Frightening ACLU Report Shows How Militarized America's Cops Really Are

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Swat Team Police

AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

A SWAT robot, a remote-controlled small tank-like vehicle with a shield for officers, is demonstrated for the media in Sanford, Maine on Thursday, April 18, 2013

A sobering new report from the American Civil Liberties Union reveals how the U.S. military transfers a shocking amount of military-grade equipment to local cops who often misuse these tools.

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The Defense Department gives this military-grade equipment to cops through its 1033 program, which has the motto "From Warfighter to Crimefighter." The idea is that police can repurpose equipment once used on the battlelines to fight the drug war and terrorists at home.

Back in 1990, the military transferred only about $1 million worth equipment through this program, according to the ACLU. That number ballooned to nearly $450 million by 2013, suggesting that America's police officers are militarized than ever. The problem with this shift is that military-grade equipment can pack more punch than local cops really need.

"As the saying goes, if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail," the ACLU noted.

These toys often encourage cops to adopt a "warrior" mindset and use force against citizens more than they really need to, the ACLU says. Armed to the teeth with semiautomatic weapons and flashbang grenades, cops too often burst into people's homes and carry out unnecessary SWAT raids. In the process, SWAT teams killed a 26-year-old mother holding her infant son in Ohio, and they critically injured a Georgia toddler with a grenade.

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In Gwinett County, Georgia, the SWAT team received nearly 60 military-grade semiautomatic weapons through the 1033 program between July 10, 2010 and Oct. 6, 2013. That SWAT team broke down doors roughly half the time it was deployed, sometimes damaging unarmed people's property, according to the ACLU.

Aside from receiving equipment through 1033, cities also use grants from the Department of Homeland Security to purchase military-grade equipment. The city of Keene, New Hampshire received a grant to buy a Ballistic Engineered Armored Response Counter Attack Truck, known as a BearCat, to combat terrorism. The city's application went on to cite Keene's pumpkin festival as a possible terrorist threat, the ACLU report notes. From the ACLU report:

Not even Keene city officials believed that the city actually needed the BearCat to thwart terrorism. To explain why the police included the word "terrorism" on their application for federal funding for this purchase, a city councilmember said, "Our application talked about the danger of domestic terrorism, but that's just something you put in the grant application to get the money. What red-blooded American cop isn't going to be excited about getting a toy like this? That's what it comes down to."

While cops began gearing up in the name of fighting terrorism after Sept. 11, 2001, the trend actually began as part of the drug war of the 1980s, Radley Balko has written in the Huffington Post. SWAT teams began to proliferate to crack down on drugs. Then, after 9/11, police got an influx of funding for military-grade equipment, Balko noted. The military and police began to cooperate more.

"The military's job is to annihilate a foreign enemy," Balko wrote. "Cops are charged with keeping the peace, and with protecting the constitutional rights of American citizens and residents. It's dangerous to conflate the two."

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