Death
at Your Door: Knock-and-Talk Police Tactics Rip
a Hole in the Constitution
By John W.
Whitehead
“It’s 4 in the
morning, there’s headlights that are shining
into your house; there’s a number of
different officers that are now on the
premises; they’re wearing tactical gear;
they have weapons; and they approach your
front door.
Do you think that the ordinary citizen in
that situation feels that they have an
obligation to comply?”—
Michigan Supreme Court Justice Richard
Bernstein
March
30, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- It’s 1:30 a.m., a time when most people are
asleep.
Your
neighborhood is in darkness, except for a few
street lamps. Someone—he doesn’t identify
himself and the voice isn’t familiar—is pounding
on your front door, demanding that you open up.
Your heart begins racing. Your stomach is tied
in knots. The adrenaline is pumping through you.
You fear that it’s an intruder or worse. You not
only fear for your life, but the lives of your
loved ones.
The
aggressive pounding continues, becoming more
jarring with every passing second. Desperate to
protect yourself and your loved ones from
whatever threat awaits on the other side of that
door, you scramble to lay hold of
something—anything—that you might use in
self-defense. It might be a flashlight, a
baseball bat, or that licensed and registered
gun you thought you’d never need. You brace for
the confrontation, a shaky grip on your weapon,
and approach the door cautiously. The pounding
continues.
You
open the door to find a shadowy figure aiming a
gun in your direction. Immediately, you back up
and retreat further into your apartment. At the
same time, the intruder opens fire, sending a
hail of bullets in your direction. Three of the
bullets make contact. You die without ever
raising your weapon or firing your gun in
self-defense. In your final moments, you get a
good look at your assailant: it’s the police.
This is
what passes for “knock-and-talk” policing in the
American police state.
“Knock-and-shoot” policing might
be more accurate,
however.
Whatever you call it, this aggressive, excessive
police tactic has become a thinly veiled,
warrantless exercise by which citizens are
coerced and intimidated into “talking” with
heavily armed police who “knock” on their doors
in the middle of the night.
Poor Andrew Scott didn’t even get a chance to
say no to such a heavy-handed request before
he was gunned down by police.
It was
late on a Saturday night—so late that it was
technically Sunday morning—and 26-year-old Scott
was at home with his girlfriend playing video
games when police, in pursuit of a speeding
motorcyclist, arrived at Scott’s apartment
complex, because a motorcycle had been spotted
at the complex and police believed it might
belong to their suspect.
At 1:30 a.m., four sheriff’s deputies began
knocking on doors close to where a motorcycle
was parked. The deputies started their
knock-and-talk with Apartment 114 because there
was a light on inside. The occupants of the
apartment were Andrew Scott and Amy Young, who
were
playing video games.
First,
the police assumed tactical positions
surrounding the door to Apartment 114, guns
drawn and ready to shoot.
Then,
without announcing that he was a police officer,
deputy Richard Sylvester banged loudly and
repeatedly on the door of Apartment 114. The
racket caused a neighbor to open his door. When
questioned by a deputy, the neighbor explained
that the motorcycle’s owner did not live in
Apartment 114.
This information was not relayed to the police
officer stationed at the door.
Understandably alarmed by the aggressive
pounding on his door at such a late hour, Andrew
Scott retrieved his handgun before opening the
door. Upon opening the door, Scott saw a shadowy
figure holding a gun outside his door.
Still police failed to identify themselves.
Unnerved by the sight of the gunman, Scott
retreated into his apartment only to have
Sylvester immediately open fire. Sylvester fired
six shots, three of which
hit and killed Scott,
who had no connection to the motorcycle or any
illegal activity.
So who
was at fault here?
Was it
Andrew Scott, who was prepared to defend himself
and his girlfriend against a possible late-night
intruder?
Was it
the police officers who banged on the wrong door
in the middle of the night, failed to identify
themselves, and then—without asking any
questions or attempting to de-escalate the
situation—shot and killed an innocent man?
Was it the courts, which not only ruled that the
police had qualified immunity against being sued
for Scott’s murder but also
concluded that Andrew Scott provoked the
confrontation
by retrieving a lawfully-owned handgun before
opening the door?
Or was
it the whole crooked system that’s to blame? I’m
referring to the courts that continue to march
in lockstep with the police state, the police
unions that continue to strong-arm politicians
into letting the police agencies literally get
away with murder, the legislators who care more
about getting re-elected than about protecting
the rights of the citizenry, the police who are
being trained to view their fellow citizens as
enemy combatants on a battlefield, and the
citizenry who fail to be alarmed and outraged
every time the police state shoots another hole
in the Constitution.
What
happened to Andrew Scott was not an isolated
incident.
As Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch
recognized in a
dissent in U.S. v. Carloss: “The ‘knock
and talk’ has won a prominent place in today’s
legal lexicon… published cases approving knock
and talks have grown legion.”
