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Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Tasers

     Tasers, which have been around since the 1970's, are handheld devices that deliver an electrical shock that temporarily stuns and disables suspects who resist authority or pose serious physical threats to arresting officers. The original five-watt stun gun, which produced a major jolt, was followed in 1994 by a seven-watt version called the Air-Taser, a product manufactured and sold by Taser International. In 1998, the company developed a higher-powered taser designed to stop the more combative, dangerous suspect likely to fight through the lighter applications. A year or so later, Taser International came out with the M 26, a 26-watt device that stunned subjects with 50,000 volts. The company began selling the X26 in 2003, a lighter, more portable version of the M 26.

     While representatives of Taser International insist that their nonlethal device is safe, critics of the stun gun, such as Amnesty International, claim that tasers have killed hundreds of people. In cases where citizens have died after being shocked by the police, forensic pathologists have found preexisting illnesses or the presence of drugs and other toxic substances. The safety debate continues in forensic medicine and in the courts. But among those who recognize and appreciate that tasers provide a nonlethal  alternative to billy clubs and guns, there is concern over the  indiscriminate use of the device on people whose behavior doesn't call for such force. Over the past few years, police officers have tasered (or tased) children as young as six years of age; people who were mentally ill or physically disabled; and elderly women. Police officers have also stunned peaceful protestors and citizens stopped for traffic violations and other minor offenses whose actions did not justify the unpleasant experience of being jolted by 50,000 volts.

     At present, officers in more than 11,000 police agencies carry taser guns. Although there is no governmental agency that keeps a record of the frequency and consequences of taser use, groups like Amnesty International assert that the frequency of taser use in on the rise. The rise in Taser use, at least in part, may be a result of the increased use of drugs that cause violent behavior, and the fact more people are resisting arrest. Although there is no hard evidence to support this, Taser use probably has reduced the number of police-involved shootings.

1 comment:

  1. Ken (EUP former student)January 13, 2012 at 3:10 PM

    Jim,


    A TASER is NOT LETHAL FORCE. To use lethal force you need to have articulate grounds to use a gun(or other lethal force). The suspect has a gun and is threatening to use it again, the suspect just fire a round at someone etc.
    A TASER is not LETHAL Force is NOT to be used as a means of Lethal Force.
    Here is an example that I use.
    I get dispatched to a bar fight. I and another arrive at the scene. We enter and find one suspect holding a broken bottle standing over a victim with a massive head wound. We order the suspect to drop the bottle. He says, "F*** You" and says you take it off of me". Now you may say stand there and talk with him for awhile and he will eventually comply, but you have not made the great encounter with a Meth Head like I have.
    Use The Taser and the entire incident will be over in a matter of seconds. Wait like you describe and God Bless the other patrons.

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