Current:Home > MyPolice raided George Pelecanos' home. 15 years later, he's ready to write about it -Aspire Capital Guides
Police raided George Pelecanos' home. 15 years later, he's ready to write about it
View
Date:2025-04-18 11:04:29
It was August 2009 when the police raided writer George Pelecanos' home in Silver Spring, Md., just outside of Washington, D.C., with a no-knock warrant.
He was performing his daily ritual of sitting on the couch reading The Washington Post when he saw cars enter the driveway. "I saw these guys wearing black and holding automatic rifles and battering rams," he said in an interview at his home. The police broke down the door overlooking the driveway, and the basement door, too. Pelecanos said they put him on the floor and zip tied his hands.
The police were looking for his then 18-year-old son, Nick. The younger Pelecanos was a part of the robbery of a weed dealer, with a gun involved. So, the cops executed the no-knock warrant looking for evidence of guns or drugs.
After not finding anything, George Pelecanos said the officers started needling him about his liquor cabinet, his watch, his home. "One of the SWAT guys was looking at my books, and he goes 'maybe you'll write about this someday.' And he laughed," Pelecanos said. "And right then I knew that I would write about it. He challenged me."
No knock warrants have been banned in multiple states
Pelecanos is known for his gritty, realistic crime stories. For television, he co-created The Deuce, about the burgeoning porn industry in 1970s New York City, and We Own This City, the mini-series detailing a real-life corrupt police ring in Baltimore. As an author, he's known for his deep catalog of stories set in the streets of Washington, D.C.
His new short story collection is titled Owning Up. And it features characters grappling with events from the past that, with time, fester into something else entirely. There's a story about two guys who knew each other in jail, crossing paths years later. Another has a woman digging into her own family history and learning about the 1919 Washington, D.C. race riots.
But Pelecanos said he wanted to write about the August 2009 incident because he wanted to further show the effects of no-knock raids. The Montgomery County police department confirmed they executed the warrant but they didn't immediately provide any additional details. Pelecanos did share a copy of the warrant, which states: "You may serve this warrant as an exception to the knock and announce requirement."
The practice of issuing no-knock warrants has been under increased scrutiny since the police killings of Breonna Taylor in Louisville in 2020, and Amir Locke in Minneapolis in 2022. They're banned in Oregon, Virginia, Florida and Tennessee.
"They don't accomplish anything except mayhem and violence," Pelecanos said.
The story "The No-Knock" starts with a journalist named Joe Caruso drinking his coffee and reading the morning paper when the vehicles pull up. The same beats follow — the guns, the zip ties, the pinning down on the floor. Pelecanos writes like he remembers every sensation from that night, because, he said, he does.
It deviates further into fiction from there. Caruso wants to write about it, but he can't. He's too close. He starts drinking heavily, instead. Pelecanos, on the other hand, knew he could write about it, easily. But he waited for over a decade on purpose. He wanted his son's permission, first.
"I wanted my son to grow up," he said. "And so that I could say to you today – he's fine."
Owning Up to the past
"He allowed time for me to grow as a man, and develop myself as a responsible person," said Nick Pelecanos in an interview. He now works in the film industry as a director and assistant director. He got his start working on jobs his dad helped him get. So he's attuned to his father's storytelling style — how he favors details and facts over sepia-toned nostalgia.
"When he writes something, you know that it's technically correct," he said. "And has come to his objective, as non-biased as possible opinion."
As personal as "The No-Knock" is, Pelecanos calls the title story in the collection his most autobiographical. It's about a kid in the 70s named Nikos who works a job where he gets in with a bad crowd, and eventually gets talked into breaking into a guy's house.
"It's just the way my life was in that era and on this side of Montgomery County," Pelecanos said. "It was about muscle cars, playing pickup basketball, drinking beer, getting high."
Listening to Pelecanos talk about this story, it sounds familiar. You get the sense that history does repeat itself. That the same lessons get taught again and again. But that's O.K., because some lessons bear repeating.
"I got in trouble occasionally," he said. "But I always came home to the warmth of my family, you know? That's all you need."
Meghan Collins Sullivan edited this story for radio and the web.
veryGood! (1828)
Related
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Who advanced in NBA In-Season Tournament? Nuggets, Warriors, 76ers among teams knocked out
- Texas Supreme Court hears case challenging state's near-total abortion ban
- 28 White Elephant Gifts for the Win
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Lisa Barlow's Latest Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Meltdown Is Hot Mic Rant 2.0
- Emirati-designated COP28 leader forcefully denies report UAE wanted to seek oil deals in summit
- Red Lobster's 'Endless Shrimp' deal surpassed expectations, cost company millions
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Mediators look to extend truce in Gaza on its final day, with one more hostage swap planned
Ranking
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Mark Cuban working on $3.5B sale of Dallas Mavericks to Sands casino family, AP source says
- Climate contradictions key at UN talks. Less future warming projected, yet there’s more current pain
- Georgia Republicans move to cut losses as they propose majority-Black districts in special session
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- 'If you have a face, you have a place in the conversation about AI,' expert says
- Navy removes fuel from spy plane that crashed into environmentally sensitive bay in Hawaii
- Sports Illustrated is the latest media company damaged by an AI experiment gone wrong
Recommendation
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Mystery dog respiratory illness: These are the symptoms humans should be on the lookout for.
Vandalism and wintry weather knock out phone service to emergency centers in West Virginia
An ailing Pope Francis appears at a weekly audience but says he’s not well and has aide read speech
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
A teen is found guilty of second-degree murder in a New Orleans carjacking that horrified the city
Missing U.S. airman is accounted for 79 years after bomber Queen Marlene shot down in France
This rabies strain was never west of the Appalachians, until a stray kitten showed up in Nebraska