http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-mayor0807,0,4563211.storyBerwyn Heights mayor asks for investigation into raidBy Doug Donovan | Sun reporter
4:44 PM EDT, August 7, 2008
Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo (right) and his wife Trinity Tomsic talk during a news conference outside their Prince George's County home, which was raided last week. (Sun photo by Lloyd Fox / August 7, 2008)
Berwyn Heights' mayor today asked federal officials to investigate possible civil rights violations stemming from last week's raid of his Prince George's County home by police officers who shot and killed his two dogs, his attorney said.
Mayor Cheye Calvo and his wife, Trinity Tomsic, asked for a U.S. Department of Justice inquiry during a 2 p.m. news conference today outside their Berwyn Heights home, said Timothy Maloney, their attorney.
"We have asked the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice to investigate not only what happened to us, but also the larger question of policies and practices of county law enforcement agencies in executing warrants," Calvo said.
"We have witnessed a frightening law enforcement culture in which the law is disregarded, the rights of innocent occupants are ignored, and the rights of innocent animals mean nothing."
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In this undated photo provided by Cheye Calvo, he and his wife, Trinity Tomsic, walk their Labradors
Today's Sun photos Photos Calvo's home was raided by the county Sheriff's Office SWAT team and narcotics officers after a package of marijuana addressed to the house was seized. Police obtained a search warrant and officers broke down their door and shot and killed the family's two black Labrador retrievers, Payton and Chase.
But arrests this week of two men involved in a marijuana smuggling ring that allegedly delivers packages of the drug to unsuspecting homes appears to indicate that Calvo was not involved in any illegal activity.
Berwyn Heights' police chief, Patrick A. Murphy, said his agency was not alerted about the raid by county police and that those agencies need to state clearly that Calvo had no involvement with the marijuana ring.
"I see no connection between the mayor and his family and the persons who have been arrested in this case," Murphy said. "To keep it vague at this point is a serious disservice to this very decent, very honorable man. I think this continues to be an embarrassment."
During the raid last Tuesday, Calvo's mother-in-law was handcuffed and laid on the kitchen floor next to the body of 7-year-old Payton, said Maloney. At the same time, the mayor -- wearing only his underwear and socks -- was forced to walk backward down his stairs, hands in the air, before being handcuffed and laid on his living room floor, he said.
"After about an hour, it dawned on the police that these are not drug dealers," Maloney said.
He said the mayor never heard the police announce themselves before they stormed in. The mayor assumed his house was being invaded by armed robbers, Maloney said.
Maloney said the Prince George's County sheriff and the county's chief of police have not apologized for the conduct of their officers.
Neither could be reached for comment today.
Murphy said that if his police department was made aware of the search warrant he could have gotten the mayor to secure the dogs and to allow for the peaceful entry of police.
"There's no reason for it," Murphy said. "I'm gravely concerned about this incident eroding the public's trust in their law enforcement officials."