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View Full Version : The word is "Impunity" - Will Grigg on the Jose Guerena murder




Anti Federalist
06-15-2011, 11:07 AM
The Word Is 'Impunity'

Posted by William Grigg on June 15, 2011 08:45 AM

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/89777.html#more-89777

The actions of five Tucson SWAT operators who invaded Jose Guerena's home, hit him with 22 out of at least 71 shots (thereby endangering Guerena's wife and child, hiding in a closet), and then prevented medical treatment for an hour while the victim bled to death, were "justified," according to David Berkman, Pima County Deputy Attorney.

Guerena, who had slept for about two hours after finishing a midnight shift at the local copper mine, was clad only in his boxer shorts when his terrified wife Vanessa told him that there were armed men on their property. The former Marine, who served two combat tours in Iraq, told Vanessa to take their toddler Joel and hide in the closet. He reportedly armed himself with an AR-15 -- referred to by Berkman as an "assault rifle," owing to the fact that it was in the unhallowed hands of a Mundane -- to confront the invaders. Guerena never fired a shot, and the safety was engaged when the weapon was found on the floor next to his body.

"The officers were mistaken in believing that Mr. Guerena fired at them," Berkman wrote in a letter to Sheriff Clarence Dupnik, who commanded the home invasion crew that murdered Guerena. "However, when Mr. Guerena raised the AR-15 ... in their direction, they needed to take immediate action to stop the deadly threat against them."

Dupnik's Raiders -- who, by the Sheriff's admission, carry out about 50 "warrant-enforcement" actions a year, or about one a week -- outnumbered Guerena five-to-one; they were clad in body armor and protected by ballistic shields. They were involved in an act of criminal aggression (the fact that they had an official-sounding permission slip doesn't change the moral nature of their behavior) against the Guerena household. The only morally and legally defensible response to Guerena's act of self-defense was to retreat, regroup, and negotiate. As a group of armed robbers, the SWAT team had no right to use lethal force to protect itself. Furthermore, the act of preventing medical assistance, taken alone, makes the death of Jose Guerena an instance of second degree murder through depraved indifference, given that his wounds were survivable.

The "justification" offered by Berkman and Dupnik -- and being retailed uncritically by the Arizona Republic -- is that Guerena, who was never charged with a crime, let alone prosecuted or convicted, was a "person of interest" in a narcotics investigation. He was arrested in 2009 on drug and gun charges, which were dropped for lack of evidence. In other words, Guerena was cleared of wrong-doing long before the death squad darkened his doorway. The affidavit requesting a search warrant is drenched in innuendo and barren of actual evidence against Guerena. As the Republic reported, the SWAT team was "looking for evidence connecting Guerena to a suspected drug organization involving his brother [and] his sister-in-law, among others"; the needless lethal raid yielded exactly the amount of evidence that would have resulted from a conventional search -- zero.

However, because the gang that employed Dupnik's Raiders has, as St. Augustine put it, given themselves impunity, its enforcement arm was given license to kill Guerena, and invent a justification after the fact. Thus the internal inquiry -- in which the administrative branch of a criminal gang "investigated" the armed marauders who enforce their will and gather loot on their behalf -- has "cleared" the killers of wrong-doing before the case even went to trial.



The five officers involved in the shooting were cleared Monday of any wrongdoing by the Pima County Attorney's Office, which said the "use of deadly force by the SWAT team members was reasonable and justified."


http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/06/14/20110614tucson-swat-shooting-officers-cleared14-ON.html#ixzz1PMiRrZte

fisharmor
06-15-2011, 12:00 PM
I just read through a lot of the comments on that azcentral link, and now I'm pretty convinced there's no way out of this mess.

I just don't get it. This is their argument:
1. Drug dealers are all murderers.
2. Drug dealers are heavily armed.
3. Therefore, the best way to stop them is to murder the innocent family members of drug dealers.

As I've pointed out before, this is the exact same reasoning used in the middle east, come home to roost.
Pick an enemy, do nothing to stop that enemy, murder that enemy's family and friends, and nothing bad can possibly result from that plan.

heavenlyboy34
06-15-2011, 01:33 PM
SWAT killing of Marine in Tucson: Probe clears officers

Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/06/14/20110614tucson-swat-shooting-officers-cleared14-ON.html#ixzz1PNIvWOmo

