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New Orleans Police Kill Unarmed Man During Pot Raid

Curt James

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New Orleans Police Kill Unarmed Man During Pot Raid

By Jacob Sullum
March 9, 2012

On Wednesday night a New Orleans police officer shot and killed an unarmed 20-year-old man, Wendell Allen, during a pot raid. Police, who had a search warrant, say they recovered about five ounces of marijuana, bags, digital scales, and a handgun from the house.

women-grieve.jpg

Rusty Costanza, The Times-Picayune
Women grieve after a suspect was shot and killed by a New Orleans police officer in the 2600 block of Prentiss Avenue on Wednesday.


They arrested two men for possession with intent to distribute. Allen, a former high school basketball star who was given a five-year suspended sentence for that offense last year, escaped charges this time around, what with being dead and all. The New Orleans Police Department is investigating why Officer Josh Colclough shot Allen, whose mother told a local TV station:

His police title, that's just a title. He's still a man just like the next man that commits a murder. So my child's crime should be treated the same if he'd gotten killed by a regular man.​

Should be, but certainly won't. A regular man who breaks into a house and kills someone, even accidentally, would be guilty of murder. But the drug laws authorize police officers to do things that otherwise would be considered burglary and armed robbery. In this case, the cops charged into the house with guns drawn, knowingly endangering everyone inside:

"All the children said that when they came in and they heard the boom, they put guns in the children's faces and asked them to back up. They proceeded upstairs and all they heard was a pow and Wendell screaming," said [Crystal] Butler [Wendell Allen's aunt]. NOPD confirms that 5 children were inside the Gentilly home when the search warrant was executed ranging from ages 1 to 14.​

"We have not been able to yet completely understand what exactly occurred,??? Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said yesterday. No matter why Colclough fired his gun, the crucial error occurred long before he ran up the stairs, when legislators decided this was an appropriate way to deal with a plant they did not like.

From New Orleans Police Kill Unarmed Man During Pot Raid - Hit & Run : Reason Magazine
 
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What if the cop said he made a threatening gesture? Not knowing if he had a gun or not, and only finding out he was unarmed after he shot in self defense?
 
Mayor Mitch Landrieu states there will be an open, full, and transparent investigation but we all can guess what the outcome will be.

The young man's shooting will be declared justified. :( Five ounces of marijuana -- what NOPD Superintendent Ronal Serpas described as "about the size of a novelty football" -- and, later, with another search warrant, a handgun found in the residence.

Tragic loss, but I doubt very much that the family will get any justice.
 
What if the cop said he made a threatening gesture? Not knowing if he had a gun or not, and only finding out he was unarmed after he shot in self defense?

true or not that is what he will say.
 
^^^^ Agreed.

What if the cop said he made a threatening gesture? Not knowing if he had a gun or not, and only finding out he was unarmed after he shot in self defense?

That will probably be the defense or explanation. :wits:
 
I bet he is too. I was guessing he said that but didn't hear them say that in the videos Curt posted. Guess they need to finish up the investigation before they can "release" any further information...

:thinking:

Why not keep the observations going before making a bust on 5oz? Find out who his man is and so forth, and then take them all down the same night. Getting more then 5oz off the street, which I would gladly take by the way...:roflmao:
 
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Found this...

NOPD officer who shot unarmed pot suspect in Gentilly is identified

By Brendan McCarthy, The Times-Picayune
Published: Thursday, March 08, 2012, 9:25 PM Updated: Friday, March 09, 2012, 12:40 AM

New Orleans police officials confirmed Thursday that the 20-year-old man who was fatally shot by a plain-clothed narcotics officer during a drug raid at a Gentilly house a day earlier was unarmed. New Orleans police officer Joshua Colclough, 28, fired a single shot Wednesday evening that killed Wendell Allen, 20. Police officials were guarded in their comments about the shooting Thursday, citing the ongoing investigation.

shooting1.jpg

Ted Jackson, The Times-Picayune
Family members protest in front of NOPD headquarters during a news conference Thursday concerning the shooting of Wendell Allen. Allen's grandmother is at left, his sister Karen Allen is at center, and his aunt Crystal Butler is at right.


"We have not been able to yet completely understand what exactly occurred," Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said Thursday.

The shooting took place inside a red-brick, two-story home at 2651 Prentiss Ave. in Gentilly. Officers were executing a search warrant at the home following a days-old probe of marijuana dealing. Serpas said officers later found drug paraphernalia and 138 grams of marijuana -- about four and a half ounces -- inside the residence.

It was the second fatal shooting of a suspect by police within a week in the NOPD's 3rd District, a relatively sleepy swath of residential neighborhoods that stretch from Lakeview through Gentilly. In last week's incident, in Mid-City, two officers were badly injured in a gunfight before the alleged gunman, 20-year-old Justin Sipp, was killed by police gunfire.

