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Cebu_4_2
15th February 2014, 03:20 PM
Video: Police Shoot, Kill 80-Year-Old Man In His Own Bed, Don't Find the Drugs They Were Looking For (http://reason.com/blog/2014/02/15/yet-another-example-of-why-americas-drug) Zach Weissmueller (http://reason.com/people/zach-weissmueller/all)|Feb. 15, 2014 3:00 pm


"Police Shoot, Kill 80-Year-Old Man In His Own Bed, Don't Find the Drugs They Were Looking For" Produced by Zach Weissmuller
Originally published on Feb 13, 2014. Original text is below:

In the early morning hours of June 27, 2013, a team of Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department deputies pulled up to the home of Eugene Mallory, an 80-year-old retired engineer living in the rural outskirts of Los Angeles county with his wife Tonya Pate and stepson Adrian Lamos.


The deputies crashed through the front gate and began executing a search warrant for methamphetamine on the property. Detective Patrick Hobbs, a self-described narcotics expert who claimed he "smelled the strong odor of chemicals" downwind from the house after being tipped off to illegal activity from an anonymous informant, spearheaded the investigation.


The deputies announced their presence, and Pate emerged from the trailer where she'd been sleeping to escape the sweltering summer heat of the California desert. Lamos and a couple of friends emerged from another trailer, and a handyman tinkering with a car on the property also gave himself up without resistance. But Mallory, who preferred to sleep in the house, was nowhere to be seen.


Deputies approached the house, and what happened next is where things get murky. The deputies said they announced their presence upon entering and were met in the hallway by the 80-year-old man, wielding a gun and stumbling towards them. The deputies later changed the story when the massive bloodstains on Mallory's mattress indicated to investigators that he'd most likely been in bed at the time of the shooting. Investigators also found that an audio recording of the incident revealed a discrepancy in the deputies' original narrative: Before listening to the audio recording, [Sgt. John] Bones believed that he told Mallory to "Drop the gun" prior to the shooting. The recording revealed, however, that his commands to "Drop the gun" occurred immediately after the shooting.


When it was all over, Eugene Mallory died of six gunshot wounds from Sgt. John Bones' MP-5 9mm submachine gun. When a coroner arrived, he found the loaded .22 caliber pistol the two deputies claimed Mallory had pointed at them on the bedside table.


Mallory had not fired of a single shot. The raid turned up no evidence of methamphetamine on the property.
To find out more about this case, including details about what the police did find, watch the above video, featuring Mallory's widow Tonya Pate. Pate has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department, an agency plagued by prison abuse scandals, questionable hiring practices, and allegations of racial profiling and harassment in recent years.


The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department declined multiple requests to comment on this story.

vacuum
15th February 2014, 07:10 PM
We need a global database of incidents like this, the names of everyone involved, and the outcome of what happened to them. We can't ever, ever forget a single one of these stories.

Cebu_4_2
15th February 2014, 09:47 PM
We need a global database of incidents like this, the names of everyone involved, and the outcome of what happened to them. We can't ever, ever forget a single one of these stories.

Agreed, this needs to be put in some perspective to study, or point at. Way way too many to keep track of. Any ideas? I am on and off net so I can't do much beside hope I don't duplicate posts. I can save them if need be for someone to put together.

osoab
16th February 2014, 05:10 AM
The guys in the MBCs got to go home safe. All is well...

midnight rambler
16th February 2014, 05:39 AM
All the more reason to repel ALL boarders. The only good pirate is a dead pirate.

osoab
16th February 2014, 06:06 AM
All the more reason to repel ALL boarders. The only good pirate is a dead pirate.

Doesn't it depend on who the pirate is working with?

midnight rambler
16th February 2014, 09:13 AM
Doesn't it depend on who the pirate is working with?

If they are flying the colors of the Death Cult (the skull n' crossbones or the like) when showing up on your ground to exercise lethal force in the extreme without any compunction whatsoever best advised to dispatch 'em before they do you (when on your own ground). When you start seeing household members being shot then you know you hesitated for too long.


“And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if every Security operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive and had to say good-bye to his family? Or if, during periods of mass arrests, as for example in Leningrad, when they arrested a quarter of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing left to lose and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand?... The Organs would very quickly have suffered a shortage of officers and transport and, notwithstanding all of Stalin's thirst, the cursed machine would have ground to a halt! If...if...We didn't love freedom enough. And even more – we had no awareness of the real situation.... We purely and simply deserved everything that happened afterward.”

osoab
16th February 2014, 12:02 PM
If they are flying the colors of the Death Cult (the skull n' crossbones or the like) when showing up on your ground to exercise lethal force in the extreme without any compunction whatsoever best advised to dispatch 'em before they do you (when on your own ground). When you start seeing household members being shot then you know you hesitated for too long.


I just don't consider them pirates. Foot soldiers of the state most certainly. imho a true pirate is anti-state. They are all for the looting and pillaging, but a nemesis of the state because they will loot and pillage the state the same as a private individual.

Mercenaries today would be the most akin to pirates. But we are not dealing with mercenaries in this case.

This is a case of JBTs in MBCs that have free reign to wreak havoc with no personal liability.

midnight rambler
16th February 2014, 12:13 PM
I just don't consider them pirates. Foot soldiers of the state most certainly. imho a true pirate is anti-state. They are all for the looting and pillaging, but a nemesis of the state because they will loot and pillage the state the same as a private individual.

Mercenaries today would be the most akin to pirates. But we are not dealing with mercenaries in this case.

This is a case of JBTs in MBCs that have free reign to wreak havoc with no personal liability.

I fail to see how they don't qualify as mercs.

govcheetos
16th February 2014, 02:03 PM
I just don't consider them pirates. imho a true pirate is anti-state. They are all for the looting and pillaging, but a nemesis of the state because they will loot and pillage the state the same as a private individual.


Some of the most free individuals in the last 500 years. The Brethren of the Coast were a loose knit cartel of individuals who pillaged state owned ships. Some received Letters of Marque from heads of state to sanction their work and were then convicted of pyracy after a treaty was signed by the same heads of state. (Iran Contra anyone?)

Captain Charles Johnson's "A General History of Pyrates" is worth checking out if interested.

For me the skull is representative of John the Baptist. Another individual who knew the score.