- 3 - STATEMENT On January 18, 1991 at 11:30 PM the petitioner telephoned a complaint to the Sharon Police about his neighbor. Officer Donald Williams responded to his call. He took information and left the petitioner's home to resolve the problem. He never resolved the original complaint. This is deprivation of rights. Five minutes later he broke into the petitioner's home with the petitioner's latch key. The key was always left in the lock. He did not knock on the door. He had no warrant, no court order, no M.G.L. Chapter 123, "pink slip". The petitioner heard a noise in the kitchen, while he was watching television, home alone. The petitioner went into the kitchen to see Donald Williams standing there. The petitioner asked him, "How did you get in?" He said nothing. The petitioner gave the officer no reason to come back. He cannot break in to gain entrance into a home. Every person has a constitutionally protected right to privacy in their home. He was required to knock and announce himselve first. He did not knock. He broke in. The plaintiff's right to LIBERTY was violated. Gestapo tactics shall not replace our Constitution. A man's home is his castle. Donald Williams than said, "I am taking you to Norwood Hospital". He was asked to produce papers. He had none. The petitioner was deprived of his civil rights, constitutional rights and state rights. There was no due process before a judge as required by Massachusetts law. His motive was to teach the petitioner a lesson. He wrote a false hit and run accident report on November 14, 1990 with injuries resulting. He forced the petitioner to go to the Hospital. The petitioner was restrained without a court order.