Police are too quick to grab for Taser's power, say critics
Saturday, December 4, 2004 at 11:50PM
TheSpook
Tasers have been used locally to end violent standoffs
and subdue suicidal people, but a Seattle Post-Intelligencer review
found they're also being used routinely in far less threatening
situations -- including against juveniles, pregnant women and people
who have already been handcuffed. King County sheriff's deputies have
fired Tasers at a teenager who ran after not paying a $1.25 bus fare, a
71-year-old man who was arrested for drunken driving and refused to get
into a patrol car, and a partially deaf man who couldn't hear deputies
ordering him to stop, reports show. Some civil rights advocates argue
Tasers are being drawn too quickly and in cases in which such extreme
force isn't necessary. They worry about potential abuses as more
officers rely on the tool to subdue people who they say pose no serious
threat to themselves or others. "We have a problem with the rush to
tase and ask questions later," said Sheley Secrest, with the NAACP's
Seattle chapter, who has fielded several complaints, including one from
Otis. The NAACP wants stricter policies. Amnesty International released
a report today saying police nationwide are abusing the stun guns, and
more than 70 deaths in Taser incidents raise questions about whether
the devices are safe -- though the company that builds them insists
they are. [
more]
- Pictured above: Valinda Otis was three months pregnant -- and in handcuffs -- when a King County deputy used a Taser on her in September.
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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