by John Whitehead
Originally posted on OpedNews.com
Despite the steady hue and cry by government agencies about
the need for more police, more sophisticated weaponry, and the difficulties of
preserving the peace and maintaining security in our modern age, the reality is
far different. Indeed, violent crime in America has been on asteady
decline, and if current trends continue, Americans will finish the year
2013 experiencing the lowest murder rate in over a century.
Despite this clear referendum on the fact that communities
would be better served by smaller, demilitarized police forces, police agencies
throughout the country are dramatically increasing in size and scope. Some of
the nation's larger cities boast police forces the size of small armies. (New
York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg actually likes to brag
that the NYPD is his personal army.) For example, the Los Angeles Police
Department (LAPD) has reached a total of 10,000 officers. It takes its place alongside
other cities boasting increasingly large police forces, including New York (36,000 officers) and Chicago (13,400 officers). When considered in terms
of cops per square mile, Los Angeles assigns a whopping 469 officers per
square mile, followed by New York with 303 officers per square mile, and Chicago with 227 cops per square mile.
Of course, such heavy police presence comes at a price. Los
Angeles spends over $2 billion per year on the police force, a 36%
increase within the last eight years. The LAPD currently consumes over 55% of
Los Angeles' discretionary budget, a 9% increase over the past nine years.
Meanwhile, street repair and maintenance spending has declined by 36%, and in
2011, one-fifth of the city's fire stations lost units, increasing response times for 911 medical emergencies.
For those who want to credit hefty police forces for
declining crime rates, the data just doesn't show a direct correlation. In
fact, many cities across the country actually saw decreases in crime rates
during the 1990s in the wake of increasing prison sentences and the waning
crack-cocaine epidemic. Cities such as Seattle and Dallas actually cut their
police forces during this time and still saw crime rates drop.
Having watered down the Fourth Amendment's strong
prohibitions intended to keep police in check and functioning as peacekeepers,
we now find ourselves in the unenviable position of having militarized standing
armies enforcing the law. Likewise, whereas the police once operated as public
servants (i.e., in service to the public), today that master-servant
relationship has been turned on its head to such an extent that if we fail to obey anyone
who wears a badge, we risk dire consequences.
Consider that in 1980, there were roughly 3,000 SWAT
team-style raids in the US. By 2001, that number had grown to 45,000 and has since swelled to more than
80,000 SWAT team raids per year. On an average day in America, over 100 Americans have their homes raided by SWAT teams.
In fact, there are few communities without a SWAT team on their police force
today. In 1984, 25.6 percent of towns with populations between 25,000 and
50,000 people had a SWAT team. That number rose to 80 percent by 2005.
The problem, of course, is that as SWAT teams and SWAT-style
tactics are used more frequently to carry out routine law enforcement
activities, Americans find themselves in increasingly dangerous and absurd
situations. For example, in late July 2013, a no-kill animal shelter in
Kenosha, Wisconsin, was raided by nine Department of Natural Resources (DNR) agents
and four deputy sheriffs. The raid was prompted by tips that the shelter
was home to a baby deer that had been separated from its mother. The shelter
officials had planned to send the deer to a wildlife rehabilitation facility in
Illinois, but the agents, who stormed the property unannounced, demanded that
the deer be handed over because citizens are not allowed to possess wildlife.
When the 13 LEOs entered the property "armed to the teeth," they
corralled the employees around a picnic table while they searched for the deer.
When they returned, one agent had the deer slung over his shoulder in a body
bag, ready to be euthanized.
When asked why they didn't simply ask shelter personnel to
hand the deer over instead of conducting an unannounced raid, DNR Supervisor
Jennifer Niemeyer compared their actions todrug raids, saying "If a sheriff's department is
going in to do a search warrant on a drug bust, they don't call them and ask
them to voluntarily surrender their marijuana or whatever drug that they have
before they show up."
If these raids are becoming increasingly common and
widespread, you can chalk it up to the "make-work" philosophy, in which
you assign at-times unnecessary jobs to individuals to keep them busy or
employed. In this case, however, the make-work principle is being used to
justify the use of sophisticated military equipment and, in the process, qualify for
federal funding.
