HuffPo: How A Drug Raid Gone Wrong Sparked A Call For Change In The Unlikeliest State In The Nation

HuffPo: How A Drug Raid Gone Wrong Sparked A Call For Change In The Unlikeliest State In The Nation by Radley Balko:

This article is the first in a six-part series about the drug war and police reform.

OGDEN, UTAH — It’s late summer, and the house at 3268 Jackson Avenue has been boarded up for months. The front door, riddled with bullet holes, is pasted over with police tape and a “No Trespassing” sign. As Erna Stewart pries open the door, shards of glass from the edges of its already shattered window fall to the ground.

The air inside is stale and hard to breathe. Belongings are strewn about. There’s a dusty television, an answering machine, a computer printer still in its box, some video games stacked on bookshelves. The police have ripped up sections of floor that had been soaked with blood, leaving a scar in the bathroom and another in the kitchen.

More bullet holes call out from all sides: the walls, the doors, the ceiling, the floor, the windows, the molding, the kitchen cabinets. Two of the bullets hit the brick siding of a neighbor’s house. One pierced a bedroom window. The trail of damage leads out to the pock-marked backyard and the shed where Erna’s brother-in-law, Matthew, attempted to take refuge.

. . .

That Utah, one of the most conservative states in the country, would become a hotbed for police reform, is surprising. But these reformers have carefully crafted their approach, honed a message that seems to be resonating with the community, and won over some early converts. As botched raids and excessive SWAT-style tactics have gained increasing notoriety around the country, other communities may soon be looking to Utah as a model for less aggressive but more effective approaches to public safety.

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