this kind of crap shouldn't be happening here or anywhere for that matter


eagleeyes

New member
Mysterious package delivered to family, 10 minutes later police break down door and ransack home

A family in Beach Park, Illinois underwent a strange series of events after a mysterious package, allegedly containing marijuana, was delivered to their home. A mere 10 minutes after the package, which was not actually addressed to anyone in the family, was delivered, police broke down the front door and confronted the family with guns drawn.

Unfortunately, police raiding the wrong home is far from rare although I guess we can be grateful that no one was killed in the botched drug raid which actually never turned up anything illicit. The Lake County News-Sun reported that Paul Brown, a 58-year-old architect, was in the basement of his home when a “huge noise” drew him upstairs where he was swiftly met with a gun in his face.

According to Brown, he was handcuffed and placed on a chair with a gun still pointed at his face. “They wouldn’t tell us why they were there,” he said, referring to the police. Only after the fact was Brown able to piece together what actually happened.

“A package was delivered, it was about 18 inches by 18 inches 22 to 24 inches tall, by a postal inspector and was accepted outside the open garage by Brown’s son-in-law, Wilmer Aries, 28, who is married to his daughter Ericka, 23, who also live in the home,” the News-Sun reported.

Brown said that Aries then brought the package inside the house, placing it in the foyer. Brown never actually saw the package but Aries said it was addressed to a completely different house. To make matters even worse, the search warrant address listed Brown’s house as in Waukegan when in reality it is in Beach Park. Brown also said he thought the package was addressed to someone name Oscar with a different last name.

Only 10 minutes after the package was accepted, police officers from the Metropolitan Enforcement Group (MEG) “smashed in the front door and began ransacking the house, even pulling out insulation in the basement,” according to the News-Sun.

“They crashed things, they smashed things,” Brown recalled. “You couldn’t walk into a room because everything from the drawers was thrown around and emptied onto the floor.”

According to Brown, it was completely unnecessary for the police to break down his door in the first place.

“The garage door was open. They could have just walked in,” he said.

Brown said that the search turned up no drugs whatsoever and the police took the box – allegedly containing marijuana – with them. It is not all that surprising to learn that the calls placed by the News-Sun to the Metropolitan Enforcement Group were never returned. It is also not shocking, but still troubling to learn that the Metropolitan Enforcement Group hasn’t returned Brown’s calls either.

Brown was clearly disturbed by the incident beyond just wondering who is going to pay for his door valued at $3,000 12 years ago along with the $130 lock set.

“It’s pretty shadowy and pretty bizarre for us,” Brown said, referring to the incident which lasted a whopping two hours starting around 4 p.m. “I was terrified. My chest was hurting and I am a diabetic and prone to heart attacks.”

To add insult to injury, Brown said that the officers were high-fiving and fist-bumping each other as they were tracking the shattered glass from his front door around the house. Brown also said that his 77-year-old mother-in-law was in the kitchen when the raid happened and the police opted to give her the search warrant to read instead of actually giving it to Brown.

“I was basically held hostage,” said Brown, while adding that his family is “not hard to investigate.”

“They were upset they didn’t find anything. When I asked them who was going to pay for the door they basically said, ‘Not us’,” said Brown.

I hate to say it but I really wouldn’t be all that surprised if Brown never was reimbursed and never even received an apology from the police. After all, they didn’t kill any pets or family members so he should be grateful, right?

More at EndtheLie.com - Mysterious package delivered to family, 10 minutes later police break down door and ransack home | End the Lie – Independent News
 

One thing I have heard of lately is ID thieves buying stuff & having it shipped to the wrong address intentionally in order to make tracking them down harder. They keep track & watch the house the item is delivered to and retrieve the package before the homeowner knows anything about it.

Knowing that this takes place, I can see where drug dealers or any other BG may use a similar tactic. I'm not defending bad police work. But, I can see how getting the wrong house could be a possibility.

(BG sends package to innocent homeowner and LE get wind of the package & stakes out the home. Not knowing the extent of the homeowners involvement or lack thereof LEOs raid home when package is delivered.)

Unfortunately, this kind of "jump the gun" police work hurts LE reputation, builds distrust and tips off the BG that the police are onto them.

-
 
I certainly hope that the Brown's have a good attorney that is not intimidated by the local politics, and that they are able to go after the agencies responsible for the destruction of the Brown home AND collect a whopping sum in damages. Our law enforcement community is getting pretty good at getting things wrong and then just walking away from it with retribution.
 
Yet another no-no-knock raid gone awry. Thankfully no innocents were injured.

Why was the package accepted if not addressed to someone who lives there?
Why was the address on the warrant not correct? How is it that that is OK?
Will the city be forthcoming with restitution for damages? Unlikely, without a court order.

Disturbing!
 
I certainly hope that the Brown's have a good attorney that is not intimidated by the local politics, and that they are able to go after the agencies responsible for the destruction of the Brown home AND collect a whopping sum in damages. Our law enforcement community is getting pretty good at getting things wrong and then just walking away from it with retribution.

I hope so too. The more they get away with it, the more we will be hearing of it happening. It's a shame that there is nobody personally responsible when this happens. That must be why their attitude is so bad. If you sue the Police, the taxpayers pay the settlement and nobody did a thing wrong.

