Your 'Duty' To Protect and Serve the Police
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: The
Police: Useless, But Not Harmless
Police
have no enforceable duty to protect an individual threatened
by criminal violence.
A lawsuit recently filed in New Hampshire demonstrates that police
are taught to assume that citizens have a moral and legal duty to
protect them.
Beverly
Mutrie of Greenland, New Hampshire is being sued by four police
officers who were wounded during an
April 12 shootout at the home of her late son, Cullen. Greenland
Police Chief Michael Maloney was killed in the gunfight. Following
an eight-hour standoff involving SWAT operators and dozens of police
officers, Cullen and his girlfriend, Brittany Tibbetts, were found
dead in what was described as a murder-suicide.
Mrs. Mutrie’s
only connection to the events of April 12 is the fact that she owned
the home where the shootout took place. The lawsuit filed by the
officers claims that she "indirectly supported and facilitated"
illegal activity that supposedly occurred on the premises. She has
not been charged with a crime.
In addition
to being an act of simple vindictiveness, the lawsuit against Beverly
Mutrie is probably an attempt by the municipality – which wasn’t
cut in for a share of the "forfeiture" haul – to confiscate
her home. An interrogatory interview of Mrs. Mutrie focused entirely
on her insurance coverage. The DEA seized
three vehicles found on the property and $14,320 in cash that
was found
on the body of Brittany Tibbetts.
The raid itself
may have been prompted by concerns that the case against Cullen
Mutrie was weak. An aspiring firefighter who spent much of his time
in the gym, Cullen came to the attention of a state narcotics task
force in July 2010 when an officer serving a restraining order found
anabolic steroids during a search of the home. In a bench trial,
Cullen was found guilty of domestic assault against a live-in girlfriend.
He was put on probation and required to undergo an anger management
assessment.
In January,
an informant working with the state drug task force allegedly bought
a small amount of oxycodone from Cullen’s girlfriend. Over the next
several weeks, while the police continued their surveillance of
the home, Cullen reconsidered his initial guilty plea on the steroid-related
charges. His attorney, Stephen Jeffco, filed a motion to suppress
the drug evidence as the product of an illicit search. As Rockingham
County Attorney Jim Reams points out, the case was "set for
trial when the shootout began."
Police arrived
at Cullen’s home on April 12 to serve a no-knock warrant. Two of
the officers, who were acquainted with Cullen and aware of the home’s
surveillance cameras, gestured to be let inside. When Cullen refused
to grant entry, Task Force agents forced open the door. Cullen reportedly
opened fire, wounding four of the officers and killing Chief Maloney.
An eight-hour standoff ensued, during which time the alleged murder-suicide
took place.
If Cullen Mutrie,
who was 6’3" tall and weighed 275 pounds, was involved in criminal
conduct, what was his mother supposed to do about it – spank him?
Assuming that she was aware of his activities, she could have called
the police, who had already been investigating her son for nearly
two years. If she had been an accomplice or an accessory, Mrs. Mutrie
would face criminal charges, rather than what amounts to an extortion
attempt.
The persecution
of Beverly Mutrie is neither the first, nor the worst, case of its
kind.
In June 2007
Karen Mies, a 66-year-old hospice nurse from Shingle
Springs, California, suffered two losses no wife and mother
should ever endure. Her husband, 72-year-old Arthur, was killed
in an entirely unanticipated act of irrational violence on the part
of their 35-year-old son, Eddie.
After the
police were notified, Eddie
was killed in an armed stand-off involving the local SWAT team,
a helicopter provided by the state police, and several deputies
from the El Dorado County Sheriff's Department.
More than one hundred rounds were fired in the June 5, 2007 shoot-out.
In addition to the deaths of Arthur and Eddie, three deputies --
Jon Yaws, Greg Murphy, and Melissa Meekma -- suffered gunshot wounds.
The injuries suffered by deputies Yaws and Murphy required multiple
surgeries and lengthy hospitalization, but weren’t life-threatening.
In the months
prior to that horrible day, Eddie’s behavior had become erratic,
leading his friends and family to wonder if he suffered from a psychological
condition. Karen and Arthur had tried, unsuccessfully, to find suitable
help for their troubled son – but they certainly didn’t anticipate
that his problems would culminate in murder.
Displaying
preternatural grace, Karen inquired after the health of the injured
deputies, telling a friend that her sole consolation was the fact
that they would survive. A measure of the depth of her good character
is offered by the fact that she didn’t recant that statement after
Yaws
and Murphy filed a multi-million-dollar lawsuit against her and
her husband’s estate.
