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DrugReporter

Police State Madness: Mayor's Dogs Gunned Down by Cops in Hyper-Agressive Drug Raid

By Anthony Papa, Huffington Post. Posted August 8, 2008.


Our federal government's zero-tolerance anti-drug crusade reached a new low in Prince George's County, Maryland.
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Dog lovers of the world unite. Our federal government's zero-tolerance anti-drug crusade reached a new low in Prince George's County, Maryland, when police killed two innocent pet Labrador retrievers while improperly conducting a SWAT-style drug raid on the mayor's house.

On July 29, police burst into the home of Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo and immediately shot to death his two Labrador retrievers. They were there to conduct a search for drugs. The raid was conducted by county police narcotics officers and a sheriff's office SWAT Team.

The incident occurred after Calvo carried in a package that was addressed to his wife. The mayor's mother-in-law had told the deliverymen, who were actually undercover police officers, to leave the package outside of his house. When Calvo arrived home that night, he brought the package inside. That's when the police broke down the door and immediately opened fire on the mayor's two dogs as they ran away from the narco-cops.

Police began tracking the package at a Midwest post office where drug sniffing dogs had discovered that the package contained 32 pounds of marijuana. Calvo said he had no idea how the package arrived at his home and that the sheriff's deputies entered without knocking. Then they immediately executed Payton, his 7-year old dog first, followed by Chase, a 4-year-old Lab, as he ran to another room.

Upon further investigation, it was found that the police did not even bother to secure a needed no-knock search warrant. Timothy Maloney, the mayor's attorney described the incident as a lawless act by law enforcement.

Calvo has not been charged, though police said he, his wife and his mother-in-law are all "persons of interest" in an ongoing investigation. The mayor said, "These were two beautiful black Labradors who were well-known in the community. We walked them twice a day; little kids knew their names and would come up to them and pet them," he said.

What makes this case unique is that this raid happened to a well known elected official. What is not unique is that these gestapo-like tactics happen every day in communities across America.

The drug war is an endless crusade by our government to promulgate its senseless zero-tolerance drug policies by any means necessary. This war on drugs has created convenient vehicles for appearing "tough on crime" behind a shield of public safety. But that shield gets worn down when our basic rights are curtailed through its use. We need to promote policy alternatives to the drug war that are grounded in science, compassion, health and human rights. In doing so we can reduce the harms of both drug misuse and drug prohibition, and seek solutions that promote safety while upholding the sovereignty of individuals over their own minds and bodies.


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See more stories tagged with: marijuana, maryland, police raid

Anthony Papa, author of 15 To Life: How I Painted My Way To Freedom, is a communications specialist for the Drug Policy Alliance.


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Beyond Belief
Posted by: abruzz on Aug 8, 2008 6:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I cannot even imagine the horror of having this SWAT team break down my door and shoot my dogs. The dogs had nothing to do with this "raid" and they were running AWAY from the SWAT team. Further, they were black labs that weren't even being aggressive. It boggles my mind that the United States goes around the world acting like we are a democracy and that we promote liberty and justice for all! Yeah right.

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» RE: Beyond Belief Posted by: pats2827
Beyond belief?
Posted by: donl51 on Aug 9, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You don't get out much,I read or hear about this shit going on every godammed day of the week..most are wrongfull entry gestapo type attacks,..those are wrong address,followed by no apology because the law doesn't make mistakes!...POLICE STATE MADNESS pretty much says it all!!this prohibition on people has got to end!!these killers have got to be jailed or fired and how much would you like to bet if fired they resort to crime,!!.....Homeland Security!another big lie,they own the DEA, and Corporations own them!...Amerika!for the corporation,of and by as well,....in California,It was voted that MJ could be used for med. reasons,and yes I'm sure there are those who are not sick that take advantage,but the percentage is far lower than those legals who are busted by the fed and assisted by the local cop,...be aware people....these ''law;'' enforcers are not our friends..they are the enemies of true freedom!I appreciate real police,have only found a few,not yet indoctrinated into the police state mentality!!.....drug war my ass!...PEOPLE CONTROL!!

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May they burn in hell...
Posted by: iberge on Aug 9, 2008 12:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...these so-called cops, these footsoldiers in the outlandish, immoral, criminal 'drug war' that leads to situations such as this. How DARE anyone think that tactics such as these are even vaguely acceptable in an effort to combat the use and trade of a benign green plant.

"Shameful" doesn't even begin to describe it. It's beyond outrageous.

The really sad part is that the police probably has, all said, more power than the democratically elected mayor does in this situation.

Things are really scary in this country right now.

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Anthony Papa
Posted by: tonypapa on Aug 11, 2008 4:11 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Today the police offered the mayor an apology since they arrested several people that ran a drug ring that took advantage of unsuspecting individuals. This was after they murdered the family dogs, handcuffed the mayor (who was in his underware) to his mother-in-law and made them lay beside a dead dog that was in a puddle of blood. No apology could ever repair the tramatic damage suffered by the mayor and his family.

