Black Man Killed By Minneapolis Police Was Not Named In No-knock Warrant

We may have to recon­sid­er whether the fourth amend­ment to the con­sti­tu­tion is a real thing or just some­thing on paper.
The United States Supreme Court has so moved the goal­post that police can break into your home and kill you because you have a legal weapon in your home.
The oth­er con­sid­er­a­tion is whether the fourth and the sec­ond amend­ments apply to African-Americans.
The sec­ond amend­ment guar­an­tees the right of the peo­ple to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.
The fourth guar­an­tees the right of the peo­ple to be secure in their per­sons, hous­es, papers, and effects, against unrea­son­able search­es and seizures, shall not be violated, …
Hahaha, what malarky?

Here is why these guarantees continue to ring hollow for Black people in America separate and apart from the institutionalized racism that send one person to prison for attempting to register to vote for six years while another who attempted to vote more than once gets probation. And these things continue to happen over and over again.
Guess which of these people are black and which is white?

New details have emerged about a 22-year-old Black man who was fatal­ly shot by Minneapolis police dur­ing the exe­cu­tion of a no-knock war­rant, with police offi­cials con­firm­ing the man was not named in any search warrant.
During a press con­fer­ence on Thursday held by the Minneapolis police depart­ment (MPD), offi­cials con­firmed that Amir Locke, who was shot ear­ly on Wednesday morn­ing dur­ing the search, was not named in any search war­rant car­ried out by MPD police. Locke was shot by the Minneapolis offi­cer Mark Hanneman, accord­ing to city offi­cials and doc­u­ments.
“My son was exe­cut­ed on 2 – 2 of 22,” said Karen Wells, Locke’s moth­er, dur­ing a press con­fer­ence on Friday. “And now his dreams have been destroyed.”
The video of the police shoot­ing, which was also released on Thursday, seemed to con­tra­dict ear­ly claims from police offi­cials that offi­cers had “loud­ly made them­selves known before enter­ing the apart­ment”, where Locke was. The video instead showed offi­cers announc­ing their pres­ence once they were already inside the apartment.
The video released by the Minneapolis police depart­ment shows offi­cers enter­ing the apart­ment unit by unlock­ing the door with a key, shout­ing “police, search war­rant, get on the ground, get on the fuck­ing ground,” as they entered the unit, report­ed Reuters.

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An offi­cer then kicks a couch Locke was lying on under­neath a blan­ket, appear­ing to wake Locke up. Locke, who was hold­ing a hand­gun, looks up to see offi­cers sur­round­ing him and begins to stand, with the hand­gun becom­ing visible.
Almost imme­di­ate­ly, offi­cers fired three shots, killing Locke, who was still twist­ed up in the blanket.
Locke’s par­ents, Andre Locke and Karen Wells, ini­tial­ly declined to com­ment on the video, with his moth­er telling the Star Tribune on Thursday, “We want jus­tice for our son.”
In a press con­fer­ence on Friday, Locke’s par­ents spoke more about their son, not­ing that he had no crim­i­nal record and had mul­ti­ple rel­a­tives work­ing in law enforcement.
Wells said the cou­ple had talked to their son on how to act around police and to do “what they need­ed to do when­ev­er they encoun­tered police offi­cers” giv­en the dan­ger to “unarmed Black males”.

Nekima Levy Armstrong, a com­mu­ni­ty orga­niz­er and a civ­il rights attor­ney, said that Locke’s fam­i­ly told her that Locke was a reg­is­tered gun own­er with a con­ceal car­ry per­mit who did not live in the apart­ment and was not being searched for by police, report­ed CBS.
Armstrong also con­firmed that Locke was not named in the search war­rant car­ried out on Wednesday.
The Minneapolis may­or on Friday imposed a mora­to­ri­um on no-knock war­rants. Mayor Jacob Frey said the mora­to­ri­um was effec­tive imme­di­ate­ly and would ban requests for and the exe­cu­tion of war­rants in which police do not announce themselves.
Frey said that while the mora­to­ri­um is in place, he and Minneapolis police depart­ment lead­er­ship will work with nation­al experts to review and sug­gest revi­sions to the department’s policy.
“No mat­ter what infor­ma­tion comes to light, it won’t change the fact that Amir Locke’s life was cut short,” Frey said in a statement.

Hanneman was hired by the MPD in 2015 and had received three com­plaints that were all closed with dis­ci­pli­nary action, accord­ing to city records. A fourth com­plaint from 2018 was also record­ed, accord­ing to data col­lect­ed by the Communities United Against Police Brutality orga­ni­za­tion, reports CBS. Hanneman has been placed on admin­is­tra­tive leave, which is rou­tine,pend­ing an investigation.
The fam­i­ly is being rep­re­sent­ed by the civ­il rights attor­ney Ben Crump, who has pre­vi­ous­ly worked with the fam­i­lies of police shoot­ing vic­tims, includ­ing the fam­i­ly of George Floyd.
In a state­ment, Crump com­pared the shoot­ing of Locke to the 2020 killing of Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky, dur­ing a police raid.
“Like the case of Breonna Taylor, the trag­ic killing of Amir Locke shows a pat­tern of no-knock war­rants hav­ing dead­ly con­se­quences for Black Americans,” said Crump.
“This is yet anoth­er exam­ple of why we need to put an end to these kinds of search war­rants so that one day, Black Americans will be able to sleep safe­ly in their beds at night.”
This sto­ry orig­i­nat­ed at the Guardian…