Justice is Not Blind

There have been two recent cases in which no-knock SWAT-style drug raids have led to the death of raiding police officers. Both men who killed raiding officers had prior run-ins with the law. In one case, no drugs found in the raid. In the other, drugs were found. One of these men is going to be tried for capital murder, with prosecutors seeking the death penalty. The other one the grand jury refused to indict.

One is black, one is white. Guess which one?
Guy is black, Magee white. And while Magee was found to have acted in self-defense, prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for Guy. He remains in jail while he awaits trial.

Historically, police serving warrants were required to knock on a door, announce their presence, and wait for an answer. But in SWAT raids, this is often no longer the case. Police aren't required to announce themselves if they believe the circumstances present a threat of physical violence, or if they believe evidence would be destroyed. According to a study by the American Civil Liberties Union, no-knock warrants are used in around 60 percent of drug searches.

Like Guy, Magee was initially charged with capital murder, which is punishable by death. But before Magee's trial, a grand jury found there was not enough evidence for him to stand trial on that charge. "In essence it was a ruling in self-defense," DeGuerin said. Guy has been through the grand jury process as well, his attorney said, but in his case, the grand jury allowed prosecutors to move ahead with capital murder charges. So while Magee awaits trial for felony possession of marijuana, Guy awaits potential execution.
Aristotle says that justice is treating relevantly similar cases similarly. That's helpful in a way, but it's purely formal: we still end up having to use judgment and rhetoric to reason about what constitutes relevant similarity. We can't go into justice with a blindfold on, because if we do we'll end up unable to do the work of justice at all.

These cases look a lot a like, at first, and we might be tempted to say that the grand jury is probably informed by racism in electing to prosecute the one and not the other. But there are differences, too, which we have to consider.

The first difference is the presence of drugs. But that, if anything, seems to mitigate in favor of Guy: he was the one who didn't have any drugs! On the other hand, "drug paraphernalia" was found, so the police and prosecutors may simply believe they were unlucky in the date of the raid. Still, you can't prosecute the guy for what you didn't catch him doing, and as far as the raid is concerned, no drugs were found.

The second difference is in the kind of prior trouble the men encountered with the law. Magee had two prior DUIs and two prior marijuana possession: and even though we take DUI very seriously as a society now, it's still an offense without violent intent (though it may, by sad accident, have violent result). Guy's priors were a little different: robbery, theft, burglary, and possessing a firearm while a felon (itself against the law).

Now you might say that we should judge their guilt or innocence based on the current facts of the current case, not on their priors. Even if we grant that point for argument's sake, though, we can't ignore the priors insofar as they are directly relevant to the current case. To whit, Magee was entitled to defend his home with a firearm, whereas Guy was committing a crime by even making arrangements to do so.

In that light, the grand juries' differential behavior begins to make a kind of sense. Magee could be said to be making a very honest and understandable mistake in defending his home with his rifle; Guy cannot be held to have been innocent of plotting to commit a crime with his firearm, because arming himself in that manner was itself a crime.

All that said, capital murder strikes me as an excessive charge for defending your home against violent intrusion by attackers who do not even bother to identify themselves as police with a lawful warrant. Such actors take their lives in their hands, and citizens should not be put on trial for their lives if the police's choice to run this risk ends up with them getting shot. Reason magazine notes a similar case that ended up with the man in prison for ten years. That's an injustice, when the police purposefully elect to raid your home at an hour when they expect to rouse you out of a sound sleep, dazzle you with a flash-bang grenade, and then storm your home before you can think. They must be held to be assuming the risks of such a rash course of action.

Even so, we don't have to appeal to racism to explain the difference in these cases. The cases are relevantly similar in some respects, but relevantly different in very important ones. A different outcome is not proof of injustice.

6 comments:

raven said...


No Knock raids are idiocy. Stupid on a grand scale-the gist is "he may get rid of the evidence" before we secure the house. If the evidence can be so easily gotten rid of in moments, maybe it is not such a big deal to start with. So some guy flushes a dime bag- is that worth putting the lives of the police, the suspect, and the innocent in peril?
This all seems fine with the police, but they are dealing with people who are low on the pole with regard to planning, self control etc- but the more "wrong house" raids they make, the greater the chance of hurting a truly dangerous person. Kill the mom of some SF guy in a wrong address raid and some bad news may flow the other direction.

E Hines said...

The drugs going down the toilet isn't the problem, drains and sewers are too easily checked and traced.

The problem of prompt entry from an evidenciary perspective is flash paper. Numbers, notes, tracking data, even financial books too often are kept on flash paper, which burns...in a flash. This is 50-year-old technology.

Whether that's worth the cost of no-knock raids is a worthy discussion, but drugs are a minor aspect of the evidence at risk. Because of that paper, I'm inclined to support no-knocks under some circumstances. The problem, which hasn't been solved (and may not be solvable), is how to circumscribe those circumstances so they're used only rarely and only in the proper circumstances.

Eric Hines

Eric Blair said...

I'm not buying that 'flash paper' excuse.

This is another couple of cases of "we got the toys and we want to use them."

These tactics are designed to intimidate and terrorize. And to intimidate and terrorize people that are not expected to resist, otherwise there would be a lot more shootings like this.

Witness the case of that guy in PA that shot the two state troopers. They're not actively hunting him down in his hideaways, the cops have thrown a cordon around where they think he is and are waiting for him to starve and give up. And that's because they think he will resist.

So the use of force is discretionary. The police choose where and when to use it. And we, as citizens have to trust their discretion. But they have ceased to be trustworthy.

raven said...

Not buying the "flash paper " either- I have read news, reports, etc obsessively for years and have never heard a peep about till now.

Ymar Sakar said...

How dare the peasants fire at their aristocratic betters using low born weapons.

raven said...

ymar, would you prefer they use a James Purdy double rifle in .470 Nitro express?