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Maryland sheriff clears officers in dog-killing raid, sparks lawsuit

Cheye Calvo
After police intercepted a load of marijuana sent to
Cheye Calvo's home by smugglers (who planned to
intercept the dope before delivery), they staged a
violent raid that resulted in the deaths of two pet dogs.

Summarizing his office's inquiry into a misfired marijuana raid that sent heavily armed SWAT officers into the home of innocent people, resulting in the deaths of two pet dogs and the detention of the Calvo family at gunpoint, Prince George's County, Maryland, Sheriff Michael Jackson says, "in the sense that we kept these drugs from reaching our streets, this operation was a success." Sheriff Jackson's comments stand as a figurative flipped bird to a public vocally concerned about the bloody incident -- and a tossed gauntlet that Cheye Calvo has picked up and answered with a lawsuit.

When county law-enforcement officers burst into the Berwyn Heights home last July, they didn't even know that it belonged to the town's mayor. Not only hadn't the raiders bothered to check Cheye Calvo's background, they hadn't even informed local police of their plans. So we have no reason to doubt Sheriff Jackson when he says, "my deputies did their job to the fullest extent of their abilities."

After all, it apparently hadn't yet occurred to these keepers of the peace that the address of Trinity Tomsic, Calvo's wife, might have been selected at random by smugglers who planned to intercept the 32-pound marijuana shipment before it reached its destination. That was the conclusion reached soon after the raid, by which time the family had been terrorized and the animals killed (one of them shot from behind, according to a veterinarian with the Maryland Department of Agriculture).

The problem isn't that the deputies didn't try "to the fullest extent of their abilities" -- it's that their abilities aren't good enough. Neither are their tactics.

But Sheriff Jackson's CYA skills are sharply honed. In fact, last week's press conference was almost a replay of a preliminary report released by Jackson just weeks after the raid. At that time, the sheriff commented, "the guys did what they were supposed to do. ... Unfortunately, we had to engage the animals, but that engagement was justified."

Justified? But why even storm into the house at all?

That's a question we could ask again, and again, and again ....

The Calvos could almost be said to have been lucky. After all, Minneapolis police shot it out with Vang Khang during a 2007 raid on the man's home, only finding out after the fact that they had the wrong place (officers in the incident were decorated for their "bravery."). John Adams was shot to death by police during a raid on the wrong house in Lebanon, Tennessee. And Cory Maye is serving life in prison in Mississippi after killing an officer who burst into his home after police staged yet another misfired and poorly planned drug raid that was supposed to hit the next-door apartment in his duplex.

All too many cases like this were documented in Radley Balko's book, Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America. The Cato Institute maintains an interactive map of similar incidents on the Web. It's a grim record of the bloody toll taken by militarized policing, almost all of its motivated by escalating attempts to deny people the ability to use "drugs" -- intoxicants disfavored by the government.

Asking for a serious reconsideration of drug prohibition is a long-term project, although we are starting to see some progress on that front (Mexico is decriminalizing possession of small quantities of most drugs). Reining-in militarized policing may be more immediately achievable. In the wake of the raid that killed his pets, Cheye Calvo successfully lobbied for legislation to subject SWAT teams to greater scrutiny.

And he's now suing the Prince George's County sheriff's office and police department, seeking a court order forcing the county to change its policies for deploying SWAT teams.

Let's hope Calvo's operation is more of a success than the one championed by Sheriff Jackson.

 

email J.D.: civilliberties (at) tuccille.com

 

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Comments

  • Henry Bowman 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    "Sheriff Michael Jackson says, 'in the sense that we kept these drugs from reaching our streets, this operation was a success.'"

    Excuse me? Jackson HAD the drugs in his possession... then HE put them BACK on the street!

    By 2015, Carl Drega will be recognized as a trend-setter.

  • Michelle C 2 years ago
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    Thanks for the update on this JD. Not surprised, though.

  • Benit 2 years ago
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    How right you are - if Jackson's investigative skills were as good as his "CYA skills" - this raid would not have happened.
    And to Mayor Calvo - what a shame this happened to you, your family and your beloved pets - but, good for you - make them accountable and expose their dirty little tactics for what they are - sue their b@lls off.

  • .... 2 years ago
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    wow... just.. wow

  • straightarrow 2 years ago
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    Mixed feelings here. I have to wonder if Calvo would have believed any of his constituents and jumped to their defense if this had not happened to him, personally. My bet is no, he would not. My bet is that he would have backed his PD if it had been their operation and carried out against someone not 'connected'.

    I agree that all those on the raid need to be punished severely and removed from the LE community, permanently, including the lame-ass sheriff. But to be absolutely honest, I am gladdened that if such as this had to happen, it happened to somebody who has access to the media and has political connections with which he may accomplish something.

    Let's face it, if the residents of that house had been any ordinary citizen, they would all now be serving time in prison on perjured testimony.

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