Rights group urges Texas Taser moratorium - Policy review is needed after man's death, ACLU says
The American Civil Liberties Union
is calling for police departments across Texas to stop using Tasers
until policies and training are reviewed in the wake of a Houston man's
death on Friday. The ACLU's call for a moratorium was spurred, in part,
by the death of mental health patient Joel Casey, who died on his 52nd
birthday after being shocked by a Taser gun while fighting with Harris
County Precinct 1 deputy constables. Casey's exact cause of death has
not been determined, but deputies later learned he had a history of
heart problems and hepatitis B — issues not disclosed in paperwork sent
by a private psychiatric center to the constable's office. Even so,
local law enforcement agencies polled Tuesday say they have no plans
and have not heard of any intentions by their command staffs to stop
using the Tasers. They say the stun gun has proved to be a valuable
tool and consider it a success. ACLU chapters in Colorado and northern
California have sought similar moratoriums. Just last week, a sheriff
in Toledo, Ohio, suspended his office's use of Tasers after an inmate
who died was shocked with the stun gun many times at a county jail.
Meanwhile, a civil rights activist expressed concern about how often
Tasers are used by Houston Police Department officers. Houston police
have used Tasers about 140 times since the devices were bought in
November — a rate of about one or two instances a day, said HPD Lt.
Robert Manzo. [more]
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