San Antonio police, who continued to
apologize Thursday for storming the wrong Southwest Side
duplex, said they'll meet next week to review the foul-up that
sent an innocent man to a hospital with minor injuries.
 A police raid Wednesday night left a
charred wall in the home of Marcos and Salvador Huerta.
The raid was on the wrong house. Kin Man
Hui/Express-News
 Cousins Salvador Huerta (left) and Marcos
Huerta said they were injured when police stormed into
their house Wednesday night by mistake. The two were
recovering Thursday at
home. |
Officials said SWAT team members apparently were confused
in the darkness Wednesday night by the cluster of look-alike
dwellings in the 5900 block of Fairshire Road, even though
officers spent two days watching a duplex there in an effort
to serve a warrant on a man they suspected of dealing drugs.
"Everything was done by procedure," Deputy Police Chief
Rudy Gonzales said of the SWAT unit that won state honors the
past two years. "It was just an honest mistake made by SWAT
officers at the location."
He said that if any recommendations resulted from his
review, they would be forwarded to Chief Albert Ortiz.
The officers who mistakenly crashed through a rear sliding
glass door will remain on duty while the incident is reviewed,
he said.
Ortiz couldn't be reached for comment.
Mayor Ed Garza said Thursday that he hadn't spoken with
Ortiz about the mix-up, but that he had asked for a full
report.
"I am not ready to make any comments until I've seen the
official report," he said.
It began about 8 p.m. Wednesday when a team of SWAT
officers stormed through a glass door at a home on Fairshire
Road without warning, said the three cousins who live there.
The cousins said officers shot out the door with soft
bullets and threw in a concussion grenade that left a hole and
a black scar on the wall.
The men, who work at a Mexican restaurant, said they were
watching television when the officers stomped in, flinging
punches, kicks and profanities. The cousins said they thought
they were being robbed.
Marcos Huerta, 19, was taken to a hospital where doctors
stitched a wound above a puffy eye. Salvador Huerta, 20, was
left with a chipped front tooth and a bruised face. Both said
they fell to the floor without resistance and covered their
heads as officers hit them at least 20 times.
The third cousin, Vicente Huerta, 17, fled out the front
door and was not harmed. An uncle, Jose Luis Alvarez, 40, said
his nephews planned to contact an attorney.
"I think they should have investigated before they came
in," he said in Spanish. "With pleasure, people are welcome to
the house. Just knock on the door."
Not until after the Huerta cousins were handcuffed and sat
down on the sofa did police realize that they had goofed.
Gonzales said the confusion occurred because in the dark
alley, the duplexes all looked the same. He said SWAT officers
were told to enter from the alley and to look for a red car in
the rear driveway.
"The SWAT officer saw the red car and thought that was the
residence where the warrant was to be served," Gonzales said.
Later, after the scuffle, Officer Darron Lyn Phillips and
other officers went to the correct address two doors down,
knocked on the door and arrested the suspect without incident.
When asked why officers hadn't knocked in the first place,
Gonzales said police thought the suspect inside the house
might have a gun tucked inside his waistband.
He said the element of surprise dissipated after people
heard the commotion and began filling the street.
Police arrested Richard Anguiano, 21, of the 200 block of
Refugio. He was charged with possession of cocaine with intent
to deliver and possession of marijuana. He was being held in
Bexar County Jail in lieu of posting $52,000 bond.
Inside the second duplex on Fairshire Road, police said
they found 86 grams of marijuana, 40 grams of cocaine, drug
paraphernalia, and several rounds of ammunition.
No weapons were found.
Will Harrell, executive director of the American Civil
Liberties Union of Texas, said mistakes like this one are not
uncommon. He said they are generally the result of an
increased militarization by police.
"For the past decade or more, we've seen a shift from the
notion of community-oriented police models to a militarized
model, where the police operate with a siege mentality," he
said.
jbogan@express-news.net
News Researcher Julie Domel contributed to this report.
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