JavaScript and Cookies are required to view this site. Please enable both in your browser settings.
Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

Go Back  

Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid 

Current Rating:

Join NowJoin Now
 
  #1  
Old 12-25-2010, 10:45 AM
kellyhound's Avatar
kellyhound
Offline:
✝Mudderator from Hell✝
Poster Rank:12
e-mail
Join Date: Oct 2006
Contributions: 817
 
Mentioned: 447 Post(s)
Quoted: 9192 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
19/20 20/20
Today Posts
9/11 ssss89476
Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

Quote:
“Police! Search warrant!”

Officers burst through the door. A man appears across the room.

Metal glints from his clasped hands.
Shots echo from a police-issue Glock 22.
Todd Blair slumps to the floor.

“Five seconds,” said Blair’s mother, Arlean. “In five seconds, he was dead.”

Officers entered Blair’s home Sept. 16 during a drug raid when he stepped into the hall, wielding a golf club.

Ogden police Sgt. Troy Burnett shot Blair, 45, in the head and chest.

The shooting was deemed legally justified.

“They could have handled it a lot better,” Arlean Blair countered. “They could have tasered him. They could have done a lot of things other than shoot him.”

Investigation reports depict an operation that took some unexpected turns away from protocol before that one explosive moment.

*Grounds for search*:

• Whether Todd Blair was a meth dealer or just a well-connected addict is a matter of dispute.
Investigators from Weber and Morgan counties began watching Blair in 2009 after hearing that he was letting drug dealers live at his home in exchange for their products, according to the search warrant request.

There were previous reports of meth traffic to and from the home, near 5900 South and 2600 West in Roy.

Investigators gathered evidence that it was Blair’s roommate, Melanie Chournos, buying and selling meth — a factor in the no-knock search that would precede Blair’s death.

Detectives later saw Blair leaving for short, nighttime trips, which suggested drug trades, they wrote.

Two tipsters claimed that they had seen Blair — not just Chournos — handing drugs to customers.

Investigators, however, didn’t report seeing Blair make a transaction.

“He was not a dealer,” Arlean Blair insists. “I know that he used ... but he was not a drug dealer.

A drug dealer has lots of money and nice things.
If you looked in his house, he had nothing.
He gave everything away to people who were having trouble.”

Two of Blair’s friends claimed they never saw him even use drugs, but others told police he had caved in to his meth addiction.

“He was paranoid,” said Candice Coburn, who added she was Blair’s on-again, off-again girlfriend.
“His brain was fried.
He would punch and yell at invisible people and me.”

On Sept. 16, the day of Blair’s death, Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force investigator Shane Keyes received word that Blair had 2 ounces of heroin and would be getting more that night.

Keyes asked 2nd District Judge Scott M. Hadley for a no-knock, nighttime search warrant because house “lookouts” were known to give warning when police were nearby.

Meth dissolves quickly, Keyes added, and “if given the opportunity, Chournos will destroy the evidence.”

However, the warrant doesn’t mention that Chournos had already moved out of Blair’s home — a development officers noted in interviews after his death.

“I had been told that there was some ... domestic violence,” said Weber County sheriff’s Sgt. Nate Hutchinson, who was involved with the raid.

Blair was living alone. Because of the reports of violence, officers decided to wait until he left, pull him over in his Pontiac Grand Am and then search the empty house.

*“Dynamic entry”*

• That night, officers saw people come and go from the home. Finally, a man matching Blair’s description got into the car with a woman and drove away.

Officers pulled them over, but instead found it was Blair’s friend, who had been staying with him. Police released the couple and returned their attention to Blair’s home.

The SWAT team prepared for a “dynamic entry” — breaking through the door and subduing anyone inside.

Normally, that involves extensive planning, officers said in investigation interviews.

“A PowerPoint presentation is typically put together (and) a briefing of everybody sitting around the round table in our office ... and all the details are laid out as far as the suspect, the location, the route in, the ... evacuation points and ... where the closest medical [facility] is,” officer Brandon Beck said in a transcribed interview with county investigators.

Instead, the team gathered at a nearby retirement home to go over the plan.

To do a dynamic entry without the in-office briefing is “absolutely not our standard,” said Burnett, the officer who shot Blair, during an interview with investigators.

On the video, minutes before the raid begins, an officer can be heard asking the group, “Did somebody grab a copy of the warrant off my desk?”

“Oh, don’t tell me that,” Burnett replies. He then tells the other officers, “He doesn’t have a copy of the warrant.”