The deputies
claimed that Karen – who was not charged as an accomplice – shared
the culpability for the injuries allegedly inflicted on the deputies
by her son. Eddie Mies was characterized in the document as "a diagnosed
schizophrenic" with a "criminal history" who displayed "paranoia
and [a] propensity for violence." For these reasons, insisted the
deputies, Karen should have known it was "necessary to avoid allowing
Eddie Mies access to firearms," and they claimed that she displayed
actionable negligence by permitting such access.
In a television interview, Yaws appeared to accuse the Mies family
of conspiring to endanger his life and those of his fellow officers.
When Jake Mies, Eddie's brother, made a frantic 911 call to report
that his father had been shot, he told the operator that he didn't
know who had committed the crime. Yaws characterized this as a deliberate
lie, and accused Karen of being a party to the deception.
"We were directly lied to when they said they didn't know who had
done it," asserted Yaws. "We thought it was a random person [on
the ground] through the neighborhood. We would have handled it entirely
differently if we had known it was someone from the residence."
Even if this
had been true, it's difficult to see how the knowledge that the
shooting was an aggravated domestic dispute would have changed the
tactical situation. The police deployed overwhelming force, then
used a CHP helicopter to flush Eddie into the open where he was
quickly killed by the SWAT team.
Immediately
after the incident the El Dorado Sheriff’s Office peddled a self-dramatizing
version of the episode in which Eddie Mies supposedly "tried
to bait the officers" into a thicket near the house. The department
also claimed that he had devised "an elaborate system of bunkers
and tunnels" akin to the labyrinth Colonel
Hogan's resistance cellcreated beneath Stalag 13. The lawsuit
asserted that Eddie was "found dead in a bunker with a cache of
weapons and ammunition, as well as a change of clothes."
After the suit
was filed, Karen Mies took a reporter from the Sacramento Bee
on a walking tour of the family's 2.5 acre property, where she and
her late husband had raised six children.
The "ammunition
cache" was an old toolbox containing bullets, birdshot, and useless
junk. The "change of clothes" was a jacket. At the time of his death,
Eddie was armed with a shotgun and a revolver he had purchased legally
as an adult. The warren of "bunkers" and "tunnels" consisted of
a handful of small depressions and sunken trails "where the kids
used to play," Karen pointed out.
In similar fashion, Eddie's psychological problems and "criminal"
history were generously embroidered by the deputies. Although his
behavior had become alarming to his friends and family, Eddie was
never diagnosed with schizophrenia or any other mental disorder.
His "criminal history" consisted of traffic arrests in Wyoming and
Nevada.
Although it is clear that Eddie had killed his father, it was never
firmly established that he actually shot the deputies, who may well
have been injured as a result of "friendly fire." When
asked about this possibility, Bill Clark, who at the time was chief
deputy DA for El Dorado County, blithely replied that his office
had been "too busy" to complete its official inquiry.
Lawsuits of
the sort filed against Beverly Mutrie and Karen Mies are generally
foreclosed or dismissed on the basis of the "Fireman's Rule,"
which recognizes that police and emergency workers assume certain
risks inherent in their jobs.
In 1996, the
American Federation
of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME, the official
tax-feeders' union) enacted
a resolution denouncing the "Fireman’s Rule" as a
form of "unfair and indefensible treatment of public safety employees
and law enforcement officers" and supporting efforts to "reform
or abolish the Fireman's Rule wherever it exists." The AFSCME, through
its affiliate, the National Law Enforcement Officers Rights Center,
has quietly
lobbied for modifications to the "Fireman’s Rule"
while looking
for a promising
lawsuit that could
abolish it outright.
The lawsuit
against Karen Mies was quickly snuffed out by a gale-force outburst
of public revulsion, at least some of it inspired by the fact that
the female deputy who had been wounded didn’t join in the
suit.
The
shootout that prompted the lawsuit against Beverly Mutrie is much
better suited to the needs of the cynical tax-feeders’ lobby. It
involves the death of Chief Michael Maloney, who
– in a cinematic touch -- was eight days from retirement (at
age 48, following a 26-year law enforcement career that was otherwise
devoid of danger).
Thousands
of law enforcement personnel attended Maloney’s funeral, including
career criminal Eric Holder, who apparently wasn’t too busy
fomenting
racial tensions, covering
up FBI torture-murders, or supplying
high-performance weaponry to Mexican criminal syndicates.
If Beverly
Mutrie had been visiting her son on April 12, and been shot by one
of the officers during the raid, her assailant would be shielded
from a lawsuit by the spurious principle of "qualified immunity."
The lawsuit filed against her is intended to advance the perverse
principle that citizens have a legal responsibility to act as the
equivalent of human shields for police officers – a development
that is both revolting and entirely predictable.
August
10, 2012
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2012 William Norman Grigg
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