I guess the problem is partly the deployment of heavily armed police (SWAT) to every social incident, which increases the number of state-incurred fatalities. I had read somewhere that over the years the number of SWAT calls for minor incident increased dramatically.
The police needs to be reined and kept under better control because, frankly, they are pretty much like an overseas occupation force. That's an overkill.
From CATO paper:
"Americans have long maintained that a man's home is his castle and that he has the right to defend it from unlawful intruders. Unfortunately, that right may be disappearing. Over the last 25 years, America has seen a disturbing militarization of its civilian law enforcement, along with a dramatic and unsettling rise in the use of paramilitary police units (most commonly called Special Weapons and Tactics, or SWAT) for routine police work. The most common use of SWAT teams today is to serve narcotics warrants, usually with forced, unannounced entry into the home.
"These increasingly frequent raids, 40,000 per yearby one estimate, are needlessly subjecting nonviolent drug offenders, bystanders, and wrongly targeted civilians to the terror of having their homes invaded while they're sleeping, usually by teams of heavily armed paramilitary units dressed not as police officers but as soldiers. These raids bring unnecessary violence and provocation to nonviolent drug offenders, many of whom were guilty of only misdemeanors. The raids terrorize innocents when police mistakenly target the wrong residence. And they have resulted in dozens of needless deaths and injuries, not only of drug offenders, but also of police officers, children, bystanders, and innocent suspects."
- from the
Executive Summary of a research paper titled, Overkill: he Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America
by Radley Balko, CATO Institute.
Map of Botched Paramilitary Police Raids in the US (2011)
(
Map Credits: Research & concept by Radley Balko. Programming by Lee Laslo. Add'l research/editing by Victoria Kurzweg and Killian Lapeyre.
Here you can read some first-hand accounts:
The growing menace of SWAT teams in the U.S. | United States |Axisoflogic.com