Because the warrant was for a no-knock search, the copy wasn’t necessary to enter the house, Weber County Attorney Dee Smith said.

“Someone could have easily hurried and brought it back [from the office],” he said.

There is no time limit for when a warrant should be presented to a subject, agreed Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner — “it depends on the situation” — but generally when a warrant is served, “It’s in [officers’] possession at the time.”

As the raid played out, Blair wouldn’t ask for the warrant anyway.

*Officers rush in*

• Burnett was assigned to lead the team in. It wouldn’t be his first use of deadly force — in 2006, he shot and killed white supremacist William Glen Maw after Maw fled from a traffic stop and then turned and pointed a gun at Burnett.

Then-Weber County District Attorney Mark De Caria commended him for his bravery.

Outside Blair’s house, Burnett held his .40-caliber Glock 22 “at the low ready,” with a round in the chamber. Six other officers were behind him. It was about 9:30 p.m. when they began to yell, “Police! Search warrant!”

After three strikes on the door, it burst open.

Accounts of what happened next vary by a second here and a foot there.

Those minutiae matter, Smith said.

“We actually broke [the video] down frame by frame,” he said.

The second man in, Ogden officer Jared Francom, said Burnett had gotten “about one foot in the door” when gunfire erupted.

Burnett recalled:

“The door flew open. I was first in the door. I went to the right to ... a living-room area. ... I moved to the right to dig my corners.

“[The number of] feet from the front door to where I first saw him, I don’t know ... eight feet from inside the front door, but I had went ... to the right. I don’t know how far.”

Blair appeared in the door frame holding a MacGregor Lite golf club in the stance of a right-handed batter.

“He had some silver thing. ... I thought it was a sword or something,” Burnett said. “It was silverish and thin.

“I didn’t think about saying words. I just thought about not getting hit, or slashed or whatever.”

The distance from Burnett to Blair has been estimated between “a little more than an arm’s length away,” according to Burnett, to 8 feet, as reflected by a scale diagram showing positions of the shell casings.

“There’s no way to say an exact measure,” Smith said.

Also important is whether Blair was moving toward the officers. Blair initially wasn’t in the doorway but appeared about a second later — technically an “approach,” Smith said.

Then he appears to take “about two steps into the doorway with the club raised,” Smith said.

Burnett didn’t remember Blair advancing.

“I’m sure that I was moving forward,” he said. “I don’t know if he was.

He was just — it seemed like he was just kind of still. ... I can’t recall him chasing after me.
I don’t recall that. He was just right there.”

Francom said, “It appeared to me that he was coming toward us.
But there wasn’t much time for him to make too much of an advance before.”

Ultimately, Smith said, it was Burnett who didn’t have time to wait.

“Our best conclusion is it would have taken less than half a second for Mr. Blair to close that gap and strike the officer,” he said.

Video after the shooting, not released yet, shows an officer putting handcuffs on Blair and searching for a pulse. Burnett orders a call to medics and stays in the front room, while other officers search the house.

“Everybody out,” Burnett says. “This is a different crime scene now.”

It isn’t clear from evidence logs whether investigators found the drugs they were looking for. There was paraphernalia and “a small, pink plastic bag with a white crystal substance.”

But neither the substance nor its amount is identified, and officials with the Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force didn’t return The Tribune’s calls for comment.

Ogden police investigated the shooting independently and agreed it was justified.

“He had less than a second to make a decision with a guy swinging what looked like a sword in his hands,” Greiner said.

“We train these officers regularly on how to defend themselves and be able to go home at night.”

He said his department also reviewed strategies for no-knock search warrants.

“We’ve discussed a couple of ways as to how we can be more careful,” he said without elaborating.

“The problem is, what you’re looking for could easily be destroyed and there’s generally weapons. ... I just don’t know an easy way to get in there.”

Blair’s family has obtained a copy of the video and reports. Neither Arlean Blair nor her two daughters have viewed them.

“No way,” said Todd Blair’s sister, Delene Hyde. “How could I watch my brother’s murder?”

The family has discussed suing police but hasn’t finalized anything.

“We decided to let it rest until after Christmas,” Arlean Blair said. “Christmas is a special time in our family — him [Todd Blair] included.”

*Utah’s deadly force law*

76-2-404. Peace officer’s use of deadly force.

(1) A peace officer, or any person acting by his command in his aid and assistance, is justified in using deadly force when:

(c) the officer reasonably believes that the use of deadly force is necessary to prevent death or serious bodily injury to the officer or another person.

