Updated 05:14 pm.EST, Tue February 09, 2010

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Opinion|Mon, Dec. 04 2006 11:31 AM EST

Police Overkill Leaves a Trail of Death

By John W. Whitehead|Christian Post Contributor

Once upon a time, the motto emblazoned on police cars was “To Protect and Serve.” However, as police forces are transformed into pseudo-SWAT teams, complete with riot gear and a take-no-prisoners attitude, the fear that cops are overstepping their limits is on the rise.

For example, an 88-year-old woman was recently shot and killed when policemen barged unannounced into her home. Police officers broke down Kathryn Johnston’s door while serving a “no-knock” warrant to search her home on a dangerous, run-down Atlanta street known for drugs and crime, prompting the woman to fire at the “intruders” in self-defense. The officers returned fire, killing the octogenarian. According to initial police reports, the officers had been tipped off to search Johnston’s home for cocaine. However, the police have since reportedly acknowledged that the raid may have been the result of a mistake. According to a televised interview with a man claiming to be the police’s informant, he never purchased drugs at Johnston’s home and the police had asked him to lie about providing the information. No cocaine was found.

In another incident, a 23-year-old man died on his wedding day when New York policemen fired 50 bullets at his car. According to news reports, Sean Bell and two friends were leaving a strip club after Bell’s bachelor party when an undercover officer, who was part of a larger operation at the club, thought he heard one of Bell’s group say, “Yo, go get my gun.” When the officer approached Bell’s car, an altercation erupted and police started firing. It remains unclear whether the officer identified himself as a policeman or what prompted the gunfire. However, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg agreed that the police response seemed excessive. As Bloomberg stated, “I can tell you that it is to me unacceptable or inexplicable how you can have 50-odd shots fired.” Bell, the father of two, was to have married his high school sweetheart that day. His two companions were seriously injured. All three men were unarmed.

Last but not least, police tasered and gunned to death Derek Hale, a decorated 25-year-old U.S. Marine who had served two tours of duty in Iraq, as he sat talking to a woman and two children in front of a house in a Delaware neighborhood. Police swarmed Hale in front of the suspected home of a member of an outlaw motorcycle gang that is notorious for violence and drug offenses. Upon engaging Hale, who was sitting with his hands in his sweatshirt, the officers insisted he place his hands in view. Immediately after that, according to independent witnesses, the police tasered him three times and fired three .40-caliber rounds into his chest, ultimately leading to his death. Hale had no criminal or arrest record in Delaware, and witnesses to the shooting insist that he was no threat to the police. In fact, after police tasered Hale the second time, one of the independent witnesses yelled at the police that what they were doing was “overkill,” to which one of the officers responded, “Shut…up or we’ll show you overkill.”

Sadly, more and more police actions like these are resulting in the deaths of innocent civilians. In fact, over the past 25 years, there has been a disturbing change in the way many law enforcement officials approach their jobs. The result has been overaggressive police actions, or what some call overkill. Continue »

Pages: 12
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Struggling to succeed in the Nashville music scene, talented singer/songwriter Parker James finds the competition fierce even deadly. A young woman's murder, industry corruption, a