A Houston officer lied in a search warrant that led to a drug raid that left two dead and five wounded, according to an affidavit



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Officer Gerald Goines obtained a search warrant using an unnamed confidential informant to confirm that drugs were being sold in a house on Harding Street, according to affidavits obtained by CNN. The affidavits, dated February 14, detail the investigation that followed the raid.

After the shooting, Goines appointed informants to the investigators, according to affidavits.

These informants told the authorities that they had worked with the police officer "in the past on several narcotics transactions", but not for the warrant at the address of Harding Street, according to the affidavits.

"It seems that there are important lies and lies" in the initial affidavit of Goines' search warrant for the home, said HPD chief Art Acevedo.

Goines was one of the officers injured in the shooting. Nicole DeBorde, Goines' lawyer, told CNN that her client was still on medical treatment and that her jaw was closed. "That's why you do not hear the other side.He is badly injured, he still can not speak clearly," DeBorde said. She also criticized the police chief's comments on the case, calling them irresponsible.

Police detailed a heartbreaking raid and shootout that left 5 injured and 2 dead suspects

"No matter what we find here, we know that we already have a criminal offense – and a serious criminal offense – committed by the individual who prepared this affidavit," Acevedo said at a conference of press Friday.

"When we prepare a document to go to someone (…), it must be honest, it must be absolutely," he said, adding that he There was "a high probability that a charge would be laid criminal."

The police chief said that the extent of the crime and the violated policies were still under investigation.

On the night of January 28, when drug officers stormed Harding Street, the front door rang, gunshots rang almost immediately.

One of the suspects was removed to the back of the room and came out, returning the fire. The second was shot while trying to control a hunting agent with a shotgun. The two suspects were killed.

Four narcotics officers were shot by gunfire, police said. A fifth officer was injured in the knee, according to Acevedo.

The investigators found no heroin on the scene, but marijuana and a white powder that would be cocaine or fentanyl, a powerful prescription painkiller, said Acevedo. They also seized three shotguns and two rifles.

Goine will be relieved of his duties upon leaving the hospital, according to Acevedo.

Eliott C. McLaughlin, CNN's Jason Morris and Darran Simon contributed to this report.

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