The response of city leaders to the two incidents, not surprisingly, has been markedly different. After last week's shooting, city and police leaders gathered at a news conference. They called the the officers heroic, making clear that they believed the cops were provoked by civilian gunfire and that the officers' actions appeared justified.

shooting2.jpg

Ted Jackson, The Times-Picayune
With NOPD Superintendent Ronal Serpas looking on, independent police monitor Susan Hutson discusses the shooting of Wendell Allen during a news conference Thursday.


Officers are permitted to use deadly force, such as firing a gun, when they have a reasonable belief that they or somebody else is in imminent danger of death or bodily harm.

But on Thursday, NOPD officials offered no real narrative to explain what, if anything, prompted Colclough to fire on Allen, a former standout high school basketball player. Police officials repeatedly offered condolences to Allen's family, while vowing to conduct a thorough, transparent investigation.

Serpas acknowledged that Allen was unarmed, that he was shot in the chest by a police officer, that narcotics officers were searching for drugs.
"We still have very many questions to answer," Serpas said.
"We will ensure and commit to our community that we will do so in the utmost of transparency and in the collaboration with our partners in the federal government, our partners in state government, and our supportive relationship with the independent police monitor."

The investigation that led officers to the Prentiss Avenue home began earlier this week. A confidential informant for a Jefferson Parish sheriff's deputy tipped off police that a man named "Troy" was dealing marijuana from inside the home, according to NOPD's application for a search warrant. Police identified the alleged pot dealer as Troy Deemer, 19.

The warrant states that Jefferson Parish Sgt. John Pacaccio and NOPD Officer Michael Voltolina watched the house for a 48-hour period and saw several "hand-to-hand" drug transactions in the driveway.

On Wednesday, the officers allegedly spotted Deemer leave the home carrying a white package. They followed him to Jefferson Parish and stopped the pick-up truck after he failed to signal a lane change, according to Serpas. The JPSO deputies allegedly noticed a marijuana scent inside the truck. They called for a K-9 unit, and shortly later recovered a one-pound package of marijuana inside the truck, the warrant states.

shooting3.jpg


With Deemer in custody, the investigators sought to search the Prentiss Avenue house.

At 5:15 p.m., a New Orleans Criminal District Court Magistrate Robert Blackburn signed a warrant authorizing the search of the home, and authorizing the seizure of any drugs, particularly marijuana, or weapons that could be tied to a drug trade.

The search commenced shortly afterward, about 5:40 p.m. Wednesday, just before dusk.

Four JPSO deputies formed a perimeter in the back of the house, police said. Three NOPD officers lined the front of the building. Meanwhile, an NOPD sergeant and five other NOPD officers went to the front door, according to Serpas.

They were in plainclothes but wore "raid jackets" identifying themselves as police officers, Serpas said.

"Before they entered the residence, officers announced their presence and announced their intention to serve a search warrant," Serpas said.

"Receiving no answer, they had to break the door."

The officers spread through the house.

"While some officers moved upstairs, a single gunshot was heard," Serpas added.

A single bullet struck Allen in the chest. It penetrated his lungs, heart and aorta, said Coroner Frank Minyard.

The lanky 6-foot 3-inch former basketball star fell to floor the in the stairwell. He came to rest on a landing. He died "almost instantly," Minyard said.


There is no evidence that the gunshot came at close range; there was no evidence of gunpowder on Allen's skin, Minyard said.

Allen's sister, 14-year-old Jazmine Jones, said her brother was shirtless, wearing only pajama pants. She said Allen was upstairs inside his room, and she was watching television with a younger brother, when police barged through the front door.

"As soon as they run upstairs, I heard a gunshot," Jones said. She described a chaotic scene, with mass confusion, as police spread through the home, guns drawn, and children scuttling about.

"I don't understand why this happened," she said.

Police said that five children, ranging in age from 1 to 14, were in the house at the time. The children were taken to the Child Advocacy Center Wednesday night, police said.

Two men were detained inside the residence. Brandon Boles, 19, and Davin Allen, 20, were both arrested and booked with possession with the intent to distribute marijuana.

Serpas said officers recovered "digital scales, packing materials and 138 grams of marijuana," inside the home. Though Allen was unarmed, someone inside the house alerted investigators to a gun "hidden inside the house," Serpas said.

Officers later discovered a .380 caliber handgun. Serpas did not indicate whether the gun was legal or illegal, or whether it had been registered or stolen. Nor did he link it directly to Allen.

While Serpas released these details at a late-afternoon news conference at NOPD headquarters, Allen's relatives stood outside, holding signs aloft demanding justice for their loved one.

