Buffalo Police Department, The Dog Butchers, Strike Again
BY Herschel Smith8 years, 3 months ago
BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) – Two separate police raids ended with pit bull dogs shot in their respective homes. Pit bull dogs were shot after police raided houses in the past week.
On the morning of Friday, July 29th, Michael Urban’s house was raided by the Buffalo Police Department, as their Narcotics Department executed 15 search warrants in the Lovejoy-Kaisertown area. Although BPD tells us a search warrant was executed for Urban’s home on Weaver Street, Urban says officers raided the wrong home, and that the description didn’t match him.
“5’11 210 white male and this is a 5’11 170 black male… I don’t look like either of those,” said Urban.
According to Urban, officers came into his home and shot his 18-month-old pit bull, Gotham, twice. A bullet hole on his kitchen floor serves as memory of that morning. The bullet made it through the floor to the home of the downstairs residents.
“What just happened?” Urban recalls what was going through his mind that morning. “As the bullet hole went through the floor through the ceiling, as the dogs blood is dripping through the downstairs apartment… who’s accountable?”
The Internal Affairs Division of the Buffalo Police Department has opened an investigation into the matter.
A similar situation occurred on Esser Street. According to resident of the home on Esser Street, Cindy Meers, her seven-year-old pit bull dog was shot by the Erie County Sheriff’s Office and Buffalo SWAT Thursday afternoon.
I saw you in the video, shit-for-brains. You looked like this.
What a drag, huh? Someone had you get all dressed up with no place to go except shoot a dog in the wrong house! Here’s a hint to help you in the future. A lot of records that y’all use, such as tax records, are out of date. They lead to wrong-home raids. Have a uniformed officer walk up to the front door and knock on it. He can then ask the resident of the domicile who he is. That will work better than what you did.
Or if you’re really scared of who might be in there, you can have a plain clothes officer watch the home until the owner comes out for work, groceries, or whatever. He can’t stay in there forever. Then he can do this.
Officer 1: Uh … this dude isn’t black, he’s white. Maybe the wrong place. How copy?
Officer 2: Uh … okay. Copy. Wrong place.
Officer 1: I just called his name, er … the name we think is his. He looked at me like I was crazy. I think we need to think about this. Standing down. How copy?
Officer 2: Copy that. Standing down. Let’s go get a doughnut.
If you are concerned about the high personnel costs of staking out the residence, you can sell off those helmets, AR-15s, EOTechs, Kevlar, Tac-lights, Comms gear and other unnecessary stuff. We don’t really care about your war on drugs.
You went into the home of someone else, a home that wasn’t yours, onto property that wasn’t yours, and shot his dog. You committed a home invasion, and it would have been morally justified to shoot every one of you dead. Most of us aren’t okay with something like that unless it involves the immediate protection of someone’s life, such as in a kidnapping, and even then, I would rather you take a cold shower, find someone with brains and let them deescalate the situation.
But all of this only matters if you have a moral compass. It doesn’t, and you don’t. I had thought that I remembered something special about the Buffalo Police Department. Ohhhh yes. We have history with you.
According to use of force reports requested by WGRZ-TV under the Freedom of Information Law, Buffalo Police shot 92 dogs from Jan. 1, 2011 through Sept. 2014. Seventy-three of those dogs died. Nineteen survived.
To provide a comparison, Buffalo’s numbers more than triple the amount of dog shooting incidents involving police in Cincinnati, a municipality of similar size.
“The numbers are what the numbers are,” Buffalo Police Chief of Detectives Dennis Richards said in an interview with WGRZ. “Certainly, no officer takes any satisfaction in having to dispatch a dog.”
I don’t believe you. I don’t believe you because there are other ways to accomplish the same mission. I believe that you are a bunch of sadists, and I think the people of Buffalo should begin to think of you that way. You’re a hazard to yourselves and the citizens and animals of the city. You’re clearly incompetent, and you need to have your entire department cleaned out top to bottom, side to side, front to back, with everyone replaced, entirely new procedures, and a new perspective.
Finally, I was looking for an email address to ensure that someone in the Buffalo Police Department read this article. I notice that you don’t supply any such contact information for any person in particular, you just give that idiotic form.
I’ve taken to avoiding linking or commenting on articles where the author gives no contact information. I don’t consider Twitter accounts or Facebook pages contact information. An author who doesn’t give his email address is a coward. And a cop who shoots up the city without giving his email contact information is doubly a coward. I find y’all despicable and loathsome. I’m glad I don’t know you. I pity the people of Buffalo who do have to know you.
On August 3, 2016 at 6:54 am, MattBracken said:
Winning the hearts and minds one wrong-address dog-killing raid at a time.
Welcome to the USSA, comrades. The real message is resistance if futile, so just submit.
On August 3, 2016 at 7:11 am, MattBracken said:
https://westernrifleshooters.wordpress.com/2016/08/02/officer-safety-new-jersey-style/
Three articles about the wrong-address shooting of a 76 year old human this time.
On August 3, 2016 at 8:00 am, HoundOfDoom said:
I do’t know how you can get lower than shooting an innocent dog after entering his home illegally. But I’m sure the Buffalo PD will find a way.
On August 3, 2016 at 11:31 am, Arizona Gunowner said:
Well, you could stand outside the fence with your “patrol rifle” and shoot a kids dog while he’s inside at his BD party when you came to serve a 10 yr old warrant for someone who doesn’t live there anymore.
That’s lower. And it just happened.
I don’t think there is a bottom for what the police will do.
On August 3, 2016 at 8:50 am, Douglas Mortimer said:
Unreal, just freaking unreal. I recently became a dog owner and I try to put myself in the same situation. I can’t say how I’d react. I have a philosophy that my doors are locks for the protection of everyone outside, and I believe that…. What about my children….? Who is accountable here? It is absolutely disgraceful.
On August 3, 2016 at 10:53 am, Strelnikov said:
Remember: When they approach you or your property, begin filming immediately.
And remember this guy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEmgSetYK2M
On August 3, 2016 at 10:54 am, Mike Kevins said:
It seems the rules of engagement are stricter for our soldiers in Afghanistan han they are for the po-po here at home. Pew,pew,pew, Murika indeed.
On August 3, 2016 at 11:59 am, Dan Morgan said:
It’s easy to spot a psychopath at a young age, because they generally engage in some form of animal abuse. This behavior is very predictive. Apparently, those who never overcome this urge are prime candidates for the police academy.
BTW, try shooting a police dog and see what happens. You will be charged as if you assaulted a human officer.
On August 3, 2016 at 6:57 pm, john mcginnis said:
Any PD that has a long term drug problem knows not only the street thugs but the upstream distributors. So rather than suit up, dispatch a beat copy with a warrant. Knock on the door and say you ARE the police and just WAIT. Yes one will hear flushing sounds in every bathroom. While that is going on the DE PoPo is telling the distributor another stash is down the drain. Search, won’t find nothing as expected. Rinse and repeat often.
Eventually as the money losses mount up the distro has to wonder if its his distribution network that has been compromised.
On August 5, 2016 at 12:58 pm, Josh said:
You need to open up a new tag/category. This post falls under straightup assblasting.
More assblasting, please.