is just one of many innocent lives taken or impacted by no-knock warrants in our State.

Had it had been in effect, the bill I sponsored to halt no-knock warrants in Georgia (H.B. 1046) would have prevented this exact incident. It was never even assigned to a committee.

Until we end this practice in Georgia, other innocent lives will be lost or changed forever. If this is not the America you want to live in, demand that Georgia outlaws military-style maneuvers on it's own citizens. Demand that Georgia stops allowing no-knock warrants.

As some of you know, Sam was bludgeoned to political death with propaganda regarding his bill to reform loitering laws in Georgia, when the establishment decried the law as giving 'free-roam to child molesters', knowing full-well that was not the intent of the law, and offering no amendments to 'protect the children' but rather ridiculing the author of the bill because he beat the establishment's chosen candidate in a special election earlier this year. Thank God the GA GOP got rid of 'crazies' like Sam Moore and Dr. Paul Broun in the primary. /sarcasm

So, who was gonna protect this child, again?

The GOP, and perhaps some here, want candidates to be well-polished, well-versed, and well-representative of the cause. That's nice and all, but that's just the icing on the cake. The cake is what they stand for—not how graceful or eloquent they are while standing.
 
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When Drug Warriors Burn a Baby, Who's the Terrorist?
http://reason.com/blog/2014/05/30/when-drug-warriors-burn-a-baby-whos-the

...It makes me angry too, but in a different way. It makes me angry that Terrell thinks violence is an appropriate response to consensual transactions in which someone exchanges methamphetamine for money (provided that person is not a pharmacist and his customer is not a patient with a prescription). It makes me angry that Terrell sees nothing wrong with sending a heavily armed SWAT team into an alleged meth dealer's home in the middle of the night, which inevitably endangers not only the dealer but anyone else who happens to be there. In Terrell's mind, that is not an act of aggression. It was Wanis Thonetheva who attacked first by agreeing to sell speed to people who wanted it. Hence Thonetheva is a "domestic terrorist," harming an innocent child because all he cares about is making money.

Terrorists, of course, are usually motivated by politics rather than greed. And it was not Thonetheva who sent Alecia Phonesavanh's 19-month-old son, Bounkham, to the hospital with severe burns. One of Terrell's deputies did that, in service of a political ideology that says people may not alter their consciousness in ways that are not approved by the government. "He is in a medically induced coma and he is paralyzed," Phonesavanh told WSB-TV, the ABC affiliate in Atlanta. "I hope he's not going to remember this. I know his sisters, his mommy, and his daddy will never forget this. Our kids have been through enough this year. This is just more trauma that they didn't need, and I just wish there was something better I could do to make it better for him. Wrong place, wrong time."

That place is America, and that time is a period during which police believe it is their duty to launch military-style assaults on civilians who sell politically incorrect drugs, knowing full well that there is bound to be "collateral damage" like this from time to time. After Bounkham recovers from the injuries inflicted by his government and becomes old enough to ask what happened that night, is there any explanation that will make sense to him?
 
•The family of seven-year-old Aiyana Jones claims that the flash grenade a SWAT officer tossed into her bedroom during a 2010 raid ignited a blanket, which then set the child on fire.

She didn’t suffer long.

Seconds later, a member of the SWAT team shot her dead.
 
From Balko:



A few courts have found flashbangs excessive when used in some circumstances. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled in 2004 that police violated a suspect’s Fourth Amendment rights when they “blindly” tossed a flash grenade into a house despite having no idea who was inside. But the same court also ruled that even though the officers violated the suspects rights, they were protected by qualified immunity.

Don’t look for much help from politicians, either. In my book, I write about how New York Sen. Chuck Schumer — the same guy who wants to protect us from the threat of caffeine and alcohol slushes — once blithely dismissed the threat posed by blindly tossing explosive devices into peoples’ homes.

During congressional hearings on the Branch Davidian raid, Rep. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) asked Dick DeGuerin, an attorney for David Koresh, if the Branch Davidians had stockpiled grenades. DeGuerin responded that the only grenades he had seen were thrown by BATF agents.

Schumer later derisively dismissed the idea that flash grenades were harmful. “Mr. DeGuerin said flashbangers can kill, injure, maim,” Shcumer said. “Anyone who knows anything about these things knows they can’t.” Schumer went on to win a U.S. Senate seat in 1998, meaning that when New York City resident Alberta Spruill died from the effects of a flash grenade in 2003, she was one of Schumer’s constituents.
 
“Bad things can happen. That’s just the world we live in.”

“Bad things can happen. That’s just the world we live in.”

“Bad things can happen. That’s just the world we live in.”

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OK, that's it, I'm turning off the Internets. This shit is making me upset. And I don't have a dog to kick.
 
And a new meme is born.


"Anyone who knows anything about these (flash bangs) things knows they can’t. (Injure kill or maim)" - Chuck Schumer, Waco Congressional investigation hearings.
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