Police shot unarmed man, drove an armored truck through his door when he did not exit his property on command

An armored vehicle drives a battering ram through John Geer's door.  (Source: ABC7 WJLA)Police State USA – by O.D.

SPRINGFIELD, VA — A paramilitary force was dispatched to a townhouse after a woman reported a domestic dispute between her and her boyfriend.  When her boyfriend stubbornly chose to stay inside his home, police shot him and drove an armored truck through his front door.

The situation began on August 29th around 2:40 p.m. when John Geer — a 46-year-old kitchen designer and installer — was told by his girlfriend that she had decided to leave him.  The couple had two daughters together, ages 13 and 17.  Emotionally distraught over the breakup, Geer exacerbated the situation by throwing her belongings onto the lawn of their townhouse.  

This led to her calling the police.  She informed the dispatcher that he owned a firearm.  A SWAT team was sent to the quiet cul-du-sac.

SWAT surrounding the victim's home.  (Source: NBC4 Washington)Geer’s home was surrounded by armored vehicles and uniformed personnel.  A police sniper was photographed lying prone in a neighbor’s yard aiming toward Geer’s residence.  Men in helmets and military fatigues cordoned off the neighborhood.  Police began making their demands.  An armored truck a topside gun turret parked in his yard and prepared for a strike command.  As time went on, helicopters whirred overhead and K-9 units were seen by neighbors.

SWAT vehicle at home of John Geer (Source: wusa9.com)

“We’re just here to help you — come out with your hands up,” recounted neighbor Edith Eshleman, of the police negotiations.

Fairfax County police officers spent approximately 40 to 50 minutes communicating with Geer, insisting that he either let them in his home or that he exit into their custody.  He did neither.  Geer was “a very stubborn man,” according to one of his relatives.

Geer’s girlfriend and two teenage daughters had already left when the negotiations came to an abrupt conclusion.  An officer shot Geer through a screen door as he stood facing outward at them.  Geer closed the door and retreated into his house.

An officer aims his pistol toward homeowner John Geer.  (Source: NBC4 Washington)

Around 4:30 p.m., with Geer sill “barricaded” inside his home, police used their $250,000 armored Lenco Bearcat to drive a long battering ram through the front door.  SWAT team members made entry and ultimately found Geer deceased in his home.

A sniper aims at John Geer's home (Source: ABC7 WIJA)

Don Geer — the victim’s father — watched the scene unfold from the front lawn of the townhouse where officers positioned themselves with their guns trained on his son. He confirmed that his son’s hands remained empty and resting on top of a screen door throughout the confrontation with police. When John lowered his hands about six inches, according to Don Geer, one of the officers fired a shot and hit John, causing him to retreat.

Police did not immediately say whether John Geer was armed or why the officer decided to open fire, nor would they discuss the details of the conversation between the officers and Geer before the shooting. Geer’s father says that he was too far away to hear the conversation, but claims that a detective assigned to investigate the case told him that his son that his son was not holding a gun at the time of the shooting and that he did not have one on his person.

“It was very scary because I’ve never seen coming down the street a SWAT team — I mean, a SWAT team?!” exclaimed neighbor Valerie Findley.

The armored truck mounted with a long battering ram.  (Source: ABC7 WIJA) Neither Geer’s father nor his good friend understand why the standoff ended in the death of a man with no prior convictions for violence. They do not believe that John was armed at the time, though both acknowledge that he owned a gun. Geer’s father said that the detective in charge of the investigation told him that a holstered handgun was found on the stairway landing a “couple of steps” from the front door where he was shot.

“If he doesn’t have a weapon in his immediate possession, the officer should not have fired,” Don Geersaid. “He would have to have turned around, bent over and then picked up the gun to present a threat. It’s pretty hard to say the shooting was justifiable.”

The officer involved was placed on routine administrative leave while the investigation continues, and police are remaining tight-lipped about the details of the incident.  Fairfax County Police Chief Ed Roessler said that the shooting is still an active criminal investigation adding that he could not provide more information about what happened, or address neighborhood concerns just yet.  They have not yet revealed what justification, if any, their officer had for shooting Geer.  The police said in a written statement, “Precise movements, contents of the discussion between officer [and the] man, and all pertinent matters relating to the incident are under investigation.”

SWAT team enter through rammed entryway (Source: myfoxdc.com) “It’s my goal when I can legally share that information with the community, I will,” Roessler told News4.  In September, investigators confirmed that Geer had been unarmed, according to WJLA.

