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United States News Title: ‘They Did Not Deal Drugs’: Neighbors of Slain Couple Who Shot 4 Cops Refute Official Story Houston, TX Four Houston police officers were shot on Monday during a drug raid on an alleged heroin dealers home. Luckily, the officers are all expected to survive. Now, neighbors who knew the slain couple that lived in the house are speaking out and the picture they paint is drastically different than the official story. According to the official police account, on Monday afternoon, around 5:00 pm, a dozen SWAT team members with Houstons narcotics department, along with six other patrol officers descended on a Pecan Park home to serve a search warrant. According to police, a tip from a neighbor led to an investigation in which black tar heroin was allegedly purchased from the couples home and the search warrant was executed on Monday. As police entered the home, they claim one of the suspects, Dennis Tuttle, opened fire and 4 of the officers were shot. Another officer injured his knee during the raid, but was not shot. Police then said that Tuttles wife of 22 years, Rhogena Nicholas-Tuttle attempted to grab one of the officers guns and she was killed as well. This sounds like an open and shut case of a drug raid turned violent when the dealers fought back. But if we look a little closer, a seemingly different story emerges. Something Art Acevedo did not say is that the officers who entered the home were in plain clothesnot uniforms. Whats more, upon entering the house, they immediately began shooting as one officer killed the couples dog. Thats when Tuttle came out of the back room with his .357 handgun and opened fire. Even more suspicious is the fact that these alleged black tar heroin dealershad no heroin. The only thing police alleged to have found was a small bit of marijuana and a white powdery substance. Police also said they found several guns, which all happened to be entirely legal. Robert Antu, who lived across the street from the couplefor the last 30 yearsconsidered the couple dear friends. He told Click2Houston that Tuttle would have never fired on a police officer. Another neighbor, Esmerelda Becerrawho battled cancer alongside Nicholasbacks up Antus statements and said this loving couple would have never hurt anyone. Do you know how I felt? said Becerra, crying. Theres no more tears in me. I went over there to go leave flowers. I almost fainted. I still cant stop crying!!! And yes they where (sic) GOOD PEOPLE!!! wrote one woman who knew them on Facebook. According to Tuttles sister, Tuttle was also a disabled veteran. Released on honorable discharged medical, Tuttles sister, Elizabeth Ferrari said. He had debilitating injuries for many years and its a sad situation. I dont buy it all, Ferrari said of the official police story. Not one hot minute. Nicholas-Tuttle was also a big time supporter of police, who liked the All Lives Matter page on Facebook as well as her local law enforcementdefinitely not the typical habit of a black tar heroin dealer. Every neighbor who lived by the couple gave similar testimonies making the claim that neighbors reported them as drug dealers hold even less water. They didnt deal drugs from out of that house, said one neighbor, who grew up with Tuttle and his wife. Theyre not those type of people. Indeed, they are not. When asked if the couple had any criminal history, Acevedo refused to answer the question noting that it was part of the investigation. Were not going to talk about their criminal histories, Acevedo said. Thats part of the investigation. However, Click2Houston pulled their criminal recordand its non-existent. According to their report: Court records showed that Tuttle had no criminal history in Harris County. Nicholas was charged with theft by check in January 2010, according to court records. That case was dismissed about a month later after Nicholas paid $145 in restitution. State and national searches returned no criminal history for the couple. Married couples, who own their own home, have no criminal record, one of whom is an honorable discharged disabled veteran, and who are best friends with their neighbors, do not fit the typical profile of heroin dealers. While it is entirely possible that this couple was dealing heroin, there is an equally likely alternative scenario that couldve unfolded like this: police acted on bad information from an unreliable informantwhich happens all the timeand then raided the home. When the couple saw four plainclothes officers in their homewho immediately came in and shot their dogthey likely went into fight or flight mode. Tuttle opened fire, likely thinking he was the subject of a home invasion and Nicholas may have tried to disarm one of the intruders who she thought was trying to kill her. The fact of the matter is that botched raids happen all the time. As TFTP has reported, there are countless examples of police acting on bad information, going to the wrong house, or responding to bad anonymous tips. All too often, these innocent people are shot, arrested, or even killed and they never committed a crime. In this couples case, the investigation of their deaths is now being conducted by the very people who killed them. There is likely no chance of police flipping the narrative and revealing they were in the wrong. Whats more, because these undercover cops were in plainclothes, there is no body camera footage to tell what actually happened. And, since both of the suspects are now dead, they cannot refute the official story. The four cops getting shot during this raid is tragic. However, if this couple was innocent and was merely defending their home from armed invaders, this is a tragedy of epic proportions. Poster Comment: Every neighbor who lived by the couple gave similar testimonies making the claim that neighbors reported them as drug dealers hold even less water. From another source: 'They're far from drug dealers': Neighbors confused after deadly shootout
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#1. To: Deckard (#0)
Uh-huh. And after some kid shoots up a school all the neighbors claim he was "such a nice boy".
Im with Deckard on this one. Unless they can come up with some info not posted the police really fucked the pooch bad on this one. To me it sounds like they did not do their investigating of the couple before raiding the house. BTW Most(90%+) mass shooters are well known to police and people around them. Here there is just no corroborating data that this couple sold or even did hard drugs.
"Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said the drug raid on the home stemmed from numerous complaints from neighbors. He said undercover officers had previously made two purchases of black tar heroin from drug dealers at the house."
There is no evidence of this. No heroin of any kind was in the house. Sounds like the police got played and did not investigate the claims but just raided on bad intel. CI's are notorious for being unreliable.
Then they should have invited the police in rather than shooting at them.
Are you on drugs? Are you talking same incident?
There is just something wrong somewhere in this story. Its the tale of two worlds. There was no heroin in the house. There is no evidence of use of Heroin by the couple. But on the other hand police said they hand evidence of drug dealing going on in that house.
Yep. Neighbors complaining. Two drug buys. The judge was convinced to give them a search warrant. Yet you, with much more information (I guess), remain skeptical. Because shut up.
Im not impressed with judges giving out warrants. The whole Trump collusion should have put this to rest. I do not know what really happen. The fact they did not find heroin kinda puts major doubt about this being some kinda drug house. There is no video so we do not know if they knocked or just kicked in the door. We just do not know and that is a problem since there is no real evidence of the couple doing wrong.
They must have tested the mysterious "white powder" that they confiscated. If it were drugs they would be yelling it from the rooftops. Probably Tide laundry detergent.
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