It all started back in the 1980s, when Congress launched the
1033 Program to allow the Department of Defense to transfer surplus military
goods to state and local police agencies. The 1033 program has grown
dramatically, with some 13,000 police agencies in all 50 states and four US
territories currently participating. In 2012, the federal government
transferred $546 million worth of property to state and local
police agencies. This 1033 program allows small towns like Rising Star, Texas, with a population of 835 and only one
full-time police officer, to acquire $3.2 million worth of goods and military
gear from the federal government over the course of fourteen months.
Military equipment sent to small towns has included
high-powered weapons, assault vehicles and tactical gear. However, after it was
discovered that local police agencies were failing to keep inventories of their
acquired firearms and in some cases, selling the equipment for a profit, the
transfer of firearms was temporarily suspended until October 2013. In the meantime, police
agencies can still receive a variety of other toys and gizmos, including "aircraft, boats,
Humvees, body armor, weapon scopes, infrared imaging systems and night-vision
goggles," not to mention more general items such as "bookcases, hedge
trimmers, telescopes, brassieres, golf carts, coffee makers and television
sets."
In addition to equipping police with militarized weapons and
equipment, the government has also instituted an incentive program of sorts,
the Byrne Formula Grant Program, which awards federal grants
based upon "the number of overall arrests, the number of warrants served
or the number of drug seizures." A sizable chunk of taxpayer money has
kept the program in full swing over the years. Through the Clinton
administration, the program was funded with about $500 million. By 2008, the
Bush administration had reduced the budget to about $170 million, less out of
concern for the militarization of police forces and more to reduce federal
influence on law enforcement matters. However, Barack Obama boosted the program
again at the beginning of his term, using the 2009 American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act to inject $2 billion into the program.
When it comes to SWAT-style tactics being used in routine
policing, the federal government is one of the largest offenders, with multiple agencies touting their own SWAT teams, including
the US Fish and Wildlife Service, Consumer Product Safety Commission, NASA, the
Department of Education, the Department of Health and Human Services, the US
National Park Service, and the FDA.
Clearly, the government has all but asphyxiated the Fourth
Amendment, but what about the Third Amendment, which has been interpreted to
not only prohibit the quartering of soldiers in one's home and martial law but
standing armies? While most Americans--and the courts--largely overlook this
amendment, which at a minimum bars the government from stationing soldiers in
civilian homes during times of peace, it is far from irrelevant to our age.
Indeed, with some police units equivalent in size, weaponry and tactics to
military forces, a case could well be made that the Third Amendment is
routinely being violated every time a SWAT team crashes through a door.
A vivid example of this took place on July 10, 2011, in
Henderson, Nevada, when local police informed homeowner Anthony Mitchell that they wanted to occupy his home
in order to gain a "tactical advantage" in dealing with a domestic
abuse case in an adjacent home. Mitchell refused the request, but this didn't
deter the police, who broke down Mitchell's front door using a battering ram.
Five officers pointed weapons at him, ordering him to the ground, where they
shot him with pepper-ball projectiles.
The point is this: America today is not much different from
the America of the early colonists, who had to contend with British soldiers
who were allowed to "enter private homes, confiscate what they found, and
often keep the bounty for themselves." This practice is echoed today
through SWAT team raids and the execution of so-called asset forfeiture laws, "which allow police to seize
and keep for their departments cash, cars, luxury goods and even homes, often
under only the thinnest allegation of criminality."
It is this intersection of law enforcement and military
capability which so worried the founding fathers and which should worry us
today. What Americans must decide is what they're going to do about this
occupation of our cities and towns by standing armies operating under the guise
of keeping the peace.
John W. Whitehead is an attorney and author who has written,
debated and practiced widely in the area of constitutional law and human
rights. Whitehead’s aggressive, pioneering approach to civil liberties has
earned him numerous accolades and accomplishments, including the Hungarian
Medal of Freedom. His concern for the persecuted and oppressed led him, in
1982, to establish The Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties and
human rights organization in Charlottesville, Va. Whitehead serves as the
Institute’s president and spokesperson. His thought-provoking commentaries call
people to action and address a wide range of contemporary issues from faith to
politics and television to constitutional rights. He is also a frequent
commentator on a variety of issues in the national media, as well as the editor
of the award-winning pop culture magazine, Gadfly. Whitehead's book, A
Government of Wolves, will be published in June 2013.
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