It seems to me that the people in charge, the Lieutenants, Sargeants, Chiefs and even the Mayor should be personally responsible for the behavior of their officers. I'll bet that would slow these bad raids.

Gary, 73
KF4MM
 
This is getting to be an old story. This has been increasing over recent years. Just watched a story today about a seventy year old man that did two years in a federal pen for selling flowers. A team showed up at his place with assault weapons (the real ones not the misnamed semi-auto kind) and arrested him because the importer supposedly filled out some papers incorrectly. Just remember that if you are ever on a jury you are legally the judge or the law not just the judge of the facts.
 
The way to hurt the hire ups in the pocket and not the tax payers is to sue them not as an LEO but have it done as a private citizen AND an officer that way you get both the department and the officers also another thing to do is not only go to local news but the larger national stations about it. Just my two cents
 
This smells like a setup! Who gets packages delivered "by a postal inspector"? He must have been a real winner that couldn't even read well enough to deliver it to the right address. And the fuzz waited all of 10 minutes before they broke down the door? And the garage door was wide open? If the residents were bad guys, guess they could have escaped out that way since nobody covering that exit? Maybe the drug task force figured they needed to give the druggies time to open the package and start smoking it?
Questions: What LE units were involved, local, county, Feds? Who headed up this botched operation? If it was anywhere other than Illinois, it would be a slam-dunk case to get major $ from the offending government entities. Where is accountability on this? I think calls high up the chain of command are warranted. Rattle some cages!
Since the delivered package was taken by the police, it is only the word of the son-in-law that it had a different address on the label. Do you think the police or postal inspector will admit it was delivered to the wrong address? This was an incompetent operation all around so, no way are the local government agencies going to agree they were this dumb! This is gross negligence. Now where is the ACLU on this? I would think they would be “breaking down their door” (oh, yeah, LE already did that) to take on this case.
The diabetic offended party or his mother-in-law may have lingering effects from this traumatic incident. I think any competent attorney could take a lawsuit on a contingency basis and this family should be able to recover what they lost from this operation and their traumatic incident.
One lesson for us all, do not accept a package with the wrong name and that is not our address!
 
It could be a setup. But, that doesn't mean it was a setup by LE. It could be someone had a grudge to settle and set this guy up to ruin his day.
 
Set up, mistake, LE fishing maneuvers... and no matter what the outcome, the police are getting more and more heavy handed with citizens everywhere. Disgusting, in what is supposed to be a free country.
 
The 2 big burning questions are, why would the son in law accept a package addressed to someone they don't recognize to an address not in their neighborhood.

A mere 10 minutes after the package, which was not actually addressed to anyone in the family, was delivered,

And why wouldn't someone point out the warrant was for a different address?

To make matters even worse, the search warrant address listed Brown’s house as in Waukegan when in reality it is in Beach Park.

I like to believe that law enforcement is doing the right thing, but it's time for this family to get a real good attack dog lawyer. (and I hate lawyers)
 
The 2 big burning questions are, why would the son in law accept a package addressed to someone they don't recognize to an address not in their neighborhood.



And why wouldn't someone point out the warrant was for a different address?



I like to believe that law enforcement is doing the right thing, but it's time for this family to get a real good attack dog lawyer. (and I hate lawyers)

I can only address the first one. I get packages on a regular basis by mail, FedEx & UPS. I even get them when I'm really not expecting them.

I can't speak for the victim here. But, I get neighbors packages quite regularly; simply because most drivers see a package with my "street" name on it they assume it's mine and don't really read the rest of the address. I must admit that there as been several occasions where I did sign for a package without really looking at the address label; only later to discover it was for a neighbor not me.

So, I can see how a mistake can be made in signing for someone else's package.

-
 
I certainly hope that the Brown's have a good attorney that is not intimidated by the local politics, and that they are able to go after the agencies responsible for the destruction of the Brown home AND collect a whopping sum in damages. Our law enforcement community is getting pretty good at getting things wrong and then just walking away from it with retribution.

The sad part is...

Police Departments only income / money derives from local taxes from the community it serves. When the PD gets sued and loses, it's ultimately the citizens who pay the price in the form of judgments and higher insurance premiums.

It's a lose lose situation. The supervisors / judge issuing the search warrant needs to be held accountable.

Then again, if that were to happen to me personally or my family, perhaps my attitude would change dramatically.
 
It is rather disgusting how the police, in some areas of the country, are getting away with, literally, murder, and nothing is being done about it.

Jack-boot Thuggery.

What is a normal person to do? Live in fear of the Criminals AND the Police??
 
Time to hire a lawyer and rake in the money


Time for folks to stop raping their fellow taxpayers when the retards we all elected or hired(we the people) screw the pooch. Let's get the door fixed and dishonorably discharge the folks who screwed this up. No pension, no healthcare for life, no public positions, and no severance package for the officials who caused this to NOT happen.

EDIT: I didn't read through all the posts and see that it looks like I just re-worded Dennis' post above; not the case.
 

New Threads

Members online

No members online now.

Forum statistics

Threads
49,543
Messages
611,260
Members
74,964
Latest member
sigsag1
Back
Top