Deadly Police Raid Over Meth That Wasn’t There Based on Tip From Car Thief

family photoIn Georgia, Laurens County deputies raided the
home of David Hooks on a search warrant claiming there could be
meth at the house. Why did police believe there was meth there?
Because someone who stole a car from Hooks’ property told them so.

Via 13WMAZ
:

Rodney Garrett reportedly told investigators that he took a
plastic bag from the pickup [on Hooks’ property], believing that
there was money inside,and a set of digital scales.

Then he stole another vehicle from Hooks’ home, a Lincoln
Aviator SUV, the warrant says. After he drove the SUV to Dublin,
Garrett said, he realized that the bag contained meth instead of
cash.

Garrett told officers that he “became scared for his safety,”
and turned himself in to Laurens deputies, the warrant says.

Garrett’s now been charged related to the burglary and motor
vehicle theft. Deputies searched Hooks’ home for 44 hours,
according to his family’s attorney, and found no drugs.

Rodney Garrett booking photoCops claim they investigated the
Hooks home in 2009 over meth allegations but won’t say what the
disposition of that investigation was.

It’s the not the first time a drug raid’s been executed on wrong
information. Anti-narcotics police often rely on information from
highly questionable sources. In July in Habersham County, Georgia,
police raided a home with an infant in it, tossing a flashbang
grenade into his crib,
based on an informant
who said he bought meth at the home from
an individual who wasn’t present. Police said the informant told
them there were no children in the home and that they didn’t see
any during an alleged drug buy.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is running an investigation
of the raid and doesn’t comment while it’s open.

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