The police response arguably escalated the situation instead of defusing it.  This is a recurring theme in a string of examples of how police suffer from a dearth of training in how to deal with unarmed, uncooperative citizens who had not been charged with committing any crime. What police lack in empathetic response, they more than compensate for with an excess of military toys and the use of force.

Their unsubstantiated concern for the safety of the public notwithstanding, the police are required to seek a warrant from an impartial magistrate before engaging in the search of private property and seizing of persons.  The allegation by an equally emotional girlfriend that John Geer was an owner of firearms does not constitute probable cause to violate his rights and ultimately end his life.  As John Geer had not yet committed any offense to warrant his arrest, and with his family already off-site, police should have defused the situation by themselves leaving the scene.

Refusing to be forced from your home or to allow agents of the state to enter without a warrant is not an offense punishable by execution. And though his mental state was, in the words of his friend Jeff Stewart, “emotionally wrecked that day,” the antagonistic response from the state cannot be touted as a positive outcome by any reasonable standard.

WJLA Channel 7 and NBC 4 Washington interviewed witnesses and obtained video of the incident. View them below:


 Accountability CheckAlert_HandBlinking

 

John Geer’s family and neighbors are demanding answers for what they believe was an overreaction by police.  Demand justice via the contacts below:

Fairfax County Police Department
Public Information Office
4100 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Va. 22030
Phone:  (703) 246-2253
Email:  FCPD-PIO@fairfaxcounty.gov
Facebook: Fairfax County PD

http://www.policestateusa.com/2013/john-geer-shot-by-police/

12 thoughts on “Police shot unarmed man, drove an armored truck through his door when he did not exit his property on command

  1. So now instead of handling things peacefully or worse, sending in armed police or even a taser towards an unarmed individual like yourself, they are now just going to skip all of that excessive use of force and go even further by driving right through your house and make you pay for the damages? Didn’t I see this in the movie, “Lethal Weapon”? I don’t even think Riggs would be this crazy.

    It’s like allowing the entire fire department to use a fire hose to blow out a small candle on your birthday cake. Talk about blowing things way out of proportion here.

    It’s like that seen from Robocop (for lack of a better movie) where he goes hay-wire and uses his gun to shoot the cigarette out of the guy’s mouth and says, “Thank you for not smoking”.

    I mean come on, people. When is enough enough?

  2. “Clearly it was serious”. 0:48 mark. Wow. That’s it? Great reporting channel 7. I mean that says it all. No need to report anything further! Just show some guy who basically says, “HEY MOM! I’M ON TV!”

    ““It was very scary because I’ve never seen coming down the street a SWAT team — I mean, a SWAT team?!” exclaimed neighbor Valerie Findley.”

    The lady has never seen SWAT? She should come to Round Rock, TX. They like to come into your workplace without a warrant and terrorize everyone instead of calling first to make sure it’s not a false alarm.

  3. Yes let’s have the police investigate the police’s action. GREAT IDEA! While we are at it, let’s have Eric Holder investigate Eric Holder! I mean it just all makes perfect sense in this unbelievably insane world we live in, right?

  4. The people they interview are hilarious. Like a bunch of people who never finished grade school. Instead of saying, “I can understand why they would shoot someone who had their hands up” maybe you should stop living in denial and just say, “THE POLICE MURDERED HIS ASS!!” How hard is that?

    Say it with me, you can do it now, “The…..police…..MURDERED…..his…..ass!!!”

    See now. Was that so hard? Grow a pair of balls, will ya.

  5. ““It’s my goal when I can legally share that information with the community, I will,” Roessler told News4.”

    BAHAHAAHAHA!!!! Oh man, laugh of the day. Thanks, chief.

  6. I have said all along that the more these crazy bastard are allowed to get away with the more embolden they will become. Couple that with an ego and the intelligence of a potato,militarize it and give it toys to play with and WTF do you think is going to happen? And now for the bad news,its only going to get worse till we are pushed to the breaking point which indecently isn’t that far away!

  7. Police aren’t police anymore, they are Israeli trained execution squads. I hope that stupid b**** is proud of herself because now her kids have no father. It’s only a matter of time before these cops find out just how outnumbered they are, and how high the price of being lawless truly is.

  8. C’mon guys. The cops were just doing their job.

    “To Protect And Serve”.

    The international corporate mafia, that is.

  9. My question is – as it has been for a few years now – do Americans, collectively, have a line which cannot be crossed? Increasingly, I’m thinking we do not. As long as it’s happening to “some other guy,” we’re willing to allow whatever abuses that are dished out by our evil overlords.

    Problem is, the “some other guy”s will soon be me and you. Hang together or hang separately.

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