Police Response to Bill Restricting No-Knock Raids: You Can’t Have Both Freedom & Security

Free Thought Project – by Mike Sawyer

Atlanta, GA — A Georgia lawmaker has proposed a bill, aptly named Baby Bou’s law, that would restrict the issuance of no-knock raids.

The bill’s namesake, Baby Bounekahm “Bou Bou” Phonesavanh, suffered third-degree burns to his chest and face after sheriff’s deputies in Habersham County raided a house in the middle of the night in May of 2014. They were looking for a person who did not live there, over a $50 drug sale, and threw a flashbang grenade into the infant’s crib.  

According to the bill’s sponsor, State Sen. Vincent Fort, there was also a stunning new revelation in the case of 19-month-old Bou-Bou, involving a lie.

“We know that there’s evidence someone lied, one officer lied to the magistrate in offering information for the no knock warrant,” said Fort.

Apparently Georgia has never had a specified law on the books designed to punish officers and agencies that lie to a judge to obtain a no-knock warrant.

The bill has bipartisan support from many of Georgia’s lawmakers, who are also looking to ban no-knock raids between the hours of 10 pm and 6 am.

Predictably, this bill has the police unions up in arms.

Retired drug unit officer, turned union rep for the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, Carrie Mills, is quite outspoken about the union’s opposition to the bill.

“If we knock and announce, all evidence is going to be destroyed,” Mills said.

Mills went on to threaten lawmakers by telling them they should be careful what they ask for. She then made a disgusting statement which goes against every principle of a free society, by claiming that if you want security, you can’t have privacy.

“You have to draw the line between your right as a citizen to privacy and a community’s right to live in a crime-free environment. You can’t have them both,” said Mills.

Apparently Mills has never heard the popular phrase stating that those who would sacrifice freedom for security, deserve neither freedom nor security.

The IBPO is also ignoring the tragic cases from just last year, of no-knock raids gone awry. While the case of Baby Bou has gotten international attention, the less popular death of David Hooks is equally troubling.

Acting on a bogus tip about methamphetamine from a car thief who stole Hooks’ Lincoln Aviator SUV, the Laurens County Sheriff’s office obtained a search warrant for Hooks’ residence. An hour after the judge signed the warrant police wrongfully raided Hooks’ house and took the life of this innocent grandfather.

Despite a search lasting 44 hours, police found not one single item of contraband.

If you are the IBPO, the no-knock raid tactics that led to these tragedies are fine and dandy. After all, if we aren’t locking up hundreds of thousands of people for victimless crimes, America wouldn’t be able to maintain its infamous title of Prison Capital of the World.

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Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-response-bill-restricting-no-knock-raids-freedom-security/#zm8OtDF75kX5A8KL.99

9 thoughts on “Police Response to Bill Restricting No-Knock Raids: You Can’t Have Both Freedom & Security

  1. You can’t have a crime free area of habitation and still retain your God-given freedom?

    Out of the mouth of a COMMUNIST PIG!!!!!!!!!!

  2. “Apparently Georgia has never had a specified law on the books designed to punish officers and agencies that lie to a judge to obtain a no-knock warrant.”

    In a non-bizzaro world would that not fall under ‘bearing false witness’, ‘perjury’, ‘falsifying official statements’, or some other similar sounding already unlawful act???

    ““If we knock and announce, all evidence is going to be destroyed,” Mills said.”

    Depends on what ‘evidence'(high presumption here) is being sought. Hard to destroy $200,000zollars and 12 stolen full-autos. Hard to flush felonious amounts of drugs in just a minuet or two. At least without the toilet flushing constantly…

    “You have to draw the line between your right as a citizen to privacy and a community’s right to live in a crime-free environment. You can’t have them both,” said Mills.”

    Since you say I must I will.
    My right as ‘a citizen'[what ever that is to mean] to privacy was granted to me by my creator and outlined, enumerated and defined in a document -Bill of Rights- restricting a ‘governments’ restrictions on those RIGHTS. A community on the other hand is not referenced nor recognized by any know party nor any party claiming to be an agent for said community. Ergo a ‘community’ has no natural right to “live in a ‘crime-free’ environment”. Even if one was possible which it is not.

    You see you quizzling c#nt, MY RIGHTS ARE MINE. YOUR RIGHTS ARE YOURS. There is no OUR or COMMUNITY rights.

    As far as having both privacy and ‘a crime-free environment’, you can keep your BS crime-free environment. I got enough bullets to keep my environment ‘crime-free’ till I get carpal tunnel syndrome from it. And by default my privacy.

  3. Uh, isn’t lying to a judge while answering their questions called perjury? Lying while under color of law is generally felony charge material, so why is Georgia so different?

  4. “We know that there’s evidence someone lied, one officer lied to the magistrate in offering information for the no knock warrant,” said Fort.”

    ONE???

    Revelation, or what?

    Rhetorical.

  5. “If we knock and announce, all evidence is going to be destroyed,” Mills said.”

    Or you might get shot. That’s what REALLY worries you.

    With damn good reason, I might add.

  6. ““You have to draw the line between your right as a citizen to privacy and a community’s right to live in a crime-free environment. You can’t have them both,” said Mills.

    Apparently Mills has never heard the popular phrase stating that those who would sacrifice freedom for security, deserve neither freedom nor security.”

    Apparently the 4th Article to the Bill of Rights wasn’t introduced in her criminal justice/political science class.

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