11 Shocking Facts About America's Militarized Police Forces [View all]
http://www.alternet.org/civil-liberties/11-shocking-facts-about-americas-militarized-police-forces

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1. It harms, and sometimes kills, innocent people. When you have heavily armed police officers using flash-bang grenades and armored personnel carriers, innocent people are bound to be hurt. The likelihood of people being killed is raised by the practice of SWAT teams busting down doors with no warning, which leads some people to think it may be a burglary, who could in turn try to defend themselves. The ACLU documented seven cases of civilians dying, and 46 people being injured. Thats only in the cases the civil liberties group looked at, so the number is actually higher.
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2. Children are impacted. As the case of Wilson shows, the police busting down doors care little about whether theres a child in the home. Another case profiled by the ACLU shows how children are caught up the crossfire--with devastating consequences.
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3. The use of SWAT teams is unnecessary. In many cases, using militarized teams of police is not needed. The ACLU report notes that the vast majority of cases where SWAT teams are deployed are in situations where a search warrant is being executed to just look for drugs. In other words, its not even 100% clear whether there are drugs at the place the police are going to. These situations are not why SWAT was created.
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4. The war on terror is fueling militarization. It was the war on drugs that introduced militarized policing to the U.S. But the war on terror has accelerated it.
A growing number of agencies have taken advantage of the Department of Defenses 1033 program, which is passed every year as part of the National Defense Authorization Act, the budget for the Pentagon. The number of police agencies obtaining military equipment like mine-resistant ambush protected (MRAP) vehicles has increased since 2009, according to USA Today, which notes that this surplus military equipment is left over from U.S. military campaigns in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. This equipment is largely cost-free for the police agencies who receive them.