Diamondeye wrote:
It also provides a way out for cops that are in the wrong - dead men tell no tales, so if the householder is dead because he started shooting, it's a lot easier to cover up a mistake.
If they go into 201
north XYZ Street instead of 201
south XYZ street, covering up who shot first won't do them any good. Will the homeowner be dead? Probably. However, one hopes, those cops would be going to jail for murder (using this law for precendent and grounds for the lethal force used by the homeowner) and the municipality would be paying out huge in a civil suit.
Diamondeye wrote:
DFK! wrote:
And, as I understand it, DE's counterpoint is that the homeowners may (potentially even often) get it wrong and use violence against a team conducting a lawful entry. I grant that point (even the "often" portion).
Yes. However, the risk to the officers isn't significantly greater than it already was; either they're there as an entry teak in which case they're prepared for this, or they're there on some other business in which case they should know that serving warrants and other approaches to residences are hazardous activities.
Quote:
Police conducting an unlawful entry are a threat to my life, health, and property.
And if you engage in a gunfight with them, are you more or less likely to lose or damage your health, life, and property?
That's actually an interesting question in the modern police environment. I'd go with equal odds, overall, based upon the statistics for erroneous SWAT raids and the killing of civilians, dogs, damage to property without recompense, etc. To be fair, my odds of loss of life go real high in that case and property go way down, while complying keeps my odds of loss of life low(er), but my odds of loss of health and/or property much higher. In aggregate, it's probably a wash. It'd be hard to say without relatively intense statistical analysis based on the historical evidence.
Look, the point is this: there was no disincentive to [edit, retained original for quotation reasons]
do no-knock, to over-use SWAT, going into a residence unlawfully or to go into an incorrect door in Indiana. Now there is. Meanwhile, as you said (and I agree with):
Diamondeye wrote:
Yes. However, the risk to the officers isn't significantly greater than it already was [...]
Where is the negative here?