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» RE: Anthony Papa Posted by: donl51
How Ironic
Posted by: jamesmanley on Aug 11, 2008 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Someone posted the actual Prince George County website from the day the story broke.

http://saleboutique.com/uncategorized/great-
disasters-in-web-content-management-prince-george-county/

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Is anyone right?
Posted by: better vision on Aug 11, 2008 7:16 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When starting to read this story I assumed that the keystone cops had got the wrong house (again)and the mayor was another innocent victim of the "war on drugs." But,-- that isn't the case, the cops got the right house (but in the days of planning they forgot the search warrant) and the mayor has lost his maryjoe. And -- all that the author and the mayor seem to care about are a couple of stinky dogs. Most drug houses are protected by dogs and if you were raiding one, you would shoot the dogs too. Don't get me wrong,I like dogs too.

The solution to all this is to end the war on drugs. Just how many people have died because of this stupidity? Hell, how many dogs have died because of it? What has it cost the tax payer? Are there less drug problems because of it; not in my life time and I'm old. I laugh my ass off when I see Canadian grown hemp rope for sale in the USA because we can't grow it for fear someone might smoke it. My father grew hemp, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew it too and someday I hope to grow it -- just for the fiber ya know.

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» RE: Is anyone right? Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Is anyone right? Posted by: better vision
Most importantly
Posted by: Malkavian on Aug 14, 2008 1:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THE most important feature of this botched drug raid is by far that this time they attacked a spotless pillar of the community who just so happens to be the mayor. This guy is "somebody" and he has a media base the size of which law enforcement has never seen.

This time they raided the wrong house, because people will listen to a mayor - as opposed to someone living in a run-down, poor black neighborhood.

I say: capitalize on that. Make sure this goes around the world. Get the ball rolling.

Other than that there is nothing new here. If anything the Calvos should consider themselves among some of the most lucky people in the world, for no other reason than he and his mother-in-law actually survived the raid.

Woe to the Calvos had he had a gun and defended himself. Look to the Tarika Wilson case. Downstairs cops gun down two pitbulls, and upstairs the other cop freaks out and shoots blind into a room hitting Tarika who is cradling her infant child in her arms, and even the child catches a bullet in the hand and shoulder ... and I'm sure he'll not miss that finger particularly, but he and the other five siblings will surely miss their mother. Not only did the case show that Tarika may have been down on the floor, but of course the cop was totally acquitted of any wrong-doing. As you probably know Tarika was black, and the jury that acquitted the cop all-white. Oh well..

And outside his fellow police colleagues cheered because now they surely knew that they would NEVER have to hesitate or even think for a second before unleashing a deadly volley of bullets into a room.

It must be good to know that you can kill anybody ... as long as it's in a drug raid.

Oh, and this article missed another point, I think: that the police doing the raid kept the local police totally out of the loop, so they actually did NOT know that they were raiding the mayor's house. They just ASSumed he was a drug dealer and didn't bother to do 2 seconds of investigation into the people living on the address.

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Sadly...
Posted by: NikoKun on Aug 15, 2008 1:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Botched raids like this are common place these days... This link shows just how common:
http://www.cato.org/raidmap/

And if you are raided, deserving or not, and regardless of the threat they pose, you can almost bet that the SWAT team WILL shoot your pets.
I'm starting to believe that such actions are a standard policy when conducting a raid. -_-

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» RE: Sadly... Posted by: chivakenevil_666
» RE: Sadly... Posted by: donl51
only too typical of cops
Posted by: chivakenevil_666 on Aug 18, 2008 1:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our police force is inherently corrupt in nature. like that of tijuana our police force is underpaid. however at least in TJ, cops are held accountable for their actions, by the government, organised crime establishments, or a person of influence. US cops are not treated as if they were civilian when they screw up, even reguarding something that occurred off duty. a san diego linebacker was shot down in front of his suburban home, in addition to being completely unarmed. the (white) OFF-DUTY piggy followed the (black) football player home at 1am. (Yes, he followed a celebrity and girlfriend home) Im sure when the pathetic pig saw a large, intimidating black guy emerge he wondered how he got in this suburban, and then, like a coward, hid behind the authority of his badge and gun. the outcome was bad, Foleys career is over and his girlfriend, not the pig, is in jail. all she did was try and get away after the o OFF-DUTY cop (who is ur average 24 yo, middle-class wannabee tough guy) opened fire on Foley for no reason except for being scared and panicking. the DA sticks her with a felony and the nosy pig goes back to work. the point being that police officers should not be strapped with a gat, nor do they need to. introducing a firearm to any situation rarely facilitates simple resolution. furthermore, having a gun is what gets cops shot. At least the kids learned never to trust the police. Ever!

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