If You Dont Want a SWAT Team at Your Door, You Shouldnt Be - TopicsExpress



          

If You Dont Want a SWAT Team at Your Door, You Shouldnt Be Drinking Tea -- Jacob Sullum|Mar. 26, 2014 2:31 pm Why did a SWAT team raid Bob and Addie Hartes house in Leawood, Kansas, two years ago, then force the couple and their two children to sit on a couch for two hours while officers rifled their belongings, searching for narcotics that were not there? KSHB, the NBC station in Kansas City, reports that the Hartes made two mistakes: Bob went to a hydroponics store in Kansas City, Missouri, with his son to buy supplies for a school science project, and Addie drank tea. It cost them $25,000 to discover that these innocent actions earned them an early-morning visit by screaming, rifle-waving men with a battering ram. The Hartes, who tried to reassure their neighbors by showing them the search report indicating that nothing was taken from their home, were naturally curious what they had done to attract police attention. But the Johnson County Sheriffs Office would not say, so the Hartes hired a lawyer to help them obtain the relevant records, which according to KSHB is not easy in Kansas because state law favors darkness over sunshine. Eventually the Hartes learned that a Missouri Highway Patrol trooper saw Bob at the hydroponics store on August 9, 2011. Seven months later, state police passed on this hot tip to the sheriffs office, which sprang into action (after a few weeks), rummaging through the Hartes garbage three times in April 2012. On all three occasions, they found wet plant material that a field test supposedly identified as marijuana. Such tests are notoriously unreliable, confusing chocolate with hashish, soy milk with GHB, and soap with cocaine, among other hilarious errors that result in fruitless searches, mistaken arrests, and false imprisonment. But the cops did not bother to confirm their field results with a more reliable lab test before charging into the Hartes home, three days after their third surreptitious trash inspection. When the Hartes starting asking questions about the raid, the sheriffs office suddenly decided to test that wet plant material, which it turned out was not marijuana after all. The Hartes figure it must have been the loose tea that Addie favors, which she tends to toss into the trash after brewing. Field tests have been known to misidentify various possible tea ingredients, including spearmint, peppermint, lavendar, vanilla, anise, and chicory, as marijuana. Since mistakes like this are pretty embarrassing, the Hartes think Kansas cops would be more careful if obtaining police records were easier. You shouldnt have to have $25,000, even $5,000, Addie Harte tells KSHB. You shouldnt have to have that kind of money to find out why people came raiding your house like some sort of police state. Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine and a nationally syndicated columnist.
Posted on: Fri, 28 Mar 2014 12:49:16 +0000

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