Cop: We Lie About 911 Calls to Make Arrests
NORTH CAROLINA OFFICER ADMITS TO USING TACTIC
By Neal Colgrass
The police chief in Durham, North Carolina, has warned
officers to stop lying about fake 911 calls in order to enter people's homes
and make arrests, Opposing Views reports. The tactic came up during a court
hearing in May when an officer admitted to doing it. Officer AB Beck said he'd
knocked on a woman's door and told her that someone called 911 from her house
before hurrying off the phone, Indy Week reports. When she let him in, he found
a marijuana grinder and two marijuana blunts and arrested her. A judge kicked
the case out of court, telling Beck that he "cannot enter someone's house
based on a lie."
Beck also said that this 911-call tactic was standard
procedure at the department in alleged domestic violence cases, according to
the defendant's lawyer. Durham Police Chief Jose Lopez denied this, but told
ABC 11 he's started an investigation. He also fired off a departmental memo
saying he's heard the tactic is in use and has to stop. A Durham attorney
framed it as a right-to-privacy issue, saying that "you can't fake someone
out of their constitutional rights. You've got to be honest about this
stuff."