In the Indiana case, Barnes v. State of Indiana, the State Supreme Court ruled that police can enter a resident's private property at any time - without a warrant, without suspicion, without reason - and without knocking and announcing their presence!
"The common law right to resist a police officer illegally entering a home no longer exists," said Justice Steven David about the Court's inane ruling.
In the U.S. Supreme Court's decision on Kentucky v. King, the Justices also ruled to give police the authority to enter your home without obtaining a search warrant, in expanded circumstances...but the police have to knock, first.
The Fourth Amendment violation in Kentucky v. King occurred when police officers invaded the wrong home during a search for a suspect. After busting through the wrong door, police found illegal drugs in the home, which they discovered by error, and without first obtaining a search warrant from a judge.
What this means for you, and your law-abiding friends and family members, is that the U.S. Supreme Court's decision has effectively stripped every citizen of their Fourth Amendment protections!
Right now, SWAT teams can invade innocent citizens' homes without probable cause! And, if you dare to protect your home and your family from an intruder, not knowing that the "intruder" is law enforcement, then you could be shot and killed if you are armed.
This is what happened to Jose Guereña, a young Marine and Iraq War veteran, who was killed by a SWAT team that invaded his home and fired 71 bullets -- 22 penetrating Guereña's body -- all because his brother, who did not live with him, was suspected of drug trafficking. Jose Guereña had a clean record, and police never found anything suspicious in his home. Now his young wife is left to raise their child as a single parent. If this is what the police can do with a warrant, what will happen to you and your family when police enter your home without one?
This is an excerpt from an Ameripac Bulletin