Home› Main Category› Personal Defense
Big Chief
Posts: 32,995 Senior Member
Two Maryland officers injured in shooting had served warrant to wrong apartment

Resident is lucky they didn't kill him and I'm glad he will not be charged. Sorry the offices got shot, but dang they need check and recheck the addresses on a warrant before bustin someones door down.
It's only true if it's on this forum where opinions are facts and facts are opinions
Words of wisdom from Big Chief: Flush twice, it's a long way to the Mess Hall
I'd rather have my sister work in a whorehouse than own another Taurus!
Words of wisdom from Big Chief: Flush twice, it's a long way to the Mess Hall
I'd rather have my sister work in a whorehouse than own another Taurus!
Replies
There is no viable excuse for hitting the wrong apartment/house. None.
― Douglas Adams
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/09/dallas-cop-who-killed-man-in-his-home-charged-with-manslaughter.html
How do you "mistake" someone else's apartment for your own?
How easy it is to make people believe a lie, and [how] hard it is to undo that work again! -- Mark Twain
This 'wrong house' scene happens a bit too often; perhaps it's time police departments instituted a policy that addresses that issue.
― Douglas Adams
Too many man hours???
How much do these occasional mistakes cost???
I usually make two or three every 33 minutes.
My activities are a bit less consequential.
Trouble is, when police officers make a mistake, or overreact, or they're all yelling at a suspect at once who is instantly confused by the ruckus, sometimes somebody gets killed or seriously injured. Throw in the errors that imperfect human beings statistically must make, and it can become not only a misunderstood biz, but a deadly one.
The only solutions are draconian - allow cops to shoot fleeing suspects, or disarm the police, or any of another half dozen crazy ideas. Or pass and/or repeal a bunch of new and old laws.
Until that mess gets sorted out, given the liars and fakers that LEOs have to deal with all friggin' day long, I tend to give them the benefit of the doubt...
...unless I get pulled over, and some jack-booted Nazi thug writes me a ticket when he could have exercised his discretion and given me a warning. Sorry cops, life ain't fair.
We are grateful for the enforcement of law and order until it lands on us. Then our disdain gets directed at what only moments earlier were our protectors. Receipt of this is likely a bitter pill only truly understood by the recipients.
And ranks are closed most swiftly by unions—which are mostly unimportant and overpaid.
Mistakes in an office are trivial. Mistakes in law enforcement can be dire. Train accordingly and double check everything. But mistakes will still occur.