They alleged that the shooting was unjustified and called police "killers."
"They killed him for nothing," said Allen's aunt, Karen Allen, 32, of Sulphur.
Mayor Mitch Landrieu on Thursday pledged that the NOPD will conduct a "full, open and fair" investigation of the incident. In a midday briefing in his office, the mayor called the shooting was a "tragic event."

"My heart goes out to the family of the young man who was killed," he said, while declining to talk in detail about the facts of the case. Landrieu said he and Crime Commissioner James Carter met with Allen's mother and grandmother for about 45 minutes Thursday morning in City Hall.

"She was upset, obviously," Landrieu said about Allen's mother. "She lost her baby boy. She wanted to make sure that justice was done."

Landrieu repeatedly emphasized that two FBI agents are embedded in the NOPD's Public Integrity Bureau, which investigates officer-involved shootings along with the agency's homicide division. The city's Independent Police Monitor will also monitor the NOPD's investigation, he said.

Allen was a star basketball forward at the former Frederick Douglass High School, where he averaged 21 points per game in late January 2010. He made the Times-Picayune All-Metro team. He also played football at the school.

According to online court records, Allen was arrested in January 2011 on a felony charge of possessing marijuana with intent to distribute. He failed to appear for his first court appearance and was arrested three weeks later.
In March 2011, he entered an "Alford plea" -- a plea deal in which the defendant is adjudicated guilty but does not actually admit guilt. Allen was given a five-year suspended sentence and credit for time served, the record shows, and released.

Other court records indicate that he had also been arrested on several minor municipal charges.

Colclough, 28, began his career at the NOPD in September 2007. Before serving on the force he worked at the New Orleans Private Patrol in the Garden District, according to his application to the city. His personnel file is relatively thin; he received a five-day suspension for his role in a minor traffic accident. He was reassigned to desk duty in the wake of the shooting.

Raymond Burkart III, a spokesman for the local Fraternal Order of Police lodge, urged citizens Thursday not to rush to judgment.

"We don't know what happened. And we can't guess, we need to find out the actual facts," he said. "It's only a day after the shooting. This thing is being investigated by no less than three groups within the police department, the police monitor, as well as federal agents."

Burkart, while declining to speak about Colclough, said that serving a search warrant is a high-stress, terrifying situations for an officer. "You don't know who's on the other side of the door, if people are hiding, if people are armed or unarmed."

Staff writers Laura Maggi, John Simerman and Leslie Williams contributed to this report.

From NOPD officer who shot unarmed pot suspect in Gentilly is identified | NOLA.com
 
I bet he is too. I was guessing he said that but didn't hear them say that in the videos Curt posted. Guess they need to finish up the investigation before they can "release" any further information...

:thinking:

Why not keep the observations going before making a bust on 5oz? Find out who his man is and so forth, and then take them all down the same night. Getting more then 5oz off the street, which I would gladly take by the way...:roflmao:

And if NOPD knew there were babies in that house then they should have apprehended all suspects as they left the house. Face down on the sidewalk outside the home, suspects in cuffs, then entered the home.

Sure it's easy to be an armchair quarterback and I'm sure it's a stressful activity for the officers, but wtf?

The officers had the home under surveillance, right?

Police said that five children, ranging in age from 1 to 14, were in the house at the time.
 
the cops if they were smart.They would have thrown a basketball in first and them niggas would drop everything just to play hoop and no one would have been hurt
Botched-headchopgif.gif
:coffee:
 
and if nopd knew there were babies in that house then they should have apprehended all suspects as they left the house. Face down on the sidewalk outside the home, suspects in cuffs, then entered the home.

Sure it's easy to be an armchair quarterback and i'm sure it's a stressful activity for the officers, but wtf?

The officers had the home under surveillance, right?

agreed curt!
 
They might win in civil court but I dont think they will win in criminal court
 
And if NOPD knew there were babies in that house then they should have apprehended all suspects as they left the house. Face down on the sidewalk outside the home, suspects in cuffs, then entered the home.

Sure it's easy to be an armchair quarterback and I'm sure it's a stressful activity for the officers, but wtf?

The officers had the home under surveillance, right?
stress..:thinking: have someone shooting Ak-47's and RPG's at you while you taking a piss:coffee:
1zn69eh.jpg
 
the cops if they were smart.They would have thrown a basketball in first and them niggas would drop everything just to play hoop and no one would have been hurt
Botched-headchopgif.gif
:coffee:

In Nawlins, a basket of Popeye's would have turned them against each other.
 
God bless america, i cant smoke a joint but i can stockpile weapons!

Well still better than here, at least u get the weapons lmao
 
Poor drug dealing gang banger =)

Sike!!! One less.
 
I use to live in new Orleans nopd are crooked as fuck.Thank god I'm white.
 
