posted on Feb, 28 2008 @ 10:14 PM
In the interest of the greater good, the police, or perhaps some other authority, have the right to evacuate you from a potentially dangerous
condition, to prevent you from returning to such a condition, even it your home is there, or to keep you from leaving your home.
In this case, it is impossible to know whether the measures shown in the video were necessary or not, but it is clear that there was a potential for
bloodshed and I would presume that is why police wanted residents to check with them before going to their homes.
The incident looked eerily like Waco, one of the worst police operations I have ever even heard of, much less witnessed via television.
A couple of years ago, a resident two floors above me was shot and the police thought the assailant was still in the apartment complex.
I slept through the shooting and when I woke up later in the day and stepped outside for some fresh air a police officer was standing only a few feet
from me.
He looked at me in disbelief (I guess he expected that everyone would know what was going on) then told me to go back inside. As I turned to go back
inside, I saw the SWAT team in place around the courtyard.
I was told that I could leave, but I could not return until the situation had been secured.
I chose to stay home and relax.
Only one other time have I had something like this happen and that was when I was a child living in Mississippi and an oil well blew out near our
home. We were evacuated for one night, until they could get the well capped.
I think in both these cases the authorities acted judiciously, but obviously, that is not always the case.