In fact, the Michigan Supreme Court is
currently reviewing a case
in which seven armed police officers, dressed in
tactical gear and with their police lights on,
carried out a knock-and-talk search on four of
their former colleagues’ homes early in the
morning, while their families (including
children) were asleep. The police insist that
there’s nothing coercive about such a scenario.
Whether
police are knocking on your door at 2 am or 2:30
pm, as long as you’re being “asked” to talk to a
police officer who is armed to the teeth and
inclined to kill at the least provocation, you
don’t really have much room to resist, not if
you value your life.
Mind you, these knock-and-talk searches are
little more than
police fishing expeditions carried out without a
warrant.
The
goal is intimidation and coercion.
Unfortunately, with police departments
increasingly shifting towards pre-crime policing
and relying on dubious threat
assessments,
behavioral sensing warnings, flagged “words,”
and “suspicious” activity reports aimed at
snaring potential enemies of the state,
we’re going to see more of these warrantless
knock-and-talk police tactics
by which police attempt to circumvent the Fourth
Amendment’s warrant requirement and prohibition
on unreasonable searches and seizures.
We’ve
already seen a dramatic rise in the number of
home invasions by battle-ready SWAT teams and
police who have been transformed into extensions
of the military. Indeed, with every passing
week, we hear more and more horror stories in
which homeowners are injured or killed simply
because they mistook a SWAT team raid by police
for a home invasion by criminals.
Never
mind that the unsuspecting homeowner, woken from
sleep by the sounds of a violent entry, has no
way of distinguishing between a home invasion by
a criminal as opposed to a government agent.
Too
often, the destruction of life and property
wrought by the police is no less horrifying than
that carried out by criminal invaders.
These
incidents underscore a dangerous mindset in
which civilians (often unarmed and defenseless)
not only have less rights than militarized
police, but also one in which the safety of
civilians is treated as a lower priority than
the safety of their police counterparts (who are
armed to the hilt with an array of lethal and
nonlethal weapons).
In
fact, the privacy of civilians is negligible in
the face of the government’s various missions,
and the homes of civilians are no longer the
refuge from government intrusion that they once
were.
It
wasn’t always this way, however.
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There
was a time in America when a person’s home was a
sanctuary where he and his family could be safe
and secure from the threat of invasion by
government agents, who were held at bay by the
dictates of the Fourth Amendment, which protects
American citizens from unreasonable searches and
seizures.
The
Fourth Amendment, in turn, was added to the U.S.
Constitution by colonists still smarting from
the abuses they had been forced to endure while
under British rule, among these home invasions
by the military under the guise of writs of
assistance. These writs were nothing less than
open-ended royal documents which British
soldiers used as a justification for barging
into the homes of colonists and rifling through
their belongings.
James
Otis, a renowned colonial attorney, “condemned
writs of assistance because they were perpetual,
universal (addressed to every officer and
subject in the realm), and allowed anyone to
conduct a search in violation of the essential
principle of English liberty that a peaceable
man’s house is his castle.” As Otis noted:
Now, one of the most essential branches of
English liberty is the freedom of one’s
house. A man’s house is his castle; and
whilst he is quiet, he is as well guarded as
a prince in his castle. This writ, if it
should be declared legal, would totally
annihilate this privilege. Custom-house
officers may enter our houses when they
please; we are commanded to permit their
entry. Their menial servants may enter, may
break locks, bars, and everything in their
way; and whether they break through malice
or revenge, no man, no court can inquire.
Bare suspicion without oath is sufficient.
To our
detriment, we have now come full circle,
returning to a time before the American
Revolution when government agents—with the
blessing of the courts—could force their way
into a citizen’s home, with seemingly little
concern for lives lost and property damaged in
the process.
Actually, as I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People,
we may be worse off today than our colonial
ancestors when one considers the extent to which
courts have sanctioned the use of no-knock raids
by police SWAT teams (occurring at a rate of
70,000 to 80,000 a year and growing); the
arsenal of lethal weapons available to local
police agencies; the ease with which courts now
dispense search warrants based often on little
more than a suspicion of wrongdoing; and the
inability of police to distinguish between
reasonable suspicion and the higher standard of
probable cause, the latter of which is required
by the Constitution before any government
official can search an individual or his
property.
Winston
Churchill once declared that “democracy means
that if the doorbell rings in the early hours,
it is likely to be the milkman.”
Clearly, we don’t live in a democracy.
No, in
the American police state, when you find
yourself woken in the early hours by someone
pounding on your door, smashing through your
door, terrorizing your family, killing your
pets, and shooting you if you dare to resist in
any way, you don’t need to worry that it might
be burglars out to rob and kill you: it’s just
the police.
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder
and president of The
Rutherford Institute.
His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks,
2015) is available online at www.amazon.com.
Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.