Wait.. are you just talking about random stuff right now or are we still talking about the incident?
Cause the cop didn't make the law, or the policy, or sign the warrant. All of those things were done by elected officials, so maybe you just vote for elected officials who want to legalize cocaine or whatever and stop cheering for cops to get shot. You guys keep talking about "sneaking" in through the window at "night". That is not what happened here. The article that was posted worded things in the most inflammatory way possible to generate controversy and hits. Read the comments at the bottom of the article to see why I'm upset.
What would you have law enforcement to do? Using what methods are they to arrest persons who break laws? Why is no drugs being found relevant?
You are correct. The politicians send good men to do a job that in many cases should not be done in the way mentioned.
Why a no-knock warrant on a guy who is not deemed a violent offender? While (alleged) selling meth is a despicable crime, did it really warrant a no-knock? And in the middle of the night? Using SWAT?
The fact that an officer lost his life because a judge, or politically motivate police chief decided this was necessary, well that is the real issue here.
But as a law abiding citizen who reads about little old ladies being accidentally shot in no-knock raids, it grinds my soul that the laws that are supposed to be there to protect us are the ones that politicians are using a bit liberally.
While it may make law enforcement's job a bit harder, no-knocks should be hard as hell to obtain. And they should only be used against known violent offenders.
That is why many people are upset. (not the idiots who hate police. They are just stupid)
I'm talking about folks like the guy who was purported to be a gun nut prepper that they raided his home and found food stores and five guns in a safe. Who approved that warrant and why?
So when an SWAT officer gets killed in something as meaningless as this, it brings up many questions as to when it is my right to defend my home.
The police are pawns in a game that needs to have restraint applied when issuing no-knocks.
As to what the resident knew at the time of entry, I have no idea. I just know an officer is dead because a no-knock warrant was issued and served in the middle of the night on an alleged meth dealer.
If more information comes out later that the guy was a raging murderous maniac, then I might understand. But at this point in time, it looks a bit odd.