Two years before a former Marine was shot 22 times by a SWAT team during a May search of his Tucson home, he was arrested on drug and weapons charges and became the focus of multiple investigations.
Jose Guerena, 26, had been arrested on five felony counts and was "a person of interest" in a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigation of a marijuana-distribution ring, newly released documents show.
He was never convicted of any charge, the records show.
In incident reports following the fatal May 5 shooting, Pima County SWAT officers said that Guerena was suspected of participating in robberies of drug dealers and being involved in a 2010 home-invasion murder of a Tucson couple to whom he was related.
On Monday, the Pima County Attorney's Office said the shooting was justified.
The details of Guerena's past, which are contained in search-warrant affidavits and other records released last week by the county Sheriff's Department, contrast with the picture relatives and friends painted of a war hero and hardworking father gunned down by overzealous law-enforcement officers.
Guerena armed himself with an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle and confronted police entering his home about 9:30 a.m. while his wife and 4-year-old son hid in a closet.
He was shot 22 times by officers, who fired more than 70 rounds in less than 30 seconds. Police had played a siren and knocked on the door before entering.
Questions over the shooting and the search of Guerena's home, which netted no drugs or illegal weapons, garnered national media attention.
Relatives, including Guerena's widow, participated in a Memorial Day march protesting excessive force by police in cases nationwide.
Family members had said that Guerena, an Iraq war veteran who served in the Marines from 2003 to '06 and worked an overnight shift at a local mine, was just trying to protect his family from an unidentified threat.
The five officers involved in the shooting were cleared Monday of any wrongdoing by the Pima County Attorney's Office, which said the "use of deadly force by the SWAT team members was reasonable and justified."
Investigators from the County Attorney's Office concluded that Guerena was facing officers at the end of a hallway with his rifle raised in firing position when officers shot him.
Guerena never fired his weapon, and the safety was still engaged when it was recovered next to his body.
"(The) assault rifle held by Mr. Guerena held numerous rounds in the magazine and one in the chamber," Chief Criminal Deputy County Attorney David Berkman wrote in a letter Monday to county Sheriff Clarence Dupnik.
"The officers were mistaken in believing that Mr. Guerena fired at them. However, when Mr. Guerena raised the AR-15 . . . in their direction, they needed to take immediate action to stop the deadly threat against them," Berkman wrote.
The SWAT team members who fired at Guerena included two officers from the Sheriff's Department and officers from the Marana, Oro Valley and Sahuarita police departments.
Berkman said the first officer fired when Guerena raised his rifle. Other officers mistook the muzzle flash from the officer's gun as coming from Guerena's rifle and responded with shots of their own.
Two officers said they heard him say, "I've got something for you guys."
Guerena's house, in an isolated new subdivision south of Tucson, was one of four residences targeted in a series of searches coordinated to take place that morning.
Officers were looking for evidence connecting Guerena to a suspected drug organization involving his brother, his sister-in-law and his father-in-law, among others, according to police documents.
Berkman said officers were primed for potential violence.
"The SWAT team had been briefed on the nature of the operation and the fact that the occupants of the homes to be searched were potentially violent and could be armed," Berkman wrote in the letter Monday.
After the shooting, officers found a Border Patrol hat, body armor and another AR-15 under the mattress in the master bedroom and a handgun on a dresser in an extra bedroom of Guerena's home.
It is common knowledge among law enforcement that drug traffickers steal from each other while masquerading as law-enforcement officers, including SWAT units.
In the affidavit for the residences searched May 5, a sheriff's detective reported that Guerena's brother, Alejandro, and his father-in-law, Jose Celaya, were targets of the investigation. Other family members were also named.
The affidavit says Celaya, 57, was arrested by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in 1993 and convicted on cocaine-distribution and conspiracy charges. It noted that Celaya and his wife are wanted on outstanding civil-arrest warrants.
Law-enforcement interest in Jose Guerena began in January 2009, when he was arrested by state Department of Public Safety officers on drug and gun charges in Pinal County.
The affidavit does not include the dispositions of those cases, but a court-record check shows that he was not convicted.
The affidavit noted that Guerena was also part of a 2009 ICE investigation into marijuana smuggling.
ICE spokesman Vincent Picard said Tuesday that "the information contained in the affidavit is related to an ongoing investigation" and that his office could not comment on it.
In September 2009, Guerena was a passenger in a vehicle that officers had under surveillance. When they stopped it, they found large, commercial-size rolls of plastic wrap that investigators say is used to wrap marijuana.
The affidavit also provided a detailed summary of what officers described as countersurveillance measures employed at Guerena's house.
It reported an incident in April in which an officer drove past Guerena's home and another vehicle began trailing the officer. The affidavit said the officer attempted to evade the tail but was unable to shake it.
The affidavit said two days after the incident, a Motor Vehicle Division employee ran a record check on the officer's vehicle.
The affidavit also reported that Guerena was the registered owner of six vehicles with a combined value of at least $105,385.

Pericles
06-15-2011, 02:21 PM
The photo taken of his AR showed selector at safe and bolt locked to the rear - so I assumed he never even chambered a round.

AFPVet
06-15-2011, 03:49 PM
This was not self defense on part of the invaders. This was an invasion.... This would be the equivalent to typical criminals invading a house and claiming self defense because the homeowner was attempting to assess the situation and identify the subjects.

This case should've been evaluated by a citizens review board following the investigation... we can't trust the government to investigate another agency within the government.