I haven't read or watched anything about this incident, but one thing is certain: the cop was black. If he wasn't, there'd be cries of racism.
 
I haven't read or watched anything about this incident, but one thing is certain: the cop was black. If he wasn't, there'd be cries of racism.

That is a great point, wasn't even thinking about that...:thinking:

Is the cop in question black, anybody know?
 
I haven't read or watched anything about this incident, but one thing is certain: the cop was black. If he wasn't, there'd be cries of racism.

Looked but can't verify that assumption. :(

Did find this, though:

After rewarding his drug cops with shiny coins, NOLA police superintendent Ronal Serpas is puzzled by death of unarmed man in Wednesday pot raid

BY EAPEN THAMPY
MARCH 9TH, 2012

Remember Ronal Serpas, the New Orleans Police Chief (now superintendent) who used his federal drug asset forfeiture funds to buy shiny ???Challenge Coins??? from Odgen, Utah firm Symbol Arts? In June 2011 Serpas explained that the ???challenge coins??? were meant to motivate and reward officers:

It???s why Chief Serpas says he decided to do what he says has been done in every other department he???s worked for; reward officers for a job well done with a shiny reward.

???I find they???re very helpful in creating good morale,??? says Serpas. ???People like having them, they laugh about them. One officer once told me he had so many coins, he could play a poker game. They???re very good at building morale, and have been around for a long time and I like them.???

In February, Chief Serpas ordered 2000 of the challenge coins.​

I don???t know if New Orleans police officer Joshua Colclough, shooter in Wednesday???s marijuana raid in Gentilly, received challenge coins from Serpas as part of his tenure with the NOLA police department. But given that the funds for these coins were bought with drug forfeiture money, and Colclough was involved in NOLA PD???s drug law enforcement efforts, it???s reasonable to assume that he was at least aware of the program. More directly, it is demonstrable that Colclough was incentivized to perform his job as part of an operation that raided suspects, seized cash, and rewarded itself with the proceeds. Impartiality be damned, this is law enforcement for profit.

But of course Ronal Serpas doesn???t understand this:

New Orleans police officials confirmed Thursday that the 20-year-old man who was fatally shot by a plain-clothed narcotics officer during a drug raid at a Gentilly house a day earlier was unarmed. New Orleans police officer Joshua Colclough, 28, fired a single shot Wednesday evening that killed Wendell Allen, 20. Police officials were guarded in their comments about the shooting Thursday, citing the ongoing investigation.

???We have not been able to yet completely understand what exactly occurred,??? Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said Thursday.

The shooting took place inside a red-brick, two-story home at 2651 Prentiss Ave. in Gentilly. Officers were executing a search warrant at the home following a days-old probe of marijuana dealing. Serpas said officers later found drug paraphernalia and 138 grams of marijuana ??? about four and a half ounces ??? inside the residence.​

Wendell Allen didn???t die just because Louisiana and federal law enforce marijuana prohibition. Wendell Allen died because Louisiana and federal law enforcement agencies are fundamentally divorced from the demands and desires of their constituents; the enforcement of this prohibition and the salaries of the enforcers are paid not through citizen mandate or legislative appropriation but through raids yielding seizures that the police can keep for themselves. Wendell Allen should be remembered not just as the victim of marijuana prohibition but as the victim of mercenary law enforcement.

There is a final irony here: Symbol Arts, the company who makes these challenge coins for law enforcement and SWAT teams around the country, is located in Ogden, Utah, where a January 4th nighttime marijuana raid on Iraq veteran Matthew Stewart resulted in a firefight that severely injured Stewart and fatally injured Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force officer Jared Francom. Like Ronal Serpas???s drug police, the Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force is funded nearly entirely through asset forfeiture money and federal grants, and has a reputation for hunting and killing people in other raids, like the September 2010 murder of Tony Blair (below, which was actually caught on video by Officer Francom). Currently, the Odgen prosecutor???s office is seeking the death penalty on a charge of capital murder against Stewart, and is doing everything in its power to deny Stewart a fair trial.


From Joshua Colclough « Americans for Forfeiture Reform
 
There is a final irony here: Symbol Arts, the company who makes these challenge coins for law enforcement and SWAT teams around the country, is located in Ogden, Utah, where a January 4th nighttime marijuana raid on Iraq veteran Matthew Stewart resulted in a firefight that severely injured Stewart and fatally injured Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force officer Jared Francom. Like Ronal Serpas???s drug police, the Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force is funded nearly entirely through asset forfeiture money and federal grants, and has a reputation for hunting and killing people in other raids, like the September 2010 murder of Tony Blair (below, which was actually caught on video by Officer Francom). (snip)

YouTube Video
 
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One less drug dealing/gang banger/criminal on the streets.
 
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