therealnews.com
May 25,
2013
Men in heavy armor carry assault rifles, patrolling streets alongside armored
personnel carriers. These are scenes from the manhunt in Watertown, following
April 15′s Boston Marathon Bombings. After locking down the area, local, state,
and federal agencies sent SWAT teams out in force in search of the remaining
suspect. The images from those days are striking, and raise serious questions
about how and when the use of paramilitary policing tools should be used.
SWAT teams originated in the late 1960s, but their use greatly expanded in
the 1980s as the Reagan administration doubled down on the drug war. In 1988 the
Byrne Grant Program passed Congress, allocating substantial funding for
anti-drug policing. As money was awarded for drug arrests, resources shifted
toward drug raids, increasingly using SWAT teams for this purpose. Meanwhile
federal programs were introduced increasing training and cooperation between the
military and domestic law enforcement to battle drug crime.
Other Reagan-era policies encouraged the transfer of surplus military
hardware to law enforcement, which in the 1990s became firmly established by the
Clinton Administration’s 1033 Program, incorporating millions of pieces of
equipment designed for war zones into domestic policing agencies.
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Saturday, May 25, 2013
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