police
-
Evansville IN SWAT team raids wrong house
police 10mo ago
-
Laurel And Hardy - Murder Case -
police 1h ago
-
Durham Cop Video
police 1h ago
-
LEBANESE MASTERPIECE THEATRE, BEIRUT ASSHOLERY WITH THE KEBAB KABBIE, PART 1
police 1h ago
-
Man gets runover and stays on hood of the car • Dirty South Bass
police 2h ago
-
Many killed in string of Iraq attacks
police 3h ago
-
Hero Cop Richard DeCoatsworth Arrested for holding 2 Women Hostage in his Philadelphia Home
police 3h ago
-
Razor Blade Smile 1998 DVDRIP
police 3h ago
-
Cum Se Merge Pe O Roata !!!!
police 3h ago
-
Miami Police Officer Drives Up A Power Pole Was He Drunk? (News Story)
police 3h ago
-
Vidya Balan reveals a secret to Manish Paul - Umang 2013
police 4h ago
-
San Francisco police: Police Arrest Dorm Students at SFSU May 16, 2013
police 4h ago
-
At my boyz house and the police tripping.
police 4h ago
-
Officer faces criminal charges in assault
police 5h ago
-
Get Retarded! (Crank Dat Ponceman)
police 5h ago
-
The Oblivians "Call the Police" - "Desperation" LP - 2013
police 5h ago
-
Pineapple Express - F*ck the police
police 5h ago
-
Circumcision & Birth Trauma, The Evil Agenda
police 5h ago
-
Two guys robbing the Bank's cash desks with guns
police 5h ago
-
- Hero Police Officer Charged With Holding 2 Women Captive
police 5h ago
-
Mounted robber running from the police
police 5h ago
-
NewsX exclusive - The FIR on the spot-fixing scandal
police 6h ago
-
He embarrassed the police officers !
police 6h ago
-
Seattle dash cam/audio of a citizen shot and killed while breaking no laws!
police 7h ago
-
Virginia Police Officer Throws A Fit Not Getting What He Wants Like A Baby (Dashcam Video)
police 7h ago
-
Met Police Road Safety Team
police 8h ago
-
Incidentes tras la celebración de los aficionados del Atlético de Madrid | Copa del Rey 2013
police 9h ago
-
Skater Attacked by the police
police 10h ago
-
IPl Spot Fixing : Guilty must be punished, says Rajeev Shukla
police 10h ago
-
IPL Spot Fixing : Rajeev Shukla breaks silence
police 11h ago
Tags
- american police
- anonymous
- at all
- child porn
- decked out
- evansville
- evansville courier & press
- fbi
- five years
- getting it
- going to
- indiana
- internet
- old woman
- police
- police chief
- police department
- screen door
- search warrant
- search warrants
- small-town
- some more
- take down
- the damage
- the door
- the existence
- the goal
- the home
- the house
- the key
- the process
- the right
- the video
- use it
Description
SWAT tries to take down Internet meanie; raids grandma instead The long-standing, heavily documented militarization of even small-town American police forces was always going to create problems when it met anonymous Internet threats. And so it has, again—this time in Evansville, Indiana, where officers acted on some Topix postings threatening violence against local police. They then sent an entire SWAT unit to execute a search warrant on a local house, one in which the front door was open and an 18-year old woman sat inside watching TV. The cops brought along TV cameras, inviting a local reporter to film the glorious operation. In the resulting video, you can watch the SWAT team, decked out in black bulletproof vests and helmets and carrying window and door smashers, creep slowly up to the house. At some point, they apparently "knock" and announce their presence—though not with the goal of getting anyone to come to the door. As the local police chief admitted later to the Evansville Courier & Press, the process is really just "designed to distract." (SWAT does not need to wait for a response.) Officers break the screen door and a window, tossing a flashbang into the house—which you can see explode in the video. A second flashbang gets tossed in for good measure a moment later. SWAT enters the house. On the news that night, the reporter ends his piece by talking about how this is "an investigation that hits home for many of these brave officers." But the family in the home was released without any charges as police realized their mistake. Turns out the home had an open WiFi router, and the threats had been made by someone outside the house. Whoops. So the cops did some more investigation and decided that the threats had come from a house on the same street. This time, apparently recognizing they had gone a little nuts on the first raid, the police department didn't send a SWAT team at all. Despite believing that they now had the right location and that a threat-making bomber lurked within, they just sent officers up to the door. "We did surveillance on the house, we knew that there were little kids there, so we decided we weren't going to use the SWAT team," the police chief told the paper after the second raid. "We did have one officer with a ram to hit the door in case they refused to open the door. That didn't happen, so we didn't need to use it." Their target appears to be a teenager who admits to the paper that he has a "smart mouth," dislikes the cops, and owns a smartphone—but who denies using it to make the threats. While the open WiFi issue has caused many problems over the last five years—especially in child porn cases—the FBI is becoming more savvy about how it executes search warrants. As we noted last December, a well-run FBI child porn investigation (also in Indiana) took rather obvious precautions before executing a warrant: On April 30, two FBI special agents drove past the Carmel home and noted the existence of two WiFi networks reachable from the property. One used WEP encryption, the other had the more robust WPA2, but the key point from the FBI's perspective was that neither network was unsecured. A search thus seemed much more likely to find its proper target. Because most people aren't stupid enough to make obvious threats from their own home Internet connection, the corollary principle also holds: if a home does have an open WiFi connection, investigators might want to ease away from the flashbangs-and-SWAT-team approach; the threat of getting it wrong is a real one. But Evansville police aren't backing down from their initial SWAT raid (read more about their later justification for using such force). And the targets of that raid aren't pleased. As the owner of the first house told the paper, "The front door was open. It's not like anyone was in there hiding. To bring a whole SWAT team seems a little excessive." The city will be paying to repair the damage it caused. Not that all Evansvil...