(2) If feasible, a verbal warning should be given by the officer prior to any use of deadly force under Subsection (1)(c).
Test
Picture and Video Clip Stats.
File Type: mp4 Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid.mp4 (1.67 MB , 1216 views)
Reply With Quote
The Following 12 Users Say Thank You to kellyhound For This Useful Post:
Bclancy95, Dragonlady66, icepick29, lecsee, princess83, Pyramid_Head, SinisterNm, St. Geno, sutty37, wally teeter, wickedminds1, Wiley
  #2  
Old 12-25-2010, 10:55 AM
dale4978
Offline:
My Rank: PRIVATE
Poster Rank:6358
Join Date: Mar 2010
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssssss34
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

what the hell cops kills for no reason..
Reply With Quote
The Following 12 Users Say Thank You to dale4978 For This Useful Post:
11B2P, 434burke, abacus, copskill8, janedoe77, jedwards9922, lecsee, lzerohour, shell416, Squeak, Wiley, zombiehunter1231
The Following 5 Users Said Fuck Off to dale4978 For This Post:
camaromike, coldbloodz187, M.F.D.B., MEMOR3X, Mystery Tour
  #3  
Old 12-25-2010, 12:18 PM
MisterX's Avatar
MisterX
Offline:
My Rank: FIRST SERGEANT
Poster Rank:457
male
Join Date: Dec 2009
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 46 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss2341
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

that was very fast! but it did look like he had a gun i think?
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 12-25-2010, 01:52 PM
flyflicker123
Offline:
My Rank: MASTER SERGEANT
Poster Rank:532
male
Join Date: Apr 2010
 
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Quoted: 811 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss1863
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

O well....
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 12-25-2010, 03:42 PM
AmericanIllusions's Avatar
My Rank: FIRST SERGEANT
Poster Rank:382
Join Date: Oct 2009
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 143 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss3082
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

This vid quality sucks. I saw this same vid crystal clear but fuck it, a man is dead.

Get that title right, he didn't swing that club. The guys house gets raided late at night and he thinks it's theives so why wouldn't he grab a bat or golf club? You can clearly hear them say "Search Warrant" and fire shots w/o giving an order to lie down OR even giving him 2 seconds to figure what's going on. More Murder. Will they be charged, FUCK NO.
Reply With Quote
The Following 20 Users Say Thank You to AmericanIllusions For This Useful Post:
11B2P, abacus, Agapeti, audiomouth, Canuk-Bob, Chinchillazilla, edwina22, ewnasssty, HAL9000, J81, janedoe77, lecsee, lzerohour, mintycbo, Pogrom, Rejeg, Sarge99, shell416, Squeak, Wiley
The Following 5 Users Said Fuck Off to AmericanIllusions For This Post:
chewbacca, coldbloodz187, M.F.D.B., Mystery Tour, pussydoodle
  #6  
Old 12-25-2010, 04:21 PM
sil's Avatar
sil
Offline:
My Rank: PRIVATE
Poster Rank:5840
female
Join Date: Feb 2010
 
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssssss40
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

they shoot first then say "dont move"
Reply With Quote
The Following 12 Users Say Thank You to sil For This Useful Post:
abacus, copskill8, corpsehands, edwina22, ewnasssty, HAL9000, HonchoRyanC, jesuswept, lzerohour, mintycbo, Rejeg, zombiehunter1231
The Following 2 Users Said Fuck Off to sil For This Post:
coldbloodz187, Mystery Tour
  #7  
Old 12-25-2010, 04:54 PM
goregon's Avatar
goregon
Offline:
My Rank: PRIVATE FIRST CLASS
Poster Rank:4057
Male
Join Date: Dec 2009
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 2 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssssss76
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

shoots guy...guy falls to ground...police "get on the ground"


dumb fucks
Reply With Quote
The Following 16 Users Say Thank You to goregon For This Useful Post:
Agapeti, audiomouth, c4lmn, Canuk-Bob, copskill8, DJSmurf2010, HAL9000, HonchoRyanC, lzerohour, mintycbo, realrealityoflife, Rejeg, Sarge99, Vopo, weirdo111, zombiehunter1231
The Following 4 Users Said Fuck Off to goregon For This Post:
coldbloodz187, M.F.D.B., Marcher73, Mystery Tour
  #8  
Old 12-25-2010, 06:37 PM
Steve's Avatar
Steve
Offline:
★ Legacy Member ★
Poster Rank:6
What we've got here is failure to communicate.
Join Date: Aug 2009
Contributions: 3
 
