House raid

Contents

A house raid is a surprise visit of a residence conducted by an adversary to seize items, arrest occupants of the residence, or install cover surveillance devices.

When

An adversary can conduct a house raid :

Why

An adversary can conduct a house raid to:

Additional considerations

In some countries, when they conduct a house raid, the State is only allowed to search the rooms of those named in a warrant.

Used in tactics: Arrest, Incrimination

Mitigations

NameDescription
Clandestinity

If you enter clandestinity, an adversary cannot know where you live, and therefore cannot raid your home.

Preparing for house raids

You can prepare for a house raid by minimizing the presence of materials that could be harmful in the event of a raid.

Preparing for repression

You can prepare for repression to minimize the impact of house raids.

Stash spot or safe house

You can keep action materials that have no “legitimate” purpose in a stash spot or safe house, or at worst, let them pass through your home only for a very limited time.

Used in repressive operations

NameDescription
Repression of Lafarge factory sabotage

Among the initial house raids, one was particularly thorough: cops searched under mattresses, behind sofa covers and in every drawer of every piece of furniture, inspected every book, notebook and piece of clothing as well as the dishes, and emptied packages of pasta and sealed jars[1].

December 8 case

During the raids, investigators found firearms and products that could be used to create explosives[2].

Bure criminal association case

During the raids, investigators found[3]:

  • Various items consistent with items used in demonstrations: containers filled with gasoline or other substances, fireworks, Molotov cocktails, and a large number of helmets.
  • A backpack containing both a written document with a person's name and materials that could be used to build incendiary or explosive devices.
  • An unencrypted computer containing both a person's resume and a document describing what happened during the June 21, 2017 demonstration.
  • Numerous reports of sensitive meetings containing people's names or pseudonyms, both on paper and on unencrypted storage devices.
Renata

During a house raid, cops tried to get into the basement without waking up the people in the house, then privately complained that they were unable to hide what they wanted to hide[4].

2013 case against Mónica and Francisco

During a raid on the home of Mónica and Francisco, investigators found[5]:

  • Several pieces of clothing and other accessories that Mónica and Francisco had used during the action and that were visible on public CCTV footage.
  • Several unencrypted digital storage devices that contained suspicious documents.
Scripta Manent

One person was arrested after batteries and an electrician's manual were found in his home during a raid[6].

Case against Jeff Luers

During the raid of the storage unit, investigators found[7]:

  • Ignition devices matching those found at the site of the May arson attempt, as well as materials that could be used to make incendiary devices (gas cans, sponges, spools of thread, and incense sticks).
  • A bolt cutter matching the cuts in the fence surrounding the site of the May arson attempt.