Minnesota judge approved 'no-knock' search that killed Amir Locke to
protect officers -document
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[February 11, 2022]
By Tyler Clifford
(Reuters) - A Minnesota judge approved the
"no-knock" raid that killed Amir Locke in Minneapolis last week,
believing it was needed to protect the investigating officers and the
public, court documents released on Thursday showed.
Officers who requested the warrant to enter a Minneapolis apartment were
investigating a previous fatal shooting in St. Paul in which a firearm
capable of penetrating police body armor was used. That justified the
need for a no-knock entry to catch suspects off guard, the requesting
officers said.
"The court further finds that no-knock entry, without announcement of
authority or purpose, is necessary to prevent the loss, destruction, or
removal of the objects of said search or to protect the safety of the
searchers or the public," a court document signed by Hennepin County
District Judge Peter Cahill said.
Locke, a 22-year-old Black man, was not named in the warrant.
Minneapolis police have acknowledged it was unclear how or whether he
was connected to their investigation.
Locke's killing has revived calls to ban no-knock warrants, which
intensified in 2020 after the death of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old
Black woman who police fatally shot during a raid on her Kentucky
apartment. Taylor was not the subject of that search warrant.
Cahill is the same judge who oversaw the trial of former Minneapolis
police officer Derek Chauvin, who was convicted of murdering George
Floyd in 2020, an act that spurred massive protests against racial bias
and brutality by the police.
In the days after Locke’s killing on Feb. 2, police released video
footage of the raid, and peaceful protests in downtown Minneapolis have
drawn hundreds of demonstrators to demand justice and a ban on no-knock
warrants.
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Students participate in a state-wide walkout demanding justice for
Amir Locke a Black man who was shot and killed by Minneapolis
police, in St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S., February 8, 2022. REUTERS/Tim
Evans/File Photo
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey
announced a moratorium on such searches on Friday, and some state
lawmakers are seeking to enact legislation to limit them.
Video footage from the raid showed Locke holding a gun as he twisted
beneath a blanket on a sofa after being roused by officers. Police
say he pointed the gun at officers before they opened fire, but
Locke’s family refutes that narrative.
Activists at the protests have said Locke had a right to possess a
weapon in his own home and was never given the chance to disarm
himself in the chaotic moments as police stormed into his apartment
without warning.
The no-knock warrant was issued in relation to a homicide probe led
by detectives from the St. Paul Police Department.
The document mentions four suspects and names two of them, redacting
the identity of one. Mehkia Speed, a named 17-year-old suspect, was
arrested this week in connection to the killing of Otis Elder, 38,
in Saint Paul, according to authorities.
The apartment raided on Feb. 2 was registered to the girlfriend of
Speed's brother, according to a charging document filed by Ramsey
County Attorney John J. Choi. Speed's brother, his girlfriend and
Locke were at the apartment at the time.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford in New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot
and Tom Hogue)
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