Mentioned: 111 Post(s)
Quoted: 43265 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
12/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sss103336
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

That was fucking murder plain and simple.
Reply With Quote
The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to Steve For This Useful Post:
Agapeti, copskill8, ewnasssty, HAL9000, lecsee, lzerohour, realrealityoflife, Rejeg, zombiehunter1231
The Following 4 Users Said Fuck Off to Steve For This Post:
coldbloodz187, M.F.D.B., Marcher73, Mystery Tour
  #9  
Old 12-25-2010, 06:51 PM
kellyhound's Avatar
kellyhound
Offline:
✝Mudderator from Hell✝
Poster Rank:12
e-mail
Join Date: Oct 2006
Contributions: 817
 
Mentioned: 447 Post(s)
Quoted: 9192 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
19/20 20/20
Today Posts
9/11 ssss89476
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

More about sgt. Troy burnett:

Quote:
Lawsuit After Bystander Killed in High-Speed Chase


Ellis v. Ogden City, Case No. 08-4166 (C.A. 10, Dec. 17, 2009)
This tragic case addresses the level of intent necessary to prove a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against officers for their conduct in a high-speed chase resulting in a bystander’s death. The teaching of County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 836 (1998), is that in such circumstances “only a purpose to cause harm unrelated to the legitimate object of arrest will satisfy the element of arbitrary conduct shocking to the conscience, necessary for a due process violation.” See also id. at 858 (Kennedy, J., concurring) (“intent to injure” is required).

Because Plaintiff-Appellant here failed to allege facts sufficient to establish such intent, the District Court properly dismissed the First Amended Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

On December 18, 2006, Officer Matt Jones and Sergeant Troy Burnett are alleged to have initiated a “high speed chase” after Eddie Bustos through Ogden, Utah. First Amended Complaint at ¶¶ 3-4, 12, 14. The officers had been conducting a stakeout in a known gang member area of Ogden. Id. at ¶ 12. According to the First Amended Complaint, the officers began to follow and then chase Mr. Bustos “through town at speeds that exceeded 55 miles per hour, and at times reached 80 miles per hour.” Id. at ¶ 15. Officer Jones was aware of the residential address of Mr. Bustos and could have waited at that address to arrest Mr. Bustos for any crimes he may have committed. Id. at ¶ 22. Throughout the chase Mr. Bustos would drive into oncoming traffic and lanes and the defendants continued to chase him. Id. at ¶ 17. The officers were advised and ordered by dispatch to disengage from the pursuit. Id. at ¶ 19.

The First Amended Complaint further alleges that the officers disregarded the order and/or gave false information to police dispatch about their speed and that they were disengaging the chase. Id. at ¶¶ 20, 24. During the chase Mr. Bustos struck the vehicle which Mr. Ellis was driving, and this led to Mr. Ellis’s death. Id. at ¶ 23.

Mr. Ellis’s estate filed suit against Ogden City, Officer Jones, and Sergeant Burnett for allegedly violating Mr. Ellis’s Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process and his Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection of the law. The estate’s suit was maintained pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for acts which “deprived Ellis of his civil rights and his life.” Id. at ¶¶ 6, 35, 42. The estate also alleged the City of Ogden fostered and encouraged a policy of turning a blind eye to dangerous police pursuits, thus exposing the city to municipal liability. Id. at ¶¶ 39-40. A demand for trial by jury was made in the complaint. Id. at ¶ 1. Defendants-Appellees moved to dismiss the case pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim, and the District Court granted the motion. Memorandum Decision & Order, App. at 156.
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to kellyhound For This Useful Post:
heart-of-darkness, realrealityoflife
  #10  
Old 12-25-2010, 07:46 PM
alpha.first.one's Avatar
alpha.first.one
Offline:
My Rank: SERGEANT
Poster Rank:922
male
Join Date: Mar 2009
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 9 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 18/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssssss780
Re: Police Shoot & Kill Man Wielding a Golf Club During a Drug House Raid

meth is destroying communities and one dead is not enough. should do random drug testing on everybody and if found to be using than BANG! of with your head! right there on the spot.
Reply With Quote
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to alpha.first.one For This Useful Post:
camaromike, coldbloodz187, realrealityoflife, switch467
The Following 7 Users Said Fuck Off to alpha.first.one For This Post:
abcefg122, AmericanIllusions, ewnasssty, HAL9000, hippl5, J81, Rejeg

Powered by vBulletin Copyright 2000-2010 Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO