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Students Put UCLA Taser Video On YouTube

dircha writes "As widely reported, an incident in which Iranian-American student Mostafa Tabatabainejad was tasered up to five times by UCLA police on Friday, has been captured by a fellow student using a video enabled cell phone and published to YouTube. From the Daily Bruin: 'At around 11:30 p.m. Tuesday, Tabatabainejad, a fourth-year Middle Eastern and North African studies and philosophy student, was asked to leave the library for failing to present his BruinCard during a random check. The 23-year-old student was hit with a Taser five times when he did not leave quickly and cooperatively upon being asked to do so.' In a story which has raised concerns of racial profiling, police brutality and the health risks of taser use, the ubiquity of video cell phone technology has given us a first hand record of an incident which might otherwise have been a he-said, she-said affair. While the publishing of the video to YouTube has given the issue compelling popular exposure beyond the immediate campus community."

193 of 1,583 comments (clear)

  1. Ask yourself this... by DragonPup · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...if after watching this video, you see what the LAPD(and by extension, the UCLA PD) are willing to do on camera, and in front of dozens of witnesses, what do they do without people watching?

    And am I the only one that upon hearing, Police burtality" and "Caught of tape" are completely unsurprised the LAPD are somehow involved?

    --
    "Useless organic meatbag" -HK-47
    1. Re:Ask yourself this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      The UCPD is not a part of the LAPD. The UCPD is a separate law enforcement agency with the same powers as CHP officers run by the University of California.

    2. Re:Ask yourself this... by Trekologer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The officers in this video are either the dumbest cops in the world, to repediately brutalize that young man not only on video but with literally dozens of witnesses. Or they think that because of the uniform they wear, that they are above the law. It doesn't matter which one it is, those animals should be out of a job and in jail. The video did not show everything but there is at least one part where the man is clearly on the floor and is tazed again, sending his body upward in a horiffic spasm.

    3. Re:Ask yourself this... by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The officers in this video are either the dumbest cops in the world. . .

      Let us stipulate for the moment, just for the sake of argument, that the first Tasing was justified.

      Their insistence that he get on his feet or they would tase him again is all the proof we need that they were not the brightest bulbs in the pack. The function of a Taser shock is to disable by disrupting nerve and muscle function.

      If you could stand up after being Tased they wouldn't be using them in the first place.

      KFG

    4. Re:Ask yourself this... by ad0gg · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Not standing up isn't physically resisting. Thats like saying a comatose paitent was resisting arrest because it refused they refused to standup. Tasers should be used for somone actually physically resisting which results in threat, if i let my body go limp, i'm not resisting. Resisting actually requires you to actively do something, like trying to prevent the officer from hand cuffing you. A limp body allows the cop to safely handcuff you. Its all comes down to threat. Some going limp isn't a threat and taser should not have applied. So the cops have to work extra and carry the guy. Oh noes.

      Taser should never be used to make you do something. It should be used to stop you from doing something. IE struggling with an officer, refusing to lay down on the ground, locking your arms so you can be hand cuffed. Using a taser to force you do something is borderline torture.

      --

      Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

    5. Re:Ask yourself this... by falcon5768 · · Score: 5, Informative
      If you listen to the tape, after the first incident he stopped resisting, the cops on the otherhand continued to tazer him because he wouldnt (in their eyes) get up despite police protocol being very clear that it can take 10 - 15 minutes for a suspect to get over being tazered.

      The second time was questionable, the third fourth and fifth equals them going after him and attacking him. Add in more than one witness being threatened by the cops for filming and or asking their badge number (which by law every cop in the entire country MUST do regardless of who they are and whatever the officers claim)and its quite clear the officers where untrained in a potential riot situation, or where out for blood after the students started questioning their motives and thought that the easiest way to scare of the gathering crowd of 40-60 people would be to torture the suspect in front of them.

      Fortunately for all involved all three officers are likely losing their jobs as well as their chief and the intern chancellor for starters.

      --

      "Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."

    6. Re:Ask yourself this... by HTTP+Error+403+403.9 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That's an interesting opinion ... I saw an idiot (possibly an asshole) refusing to leave when he wasn't following known rules and physically resisting and fighting. Someone who was given plenty of notice he was going to be tased yet continued to resist and then getting tased again.
      If I give you plenty of notice that you are going to be shot in the head with my revolver, does the warning justify my use of force? If you don't comply with my command to get up, is my continued shooting into your head justified?
      --
      I'm not a Troll, it's reverse psychology.
    7. Re:Ask yourself this... by milamber3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      First, there was no fighting back. Not even the cops said he fought. Everyone has said he went limp when they tried to STOP HIM FROM LEAVING! Please explain the point of tasing someone who is limp on the ground. This is akin to them beating him with a club while on the ground, unless you really believe the taser is meant to be used as a motivation device. Second, even if we accepted your comment, how do explain the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th tasing? Do you justify tasering someone because they can't get up after you already tased them? They ended up dragging him out, if that was an option why did they spend time shocking him? Maybe laziness is an excuse for using a taser now? Lastly, since when does asking a cop for his badge number and telling him to stop hurting someone warrant a threat to be tased as well?

      Any explanation you could give for some small part of this atrocity would always leave the rest shown to be completely unnecessary.

    8. Re:Ask yourself this... by rebootconrad · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The UCPD is a wholly separate entity from the LAPD. It is the University of California Police Department, found at all UC Campuses.

    9. Re:Ask yourself this... by Anti_Climax · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Their insistence that he get on his feet or they would tase him again is all the proof we need that they were not the brightest bulbs in the pack. The function of a Taser shock is to disable by disrupting nerve and muscle function.

      If you could stand up after being Tased they wouldn't be using them in the first place.
      I don't know about the campus police, but part of the taser training for full police officers is to take a taser shot themselves, just like with mace (which is much more painful and longer lasting).

      The current taser models override the voluntary muscle nerve impulses and cause the body to tense for the duration it's firing. Once it's off you're back to normal within a few seconds, with the exception of the adrenaline rush.

      Almost everyone is able to get right back up if they choose to do so, especially if people are trying to pull them up from under the arms as it appears those officers were trying to do at one point in the video.

      However, tasers are intended as a means of subduing a suspect without causing serious harm, not convince them to move.

      So to respond to your original post, he could have gotten up when they told him to, the taser shot won't stop that. He chose not to. That's non-violent resistance, and I wouldn't begrudge anyone that. They needed to suck it up, get a few guys and carry him out if that's what needed to be done.
      --
      Even people that believe in pre-destiny look both ways before crossing the street.
    10. Re:Ask yourself this... by rkcallaghan · · Score: 4, Insightful
      ad0ggwrote:
      Using a taser to force you do something is borderline torture.
      Let's not start the doublespeak here on Slashdot. Using [electric shocks] to force someone to do something is torture.

      Fixed that for ya. So when the police are torturing people in the middle of a school in front of everyone; are we a police state yet? Was it some other kind of "worse" that "other countries have" that everyone meant when they blew off those that have said so before?

      ~Rebecca
    11. Re:Ask yourself this... by localman · · Score: 5, Informative

      The current taser models override the voluntary muscle nerve impulses and cause the body to tense for the duration it's firing. Once it's off you're back to normal within a few seconds, with the exception of the adrenaline rush.

      This isn't what I've seen. Just last month an acquaintance of mine, a police officer in Indiana, offered to dress like Keith Richards and be tasered on stage for five seconds while "Start Me Up" played. No, I'm serious... it was a contest put on by a radio station to give away backstage passes for the Stones concert: whoever did the craziest thing, determined by judges and crowd reaction, got the tickets.

      Anyways, he had been tasered before as part of his training, so this was his second time. The MC shot him across stage with the electrodes (they go quite far) and then juiced him for five seconds straight. He stiffened like a board and two bouncers helped him to fall safely face down on the ground. And there he lay for at least 30 seconds wihout moving: despite his best efforts, he could not get up. In fact, the crowd was mostly silent and occasionally gasping as we thought he might be dead. Eventually, with the help of the bouncers he was able to regain his feet. He won the tickets. But he was moving in slow motion for another 15-30 minutes and complained that he felt like shit for the rest of the night.

      In any case, I'm just saying that when they turn off the taser, at least some of the time, the victim cannot get right back up as you claim. So telling someone "get up or I'll taser you again" is absolutely moronic.

      Cheers.

    12. Re:Ask yourself this... by milamber3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Once again I must suggest you read the article and watch the video. He was NOT resisting. He WAS trying to leave until they stopped him. They ended up carrying him out so why couldn't they do that in the first place? What did tasering him accomplish since he was never fighting them?

      You essentially made my point for me though, about the tasering being akin (this means "similar", not "same" as you wrote it) to beating him. The taser is supposed to be used instead of a club in situations that require force to subdue someone, it should not be used in a situation that could not also warrant the use of a club if no taser was available. That is the point you, and most undertrained cops, fail to understand. Someone who is lying MOTIONLESS on the ground does not need to be subdued, period! Narrow minded people like yourself need to remember that a taser can be much more harmful or even deadly than a club to someone with specific medical conditions (some of which may be unknown even to the person being tased).

    13. Re:Ask yourself this... by TellarHK · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are correct - to a point.

      If you are given lawful instructions by a police officer, you are a damn fool not to listen to them.

      However, if you are ordered to do something that you feel violates your civil rights by someone that you feel is racially profiling or discriminating against you based on the color of your skin, and surrounded by people that can back you up (with testimony, video or photo evidence) you're a fool not to employ non-violent resistance in protest.

      It looks to me like this situation straddles the line. Lawful orders given by officers that may have acted on prejudice, and followed it up with excessive force. Ugly for -everyone- involved, but far, far worse for the officers. There were three officers, and I'm sure the situation could have been handled a hell of a lot better.

      And as to tasers and the lingering effect, that differs depending on the individual. Some people can get up and walk, some people can't move extremities with any serious control, and I've seen some people that could -barely- talk when they were hit. It's perfectly reasonable to say this guy might not have been able to control his limbs well enough to give the officers what they wanted (even if he was so inclined).

      This was neither a case of a completely innocent person being tasered, nor was it a case of officers being abusive dicks for the fun of it. It straddled the line. But in any case where you have the line being straddled like this, the people with the authority, the guns, the tasers and the nightsticks are the ones most at fault. They were entrusted with authority to uphold and represent the law, and they misused it. Do I think they should be fired? Not sure - but an investigation should definitely be conducted.

      As to the scenario you point out at the end of your post, I have to say that on the -surface- of it, that's a completely bullshit charge against the officers. I just read an article on that particular incident, so I know the specifics of what you're referring to, and I have to say I completely agree that it sounds like a justifiable shoot.

      But this tasering isn't nearly the same sort of situation. The officers were not (from what I saw/heard) being threatened with harm, nor was anyone else. The officers made unrealistic demands once he -was- tasered, and were treating him like a violent suspect which was not the case from what I was able to make out on that video.

    14. Re:Ask yourself this... by dthree · · Score: 4, Informative

      And did you catch the part near the end when the cop tells one of the students standing there watching that if he doesn't step back he will get tasered, too?

      --
      "I forgot my mantra."
    15. Re:Ask yourself this... by Scudsucker · · Score: 2, Informative

      I assume this is what you're talking about. Yeah, the cop screamed at him to get up, the man started to get up, and the cop shot him three times - chest, leg and shoulder. The man, Elio Carrion, is lucky to be alive, and that cop belongs in prison for attempted murder.

    16. Re:Ask yourself this... by GreyPoopon · · Score: 4, Informative
      The second time they tased him, I would've gotten as many students as I could together, pulled the police off of him and formed a circle around him several layers deep if necessary.
      Better think twice about that. Best case, you would have been expelled from the university. Most likely, you would have been arrested yourself, and there's a better than even chance that you or one of the students who helped you would end up being shot. I really don't think you want to turn what was a clear incident involving police brutality into the death of one or more students. The student who filmed the thing on his phone did the right thing. In the end, I'm pretty sure that three police officers will be making a career change and the victim, should he choose to file suit, will be sucking the police department dry.
      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    17. Re:Ask yourself this... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2, Informative
      True, but which one gets to be the first to get stabbed in the leg with a pair of scissors?
      He was handcuffed.
      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    18. Re:Ask yourself this... by NoTheory · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fine, then i hope you understand when i taser every white kid with a crew cut who driving a pickup truck, cause you never know which of 'em is gonna be the next Timothy McVey.

      Racial Profiling is stupid, ineffective, and an unjustifiable abuse of statistical reasoning.

      --
      There are lives at stake here!
    19. Re:Ask yourself this... by Walt+Dismal · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It is conceivable that the student could have been so shaken, fearful, and angry he literally could not stand up, that he would prefer to just sit there and try to recover. I've seen Taser demonstrations where people could not get up after even a short 1-2 second burst (a TV newswoman for example). Further, had the student had any sort of pre-existing medical condition such as a heart condition or weakness caused by (legal) medications, he certainly would have justified in not responding to the 'get up' demands. Finally, by the third time he'd been Tasered, he is likely to have been quite weak and shaky regardless. Judging by the level of his repeated screams, I'd estimate that his heart rate accelerated a lot and he was weak with systemic shock. Long ago, when I was chased and shot at the first few times, I trembled from the adrenal rush and got weak and shaky too. This kid went through a combat experience, in effect.

      Failure to show a piece of paper is no justification for the brutality shown. There was utterly no justifiable reason for the patrolmen to not have handled this in a more humane way. The school deserves whatever financial justice the UCLA alumni choose to visit upon them for hiring dumb thugs to 'protect' the students. Do not donate when solicited by UCLA. Make them hurt.

      The video was the sickest thing I've witnessed recently, unless you count watching parts of the movie "Saw".

    20. Re:Ask yourself this... by vertical_98 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are correct. The police officers in this case should have either removed the man by force (ala Rodney King) or just given up and gone home. "Oh, we couldn't do anything. He said 'no'."

      Thats the stupidest f**king thing I have ever heard. Granted I haven't been in college since 87, but I KNOW that 5 officers can pick up and carry a 200lb man. (he didn't look that big, but police say he is, so maybe) The first shock may have been righteous (don't know, don't care). Once the handcuffs where on, the man could be laying on the ground shouting 'I f**ked you daughter', and you still don't get to taser him again. Thats when it crosses the line. What they should have done was defused the situation by leaving him on the ground passive and shouting like a fool and asking the students to back up. Then those 5 cops I counted in the video could have carried his ass out the nearest exit. It doesn't matter if he was an asshole or a jerk or a retard shouting 'I want Jesus', he was passive not combative.

      --
      72 CD D7 52 D0 7E D8 47 44 91 D5 84 D1 59 F1 A9-This is my 128bit integer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    21. Re:Ask yourself this... by indiechild · · Score: 2, Interesting

      He's American actually. Are you saying that having dark/olive skin doesn't make you an American?

    22. Re:Ask yourself this... by Walt+Dismal · · Score: 4, Informative
      The 'tasers' were the small close-range type, not the dart with wires type. You could hear the air-discharge from close point-electrodes even over the cellphone video audio. The problem is, this type is not as current-controlled as the official Taser brand-name type, and it is easy for a fool to pass enough current into the chest to actually cause heart defibrillation if he applies it incautiously on the torso. These weapons should not have been in security guard hands. Hell, they should not even be available for sale unlicensed, but they are, widely. Plenty of cheap Asian import models all over, unregulated. Even been used by muggers and rapists.

      Maybe it's time to start wearing copper-mesh-impregnated shirts if this is the wave of the future.

    23. Re:Ask yourself this... by jimicus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Myself, I find it rather disturbing that three police officers were able to continue brutalising this chap for a full 6 minutes with dozens of people looking on, and the most that happened was someone piped up "Can I have your badge number?"

      That behaviour, combined with the refusal to give a badge number, would have me dialling emergency services and saying "Three men impersonating police officers are attacking a student" because quite frankly, that's what it looks like.

    24. Re:Ask yourself this... by 1u3hr · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Fine, call it racial profiling, but when I see an Iranian without a student ID, acting belligerent, carrying a backpack into a crowded place, I hope the police take whatever action is necessary to get him the hell out of there.

      Idiotic. If he did happen to be a suicide bomber, as you imply, he would detonate himself the moment the guards approached him. And actually he was American born, and no doubt rather pissed at being anal probed at every opportunity. Have you ever been in a university library? Half the patrons are scruffy, bearded, belligerant and with backpacks.

    25. Re:Ask yourself this... by Ziest · · Score: 2, Insightful
      He was also being a smart-ass (something you don't do around police),



      So, he got tazed 5 times because he was being a smart-ass? Talking back is now a crime? In your world the only thing that is allowed is silent obedience? You will make a nice sheep. See you at the death camp, fool.



      Baaahhhh

      --
      Another day closer to redwood heaven
    26. Re:Ask yourself this... by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Err, yes. Fuck.

    27. Re:Ask yourself this... by Nasarius · · Score: 3, Informative

      I posted a similar comment when the video got mentioned on DailyKos. I suggested that one might be able to avoid the charge of assaulting a police officer by pulling the guy who was tased away from the wannabe-fascist cops -- by using the common civil disobedience protest tactic of "de-arresting" someone. You get everyone in the immediate area to put their arms around his body and don't let go, and just drag him away. Make two cops try to arrest a dozen people all holding on to eachother. Oh, and then get the hell out of there.

      --
      LOAD "SIG",8,1
    28. Re:Ask yourself this... by MostAwesomeDude · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Please, by all means, go out and tase yourself until tasers no longer affect you. Then, register an account, come back, and tell us all about it.

      (Goodbye, Excellent karma. We knew ye well...)

      --
      ~ C.
    29. Re:Ask yourself this... by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There are actually very few precedents in all of recorded history for police or military officers NOT killing students. For some reason, once someone is educated, their lives become completely meaningless to people in positions of authority. The number of massacres in universities and colleges by police is staggering. There is simply no other social group that police are so completely willing to mow down in large numbers.

    30. Re:Ask yourself this... by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. While my university's library does not have a random ID check policy, I can certainly see it now. Sitting in the library late at night struggling to finish an important paper--definitely scruffy, bearded, and belligerant. Some idiot cop who could not possibly comprehend the gravity and brilliance of my work (I'm being facetious here, nor am I anti-police in general; this is just what I might think to myself in such a frustrating situation) comes along and interrupts my train of thought and tells me I have to pack up and leave immediately.

      No way in hell I'd move. I'd at least stay around to finish up that last thought, if possible, and then I'd leave. Which is apparently more or less how it happened. They told him to leave, but he did not right away. By the time they came back to haul him off, he had already finished packing his stuff and was on his way out when they stopped him. At such I point, I would no longer be in the mood to fuck around. I think maybe screaming about it was uncalled for, and he might have been able to handle it better. But if the whole thing went down anything like I described, and it seems likely, I can certainly relate to his plight.

    31. Re:Ask yourself this... by DJCacophony · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Non-violently how?

      Libary Staff: Good evening sir, may we see your ID, to confirm that you are a student at this university and not a trespassing criminal?
      Student: No.
      Libary Staff: Well then I'm afraid we'll have to ask you to leave. Library regulations state we need an ID if you are to stay.
      Student: No. I refuse to show my ID and I refuse to leave.

      At this point the student is guilty of criminal trespassing, something that can't be waved away if he were to leave now. He has been ordered off the premises and blatantly refused the order.

      Library Staff: Then we'll have to have you removed. Calls the Police, who arrive momentarily.
      Police: Alright sir, please come with us.
      Student: No.
      Police: Fine then. The Police officers take him by the arm to escort him out.
      Student: AAAAAGH! HELP! HELP! DON'T TOUCH ME! DOOOOOOOOOON'T TOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOUCH MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE The student begins to make a scene with his screaming. He jerks out of the policeman's hand and starts flailing wildly, and generally acting in a violent, unpredictable manner. Now what? How would you defuse the situation? You have an unidentified criminal, trespassing on government property, acting violent in the vicinity of young students, resisting arrest, moving in a violent manner. What would you propose, other than using force?

      --
      Slow Down, Cowboy! It's been 60 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment.
    32. Re:Ask yourself this... by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If you use a broad definition then maybe it is torture but tasers do have valid uses in police work and are far more humane than the alternatives


      Tasers might have valid uses, but the case at hand isn't one of them; and, yes, using a taser on an unarmed, handcuffed person on the ground IS torture. They shock him to get him to do what they want. Causing physical pain to someone intentionally IS torture. It's not a "broad definition" it IS the definition.

      The alternative to tasers in this case is not guns or batons; it's to not do anything harmful as it was obviously not necessary.

    33. Re:Ask yourself this... by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 5, Informative

      "The current taser models override the voluntary muscle nerve impulses and cause the body to tense for the duration it's firing. Once it's off you're back to normal within a few seconds, with the exception of the adrenaline rush."

      Ummmmm... no.

      Tasers work by using electrical shocks to rapidly contract and release your muscles. This has the very short-term effect of making you lose voluntary control of those muscles, but it also depletes the ATP (your muscles' "fuel"). A half-second burst will make you twitch violently and go "Ow". A 1-2 second burst will daze your attacker. 3-2 seconds will cause loss of balance, disorientation, and will leave you "passive and confused" for several minutes.

      A decent taser jolt (or, say, 5 or so jolts in quick succession) will effectively empty your muscles of ATP - your muscles literally have no fuel to contract, so you simply can't move them. Once the tazing stops your body will begin to resupply ATP to the muscles faster than it's being used up... but you'll be weak, shaky and possibly incapable of walking or standing up for several minutes.

      "Almost everyone is able to get right back up if they choose to do so, especially if people are trying to pull them up from under the arms as it appears those officers were trying to do at one point in the video."

      You've obviously read simplified reports of what happens when someone is given a single half-second burst. This is not the case for longer or repeated bursts.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
    34. Re:Ask yourself this... by spge · · Score: 3, Informative

      That may well be the case but, as far as I can make out from the reports, this student was tasered in a different way from your acquaintance, without the electrodes being shot at him. I believe that the 'drive stun' option, where the taser is used to touch the target/victim, is less traumatic and is "like a punch". I can't say that I would find being punched by a police man five times would clam me down any, though.

    35. Re:Ask yourself this... by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Twat.

      Or, instead of shooting him they could have acted like:

      1. Adults with a functioning sense of empathy
      2. People employed as government servants to protect the people
      3. Agents of the government of a functioning democracy
      4. A group of half-a-dozen people trying to get one, smaller, nonviolent person to move

      And just left him there or carried him out peacefully.

      At what point does repeatedly tasing an unarmed civilian, already on the floor, constitute "reasonable force"?

      The key message here wasn't "we want you out of the library" - if that was the case they would have carried him - it was "you will submit and do what we say, or we will continue to cause you pain until you do".

      And that, my friend, is torture.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
    36. Re:Ask yourself this... by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "If you use a broad definition then maybe it is torture"

      Stop right there. Let's look at the definition of torture, shall we?

      Oh look - first definition: "Infliction of severe physical pain as a means of punishment or coercion"

      Severe physical pain? Check.
      Punishment for not voluntarily moving? Check.
      Coercion to move? Check?

      It is torture. Don't mince words and don't try to apologise. A foreign student was repeatedly tortured in front of a crowd of students by the police.

      Ok? Now, moving on:

      "but tasers do have valid uses in police work and are far more humane than the alternatives."

      The only sane "alternatives" in this case were to leave him there or carry him out.

      How is tazing someone "more humane" than these alternatives? Did you think about what you were saying at all before you posted?

      "If I'm wrong then feel free to tell me how a 120lb policewoman is going to stop a 250lb male mental patient from bashing her senseless simply because she looks like his mother."

      Sorry, again... where was the 250lb mental patient? All I saw was a gang of cops standing over a smaller, prone, single student, repeatedly giving him painful and debilitating electric shocks.

      Your post makes no fucking sense whatsoever.

      Nobody's saying tazers aren't more humane than shooting someone. Nobody's saying there aren't situations where police (or whoever) should be allowed to defend themselves. Where did you hallucinate these arguments from.

      All people are doing is expressing outrage that a groups of cops should stand over a single, smaller student and repeatedly torture him until he obeys their (questionable) instructions.

      What about this strikes you as a good thing? Then why are you introducing irrelevant straw-man apologies for it?

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
    37. Re:Ask yourself this... by Kijori · · Score: 4, Informative

      Except that he was on his way out when the campus police grabbed him. And they continued using force long after he was a threat, unless you count one handcuffed boy a threat to three police officers. This is like the guy that was handcuffed, put in the back of a cruiser, and then sprayed in the face with OC. The officer responsible, incidentally, was reinstated despite multiple witnesses testifying to a clear case of police brutality.

    38. Re:Ask yourself this... by niktemadur · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right on. I mean, what was the guy supposed to do? Drop everything, stand up straight, give a military salute and march on out? When ordinary students... no, make that citizens, have to instantaneously react and obey like corporals at the drop of a police hat, y'all are heading straight into a police state.

      Incidents like this become even more disturbing when you think that police officers are also prone to PTSD and itchy trigger fingers, and a considerable percentage of Iraq veterans with much worse cases of either/both will probably find their way into some sort of police force after their tour (or tours) of duty.

      --
      Lil' Thindime, lilting a lacrimose lament, krashes the kwaint konfines of Kokonino Kounty
    39. Re:Ask yourself this... by weave · · Score: 2, Informative

      Further, had the student had any sort of pre-existing medical condition

      The student did yell out "I have a medical condition" after the first shot.

    40. Re:Ask yourself this... by finkployd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, according to multiple reports, they also threatened a girl with a tazing who asked for their badge numbers.

      Not a single one of these men is fit to be a police officer, I daresay not a single one of them is fit to be a free man walking the streets. Clearly their abuse of power and violent attitude toward others is a danger to society. All of the "cops" involved deserve prison time.

      Finkployd

    41. Re:Ask yourself this... by epine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, in democratic society, guilt is determined by a court of law. By the second instance that the word criminal trips lovingly off your tongue, he's just an alleged miscreant who has directly harmed no person or property, who's sin against society is perhaps 50% greater than anyone who leaves a public restroom without washing their hands. On the other side of the coin, police on campus are permanently outnumbered by an I-think-I'm-clever hormone-fueled demongraphic just itching to stick it to authority. In the heat of the moment, sometimes the culturally engrained "show no sign of weakness" is carried an order of magnitude too far. Either way, the parent post displays no greater glee than making a bad situation worse, which is where the escalation begins in the first place.

    42. Re:Ask yourself this... by LooseIsNotLose · · Score: 2, Informative
      A foreign student was repeatedly tortured in front of a crowd of students by the police.

      Minor quibble, because otherwise I agree--this was an *American* student. He's of Iranian descent, but that doesn't make him foreign.

    43. Re:Ask yourself this... by GreyPoopon · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So, he got tazed 5 times because he was being a smart-ass?
      Yes, he did.

      Talking back is now a crime?
      No, it isn't. Anybody who has been around police officers know that even that best are very serious when they are on the job, and if you make them feel like they aren't in control of the situation, they will react. There are two times when you don't "talk back". The first is around the arresting officers, and the second is around the judge.

      In your world the only thing that is allowed is silent obedience? You will make a nice sheep. See you at the death camp, fool.
      Actually, I'm just a bit wiser than the student in the video. I don't believe in silent obedience, but I do believe in picking the time and place for the battle. Now, if this student was out to prove that the police are out of control, he will probably be successful, and he just endured what was necessary to make his point. Otherwise, he was just being an idiot. What rationale would he have for refusing the leave the first time he was asked (before the police came)? What was he out to prove? What did he hope to achieve by shouting some nonsense about the patriot act? This kind of stuff happened long before the patriot act, except that victims were beat within an inch of their life by the police. All he achieved by shouting that nonsense to was to prove that either he didn't know what the patriot act was all about, or that he is a political dissident and should be watched closely for the rest of his life (and he most likely will). Probably none of this is true, but that is exactly how it would have come across.
      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    44. Re:Ask yourself this... by olddoc · · Score: 2

      Dialling emergency services and saying "Three men impersonating police officers are attacking a student" because quite frankly, that's what it looks like.

      That's a great idea. I'd specifically request State Police be called.

      --
      Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
    45. Re:Ask yourself this... by intheshelter · · Score: 2, Informative

      You don't see police brutality? There was absolutely NO reason for them to user a taser on him. By every account I've read he simply went limp and offered passive resistance. Shouting is not a reason to use a taser. Besides, your argument that he might "run, shoot, attack, beserk (is that a verb I'm not aware of), maim, etc." is ridiculous. HE WAS ALREADY HANDCUFFED!! And as for your "Protect a total stranger who has refused to show ID and refused to leave ". He shouldn't have to show an ID unless he is doing something wrong. They approached him and asked him for an ID for no reason. I don't see he is under an obligation to show an ID. And, he did not refuse to leave. He was walking out when the police arrived. They could have let him walk out. There was no reason to detain him, no reason to use a taser on him. "I was more afraid for the cops". Give me a break, they kid was in handcuffs. Your arguments aren't even credible. We have GOT to rise up and take back this nation. I really wish those kids would have rushed the cops. I'm tired of cops having carte blanche to treat people like shit. 50 bucks says the cops get off scott-free. I'll bet the kid gets some money, and he deserves it, but that is still not justice. Those cops should be fired and put in jail themselves.

    46. Re:Ask yourself this... by Johnny5000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      using the common civil disobedience protest tactic of "de-arresting" someone. You get everyone in the immediate area to put their arms around his body and don't let go, and just drag him away.

      That's a good idea, but it's hard enough to pull off with proper planning and a dedicated group of people in support. I doubt a bunch of strangers in a library could band together and pull it off spontaneously.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    47. Re:Ask yourself this... by rho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The ID check was common, posted policy. The proper response is, "I'm sorry, I forgot my card. I'll go back to my dorm and get it." They escort you out, you wish them a good night, and you move on.

      I was in college 15 years ago. I couldn't go anywhere or do hardly anything without my university ID. How did this kid not have his on him in this day and age? Hell, I couldn't get back into my dorm without my ID.

      Also, the way I understand it, the first people on the scene were Community Service Officers. These are basically students. This guy got mouthy with other students, not cops. The security officers came later when he refused to comply. I can't relate to his plight at all, but then I don't find acting like a twat to make a vague and irrational political point worthwhile. Hey, UCSD, this incident had nothing to do with the Patriot Act. Good job on educating him!

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    48. Re:Ask yourself this... by spyrochaete · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The video starts well after the incident begun. There is nothing clear about the intent of anyone in this video as it only shows the aftermath.

      I read the account of a student who was there in the library that day and he said this student is a well known troublemaker and a loudmouth. That 24-hour student library had been the scene of repeated unpleasantness so the school enacted a policy requiring students to show ID after 11pm. Their presence wasn't logged - the ID was shown at the door to ensure that only students were admitted to the all-hours facility. Campus security - fellow students - asked this guy nicely to show his ID but he refused. They warned him that he would not be permitted to stay if he didn't show his ID but he still refused. They asked him to leave but he refused. Security called the campus cops who picked up where this guy's peers gave up. I don't know what happened between the cops arriving and this guy screaming at the top of his lungs, but that's where the video starts.

      Is it likely that this student would leave peaceably after all that defiance? Just because he says he was walking out, doesn't mean he really was. I'm all for freedom of anonymity but I've worked as a teacher assistant and lab monitor and I know first hand how important it is to maintain order in public (for registered students) study areas. If there were unpleasant or violent past occurrences with non-students in one of my jurisdictions I'd be pretty quick to enact some kind of students-only policy myself. Anyone who was willing to discuss the matter quietly would be welcome to do so in that area, but if they raised their voice I'd have them ejected immediately.

      In the end, a university is private property and whoever attends has the option to comply with the landlord's policies or take their business elsewhere. This kid will sue the university, sue the cops, and lose. From the data I've seen on the topic this kid appears to be a rebel without a cause.

    49. Re:Ask yourself this... by TheGreek · · Score: 2, Informative
      Perhaps you forgot, but police don't convict people, only arrest them. Whether he would have been found guilty for trespassing in an area where he was allowed to be (he just didn't have his ID on him - "comrade, show us your papers or prepare to be tased!") is debatable, to say the least.
      That's great. That "comrade" thing was real classy, too.

      The only problem with your argument is that the library staff asked him for his ID. Upon his refusal to produce it, they asked him to leave. He became a trespasser prima facie the second he refused their request that he leave. It was at this point that UCPD was called and not before.

      From California's definition of Trespass (California Penal Code, Section 602):

      (o) Refusing or failing to leave land, real property, or structures belonging to or lawfully occupied by another and not open to the general public, upon being requested to leave by (1) a peace officer at the request of the owner, the owner's agent, or the person in lawful possession, and upon being informed by the peace officer that he or she is acting at the request of the owner, the owner's agent, or the person in lawful possession, or (2) the owner, the owner's agent, or the person in lawful possession. The owner, the owner's agent, or the person in lawful possession shall make a separate request to the peace officer on each occasion when the peace officer's assistance in dealing with a trespass is requested.
      The library wasn't "open to the general public" when the complaint was made. I'm also pretty sure that the library has policies that allow the staff to eject jackasses like this guy. Absent any evidence--at the time--that he was entitled to be there, he was trespassing.
    50. Re:Ask yourself this... by intheshelter · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Your version of events does not resemble every other description I've seen. Every version I have read says that the student was leaving when the police arrived and then they would not let him leave. Second, his resistance was PASSIVE. He was handcuffed when he was tasered and he was only offering passive resistance. That is NOT an excuse to torture someone with electrical shock.

      He may have deserved to be arrested. He did not deserved to be brutalized unnecessarily after he had already been placed in custody and shackled with handcuffs.

      Are YOU noticing a trend here? 99% of the people appear to think it was unnecessary. That's because it was unnecessary. The police should be fired, put on trial for torture (yes, torture) and police brutality, and they should go to jail.

    51. Re:Ask yourself this... by rizzo420 · · Score: 2, Informative

      i think you're a bit confused. according to every account of this incident that i've read, he was in the process of leaving when the police arrived. it sounded like the library people did not really ask him to leave only asked for his ID and when he didn't show it, they called the police, even if he started packing up his things. when the police came, they tried to handcuff him and he said that he was leaving (is it a crime to leave a building that he's allowed to use?).

      they taser him, he falls, yells "i have a medical condition" and they start yelling at him to get up and go with them. meanwhile, they threaten other people who are watching that they will also be tasered. the kid yells something about the patriot act and abuse of power (which it was). he still is having a hard time getting up (although he's not fighting the police, just laying there, hardly resisting). they taser him again. he falls and screams and calls the cops "mother fuckers" (which they probably are). they yell at him to get up right after they stop (meanwhile this kid is in a TON of pain, and if he does, in fact, have a medical condition, he's probably not feeling so hot). they drag him a little more and taser him a third time because he's not getting up.

      now for the icing on the cake, the chancellor of the university basically said that the cops did what they were supposed to, protecting the workers of the library from people who don't carry their student ID on them.

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    52. Re:Ask yourself this... by epiphani · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree that the kid was a dipshit, and quite deserved to be arrested.

      However, I do NOT agree that tasering him five times, using it as motivation of all things, is appropriate. A taser should be used as an alternative to a club or a gun. If he was physically resisting, taser him once, get the cuffs on him, and drag his sorry ass out of the building. There is absolutely no excuse to taser someone five times because they refuse to move.

      He already had the cuffs on, and was laying on the ground.

      A taser is not a motivational tool.

      --
      .
    53. Re:Ask yourself this... by intheshelter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Okay, lets say that all you said was true about the video starting late. They still tortured someone in handcuffs. He was NOT a threat. Was the justification for that covered in your lab monitor handbook?

    54. Re:Ask yourself this... by glockenspieler · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are touching on an important point. Many of the comments here have suggested something to the effect that "he got what he deserved." It is a fundemental principle of our criminal justice system that the police do not mete out punishment, the courts do. The police's job is to contain a situation, detain suspects, and allow the courts to determine and administer punishment.

      The instant that you look to the police to *punish* people is the moment that you move into the realm of repression. I think that this is the fundemental point and understanding this does not require one to be sympathetic to the student or to the police.

    55. Re:Ask yourself this... by Sancho · · Score: 4, Informative

      You put quite the slant/bias on this post:

      Also, notice how this idiot cop doesn't tell her she's under arrest. He just YELLS at her to get out of the car, then fires.

      First he orders her to step out of the vehicle and then to put the phone down. Then he tells her to put the phone down again. Then he opens the door and grabs her, which she resists. She starts screaming. (Note: so far, the officer has not yelled).

      The policeman draws his gun and orders her out of the car. At this point, he has raised his voice and might be considered to be 'yelling' (after several lawful attempts to get her to step out of the car). He tells her twice more to get out of the car, and says that he will taze her if she does not comply. Once more (3) he tells her to get out of the car. She refuses, he tazes.

      That covers the first 40 seconds of the video. Can you see how that is different from your account? Can you see how you've created a bias in readers who don't go look at the video? This is exactly what radio talk show journalists do, it's exactly what Microsoft does, it's exactly the orwellian doublespeak that people rant about so much on Slashdot, only this time it's got a liberal slant instead of a commercial one. Regardless of the reasonablity of using the taser on this woman (and after resisting several lawful orders while being in a car where weapons can be easily hidden, I'm not sure the initial taze was unjustified), you have created a bias before anyone even clicks your link by implying that the officer didn't even give her a chance to exit the vehicle, or that he only asked her once and waited (who knows how long) before playing with his toy.

      Try to look at things objectively, even when they're very emotional. Try to be rational. Knee-jerk reactions are a pretty big problem these days, and it's up to everyone to remain calm and level-headed when examining a situation like this.

    56. Re:Ask yourself this... by Aadain2001 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You know, I forgot my wallet one day last week. I never forget my wallet, it has all my most important items (ID, credit card, cash, etc). But I still forgot it one morning on my way out the door to work. If a cop had pulled me over, I would have been in a huge pile of trouble, simply for driving without my ID. Now I believe that most people are honest, decent people, which includes your average police officer. There could have been a chance that if I calmly explained that I forgot my wallet he could have let me off with just a warning. But I'm also white and dressed in casual business attire, so that could influence the way people deal with me. Now imagine that instead of being white, I was Black or Arab. Do you think I would get the same warning or would I get the ticket? I don't know, it's hard to predict peoples' behavior. But stories like this make me think that a minority would not be given much leniency by the police. Now add in someone who is late to work and maybe a bit belligerent to authority figures, and there would be a damn good chance of not only getting the ticket, but getting arrested and thrown in jail for most of the day. All because I/they forgot their wallet one time.

      My point? People can forget things, even very important items such as IDs. Not everyone has had good experiences with police/authority figures, and that clouds their interactions with them in the future. Did he deserve that first tazzing? I don't know, I wasn't there. But I and anyone who understand what a tazzer does knows that tazzing him 4 more times for not getting up after the first tazzing is just idiotic and crossed the line into police brutality. I hope those cops are fired and get slapped with both a federal crime charge and a lawsuit from the student. He could have been nicer, but they basically tortured him and should suffer the consequences of their actions.

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    57. Re:Ask yourself this... by TheGreek · · Score: 2, Informative
      It's kind of hard to be tresspassing on public property if you are in a common use area of the property unless it is after established hours of business.
      I'll just let UCLA speak for itself here:

      UCPD officers became involved after they were asked for help by a community service officer - or CSO -- employed by the library. This is typically the next step in such a situation, since the UCPD officers and our CSOs - which number 123 and are mostly students -- work collaboratively and routinely without incident. A person identified after the incident as a student was repeatedly refusing to comply with the requirement that he show an ID in the library after 11 p.m.

      Showing an ID after 11 p.m. is a longstanding university policy to ensure the safety of all students. It is so routine that many of the students place their IDs on the table next to them so as not to be disturbed.

      The student was clearly told by both the community service officer and, subsequently, the UCPD that if he refused to show his ID, he would have to leave the library.

      When he continued to refuse to do so, officers attempted to escort him out. At this point, the student went limp and, at the same time, encouraged other library patrons to join in his resistance.

      These actions created an urgent situation in which the officers deemed it necessary to touch the student with a Taser that was set in its "drive stun" capacity in order to gain compliance. He was touched -- not "shot" -- with a Taser, which conveyed an electric current.

      He was subsequently arrested for resisting or obstructing a police officer, a misdemeanor. He was released with a citation and issued a court date. The incident is under investigation, and our case will be presented to the City Attorney.

      Not all the events Tuesday night can be heard or viewed on YouTube. Only a complete investigation will tell the whole story. I know we're all looking forward to learning exactly what occurred.

      All use of force incidents require an administrative review of the officers' actions by the department, which is also underway.

      While I am confident of our ability to perform a fair and thorough investigation, I am also cognizant of the need for a transparent review. Therefore, I have recommended to Chancellor Abrams that he appoint an independent investigator to look into the incident.
    58. Re:Ask yourself this... by Niten · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, if I remember correctly, that particular video in which the police officer Tasers said woman out of her car actually became part of a set of training videos intended to demonstrate appropriate behavior for new officers. And there's a good reason for that.

      First of all, this part of the video only catches the tail end of this woman's interaction with the officers. She was originally pulled over by the first officer who, after talking with her for some time and finding her completely uncooperative, called for backup. In response, the woman in the SUV then got on her telephone and tried to summon an acquaintance to come join in on the altercation, a possibility that the officers were rightfully unwilling to allow to unfold.

      So she was already being uncooperative (belligerent, in fact) and, on top of that, she was at the wheel of a (IIRC) still-running vehicle. There have been too many incidents in which a police officer, attempting to extract an uncooperative suspect from a vehicle, has been dragged to the ground and injured when the driver decided to hit the gas; according to the accompanying commentary from the training video, which I can't find at the moment, using the Taser was the best way to remove her from the car while avoiding undue injury to either the suspect or the officer. I agree.

      In this particular case, that woman definitely got what she deserved.

    59. Re:Ask yourself this... by Vellmont · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It completely sickens and disgusts me that people think that tazing someone 5 times that's immobile on the ground for "not standing up" is somehow justified by the fact that he's a jerk and troublemaker.

      --
      AccountKiller
    60. Re:Ask yourself this... by Apocalypse111 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Regardless of the situation beforehand, the treatment he recieved by the arresting officers was totally unwarranted. I don't care if he just got done burning down an orphanage, its not the job of police to meet out punishment - that's for a judge and/or jury. Was the guy being tasered a douche-bag? Probably. That's no excuse for tasering him repeatedly while he is both handcuffed and on the floor, offering no active resistance. That kind of behavior has a word to describe it - torture. The officer's didn't even attempt to just talk him into leaving, which is the first responce any officer should try. The first thing they did, by all accounts, was grab him by the arm - any physical contact is an escalation to physical force, which is a line that officers usually only cross with good reason. Not so in this case, however. Then followed the taser hits. The student yelled and screamed, and thrashed as he was being tasered, but did he resist physically? No, he was either unable to move or he went limp. During the arrest process, nothing this guy did necessitated the actions the police took. Whatever the situation was before the video, and whatever the student's crime, he would have valid grounds to sue the police for brutality as well.

      --
      There is no mod option "-1: Disagree" for a reason. "Overrated" is not an acceptable substitute. Post something instead.
    61. Re:Ask yourself this... by NoTheory · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Alright i'll be more specific. (and skip to the bottom if you already understand bayes rule)

      Here's bayes rule: P(A|B) = P(B|A)P(A)/P(B)

      Bayes rule gives you the likelihood that A is true, if B is true. It does this by asking what's the probability that B is true, if A is true, assessing what the likelihood of A is, and finally putting that in context of the probability of B.

      So lets make this more concrete. We want to know what's the probability of a person being a terrorist if they are a Muslim, or in other words what is P(Terrorist|Muslim).

      So Bayes rule says this question is equivalent to asking, what the likelihood that a person is muslim if they are a terrorist P(Muslim|Terrorist), and what the probability of a person being a terrorist is, or P(Terrorist), and then whether this matters given the number of muslims out in the world P(muslim)

      P(Terrorist|Muslim) = P(Muslim|Terrorist) * P(Terrorist) / P(Muslim)

      First, a comment. A lot of people assume that P(Terrorist|Muslim) = P(Muslim|Terrorist) is true. It is not. The fact that some terrorists are muslims, does not make all muslims terrorists, or even that it's more likely that most muslims are terrorists.

      So, now, given any human, we first evaluate whether our random human is a muslim (i.e. P(Muslim)). The likelihood is high (i'm not saying it's near 1 or whatever, but it's a big number statistically, naively we'll assume that it's 1/3 for the sake of argument).

      So, now pick a number for the likelihood that our random person is a terrorist (i.e. P(Terrorist)). This number is going to be low. The fact of the matter is that there are like >10 billion people on earth, and only a small number of them are psychopathic lunatics who want to send messages to others by killing people. Even if you want to say that there are currently a million terrorists out in the world, the probability that any individual is a terrorist would be 0.0001 (pretty small).

      So that puts us at P(Terrorist|Muslim) = P(Muslim|Terrorist) * 0.0001 / 0.33

      It's not all that important how many terrorists are Muslims (i.e. P(Muslim|Terrorist)), because even if ALL terrorists are Muslims (i.e. P(Muslim|Terrorist) = 1), the probability of a Muslim being a terrorist is 0.00030303030303 (i.e. not very fucking likely). And since P(Muslim|Terrorist) is definitely significantly under 1, it's even less relevant to know whether a person is a muslim, if you're trying to identify whether they're a terrorist or not.

      If you want to find terrorists, you do in fact need to find better indicators which correlate more strongly between the population with that indicator, and being a terrorist. And what i've been saying is that those indicators are not things that a border guard, or a TSA agent is going to be able to find out quickly, with the small amount of time they have with each individual they inspect. This is why immigration requests take months to process. So your implication is correct, i think that law enforcement is not capable of making quick accurate judgements, and that furthermore, quick judgements that they make are going to be inaccurate to the point of ineffectiveness, or counter-productiveness. And just to jump back to your bandana example, lets substitute cars instead. If crimes keep being committed using cars, you're sort of SOL, because everyone uses cars. It may be a common thread, but it's totally irrelevant because there are way too many cars out there. Race is just the same way. It will never be an effective indicator, because there are way too many people with that characteristic, you may as well ignore it. (Also i still do not acknowledge race as anything but an anachronistic fiction made up to divide people)

      So, to sum up the nasty mess above, most people don't understand statistics. Most people don't understand the amount of information you need to be able to make good statistical judgements. Most people don't have access to the sort of informat

      --
      There are lives at stake here!
    62. Re:Ask yourself this... by NoTheory · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sorry, i should be more clear. If a tool has a fatal flaw, all you need to demonstrate the flaw, is that it behaves contrary to its purpose, or that it does no better than randomly guessing. To demonstrate that it behaves contrary to its stated purpose, you only need a single case. To indicate that it doesn't do any better than randomly guessing, then you do need a battery of test cases. In the case i make above, i take the second path. However, that still doesn't invalidate the possibility of the former.

      --
      There are lives at stake here!
    63. Re:Ask yourself this... by dedeman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or, instead of taking a rather small snippet of the encounter, you could show the much longer version of the video which depicts the office being calm, courteous, and giving the suspect much more leeway then she probabaly deserved.

      Shown here http://www.youtube.com/watch?search=&mode=related& v=SGaWDL7ofLQ

      But you'd rather give an editorial, with little evidence that the suspect may have done something which would prompt this "idiot cop" to taze her.

      I hope you realize that law enforcement works a bit differently here then across the pond. Would an english driver give a constable this much trouble? Hopefully not.

    64. Re:Ask yourself this... by Blue+Stone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Y'know that thing that got me?

      All the people standing around doing absolutely nothing, while a fellow human was being tortured by a bunch of thugs.

      How well people have been trained to remain docile and compliant while 'authority' inflicts abuse and brutality on us.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
  2. Sick by twifosp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This was pretty sick. If you get hit by a tazer it's pretty impossible to stand up for at least a few minutes. That's the entire point of a tazer. They could have just handcuffed him and carried him out. I hope these "officers" go to jail.

    1. Re:Sick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Every once in awhile they taser somebody two or three times and he doesn't go down.
      People react differently to things, shock!

      The guy was clearly looking for trouble - is it so surprising he found it?
      She clearly asking for it by dressing revealingly - is it so surprising she got raped? I don't think anyone should get prosecuted or charged for this.
    2. Re:Sick by ildon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If anyone other than myself had actually read any articles about this, you'd know that the library had instituted a policy of randomly asking people for their student ID's after 11 PM because of a history of sexual assaults within the library at night.

  3. bzzt by Zashi · · Score: 2, Funny

    Tagged "bzzzt" for over zealous use of tasers.

    Haha, those coppers sure love them tasers. Nothing like zapping a victim with 50 kilovolts of nerve incapacitating love.

    --
    Skiffy is Spiffy, but Ort is tort.
  4. Wow by Macadoshis · · Score: 5, Funny
    After watching that video I'm shocked.

    /duck

  5. Catching the argument... by Loopy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...between him and the police at the very end where it's "time to go" is supposed to prove what, again? Context, people. Context.

    1. Re:Catching the argument... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I will say about this what I said about Rodney King: there is nothing that could have happened before the camera started rolling that could justify what those cops did. I don't care if this guy was Hannibal Lecter; once a suspect is incapacitated, further use of this kind of force is torture, not restraint.

      Now there will no doubt be a flood of whining along the lines of, "Oh cops have such a tough job, and they deal with scumbags all day, and you just don't understaaaand!" Whatever. About, oh, fifteen years ago it was my job to render medical care to a group of people who had quite actively been trying to kill me a little while before, and who would have kept trying if they'd had the chance. And I did it, no tasers or billy clubs or attack dogs or waterboarding required. Which is why, whether it's happening halfway around the world at Abu Ghraib or right here at home in America, I have no trouble saying: fuck this shit. The people who do such things to prisoners aren't cops, or soldiers, or any kind of public servant. They're criminals, and because of their abuse of power, should be treated even more harshly than we treat serial killers, pedophiles, and other such scum.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    2. Re:Catching the argument... by MSG · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's supposed to prove that the police committed a gross abuse of their power. Tasers aren't equipment for "correcting" the uncoperative, they're intended to incapacitate dangerous persons without the use of deadly force. There was no reason to use a taser on that student.

    3. Re:Catching the argument... by spasm · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Regardless of whether the cops were responding appropriately by tasering him or not (and, as you point out, we're missing the first half of the interaction), the fact the cops refused to provide names and badge numbers to onlookers on request tells you either a) the cops believed they were doing something wrong; or b) the cops believed they did not need to be accountable. Either of those is a huge problem, independent of the justifiability of the initial tasering.

  6. Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by SRA8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I keep hearing people complaining "if he had just listened" or "all he had to do was get up." But seriously, think about it -- should he really have been tased repeatedly or simply arrested?
    1. After being shocked repeatedly, could he even have been ABLE to "just" stand up?
    2. After being shocked repeatedly, would be have been in a mental state to understand the cops' commands?
    3. He was on the floor. An irritating act, but something deserving electrocution?
    4. What if someone asks for a warrant, should they also get electrocuted. After all "all he had to do was let them search."

    Put simply, this was WRONG. The kid deserves to be arrested, NOT electrocuted. To those of you who say "tasing is non-lethal," well, i dare you to do it to yourself. Post a video on YouTube to prove it.

    1. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by breadboy21 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The term electrocution cannot be used except to refer to death by electric shock. Non-fatal shocking is not electrocution.

    2. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by couchslug · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Many PDs require that officers authorized to use Tasers submit to a stun. Some even volonteer for a sustained jolt:

      http://www.orrville.com/OPD/Training%20Taser.htm

      "i dare you to do it to yourself."

      http://www.orrville.com/OPD/Training%20Taser%20Vid eos.htm

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    3. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Informative

      After being shocked, Yes he could well be able to stand - after all, he was more than lucid enough to verbally harrass the officers around him complaining about the patriot act...

      Part of the problem is if he refuses to get up, you cannot drag him to arrest him - he must stand so he can be removed. What we cannot see in the video was how much the person may or may not have resisted being pulled to his feet to take him away, he could well have been twisting pretty wildly.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    4. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by quantaman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Next time try reading the ENTIRE story. You'll find out why he was shocked repeatedly. If he hadn't been such a jackass in the first place the cops would have never even been involved. You idiots seem to think that cops go around randomly tazoring foreign-looking people.

      Maybe he was in the wrong. Maybe he was looking for an excuse to feel persecuted. Maybe he was looking for a fight. But the last thing the police should be looking to do is to give him that fight.

      The job of police is to maintain order and diffuse tense situations, force is something that should be used as a last resort and not something to be applied at the earliest opportunity.

      p.s. The reaction of the crowd told me that not only did none of them consider him a threat but that the police actions were only serving to increase the risk of violence by driving the crowd of students to physically intervene to stop the police.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    5. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by metlin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know, being "brown", I so very often get treated differently that it stopped being funny a long, long time ago. And the attitude of the so-called public servants to folks that look "ethnic" is sometimes disgusting. You'd have to be one to understand, I guess.

      Immaterial of the ethnicity, what the cops did was wrong -- you are in a position of power. If the kid was being a jerk, use more people to restrain him. Tazing someone should be reserved when the victim presents a threat (i.e. having a weapon).

      This was brutality, plain and simple. The folks who did this should be in prison for life.

    6. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by nuklearfusion · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I suppose the cops should have just backed down and left the library, when confronted with the force of spoiled adolescent anger. Boo hoo, the cops won't let the college kids riot. Here's a really scary thought: some day this group of "oppressed" kids are going to be applying for jobs at major corporations.

      where was the kid a danger to anyone? after he is on the ground, the worst that can be said of the guy is that he used passive resistance and abusive language when tased. this hardly justifies the use of a taser. I am not (and i dont think that anyone in the board is either) suggesting that the cops leave, i am suggesting that they should act like civilized people. escort the man out, and let him yell. there is no harm in someone yelling things. once the guy in is on the floor, there is definitely no need for further use of the taser. simply drag him out.
      --

      There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots.

    7. Re:Why He Should Not Have Been Tased by gordo3000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree the cops here were out of line, but to say that that is the number one philosophy among cops does many good police officers a disservice. just as it is wrong to bucket all Arab/Persian/brown skinned foreigners as terrorists, its equally wrong to say most cops are just out to physically confront people.

      but I'm only speaking from my personal experience with my local police officers and that is another limited view. so maybe its equally wrong for me to form my conclusions on that basis.

  7. Two sides to every story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    first hand account
    Yes, I was indeed at Powell Library at approximately 11:30 on Tuesday night, and yes I did see the entire event as it went down.

    Let me start off by saying that the guy DEFINITELY was asking to get his ass kicked. He was being extremely rude with the campus patrol guys (who are college students...this was before the real UCPD got called in). He was not complying with their requests to leave the premises, and he was definitely itching for a fight. I actually know the guy and a few of his friends, and I can tell you that he's the kind of guy that loves to make trouble.

    Just as a little backstory, one of the quotes the guy has on his facebook (which he now has taken down) was "I like to find the most difficult solutions to the simplest of problems".

    He definitely taunted the UCPD into behaving the way they did with him.

    1. Re:Two sides to every story by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I like to find the most difficult solutions to the simplest of problems.

      This might've been taken out of context from the web page, but I actually agree with this since the most difficult solution provides the most opportunity to learn something new for the most simplest problem. Too often too many college students take the easiest way out instead of busting their ass to find alternative solutions. Sometimes that hurts.

    2. Re:Two sides to every story by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is a cop's job to deal professionally (which includes not using excessive force) with people who are causing trouble. If they can't do it without going apeshit on the guy, they shouldn't be cops.

      A civilian who reacted like this to somebody taunting him, arguing with him, whatever, would be headed to prison for aggravated assault. Cops, because of their position of power, should face even harsher penalties for such behavior.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    3. Re:Two sides to every story by _iris · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That matters not, my friend. Police are trained, for good reason, to detain someone with the least force necessary. Anything beyond is police brutality. Part of being a police officer is being able to withstand taunting (and much worse) without losing your composure and being able to follow the official protocols for detaining someone. I could not be a police officer. If I was a police officer and I had to witness some of the things they have to, I would probably punish the suspects outside the system, to put it gently. Police are professionals precisely because we need enforcers who can deal with precisely these situations without brutalizing anyone, even if the suspect wants to be brutalized.

    4. Re:Two sides to every story by identity0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sorry, but I think the term "Philosophy student" in the summary says it all.

      Keep in mind, that "I like to find the most difficult solutions to the simplest of problems" and "he's the kind of guy that loves to make trouble" are not the same thing as being a violent person. In fact, this is exactly the kind of mindset you'd expect from a philosophy major with an interest in the philosophy of non-violent resistance and individual rights.

      A real criminal doesn't refuse to show ID and stand his ground with the cops, they would get the hell out of there before it escalates. Making a scene like that is exactly the kind of thing a libertarian with an attitude or a leftie into protest politics does. Remember that guy who went to the Supreme Court over not showing cops his drivers licence? I bet this guy also had his ID in his pocket, he just wanted to make a point about requiring it.

      That "he urged others to join his resistance and a crowd began to gather" (from the ABC story) sounds like he was trying to make a political point. That he knew to "fall limp to the floor" also seems to indicate he was at least aware of non-violent protest tactics. His middle eastern ethnicity and Bahai faith probably make him extra-sensitive to issues of profiling and discrimination, too.

      That he was being a self-righteous asshole is just another indication that he's not a criminal and is instead an intellectual who was expecting an argument or debate - instead, he got some muscle-bound cop who thought insolence and disobedience had to be met by force.

      So congratulations, Campus Cops - you found the least dangerous, most-likely-to-sue-over-civil-rights student in the library and tasered him in front of a crowd with cameras. Great job.

  8. Re:Hahh!! by scum-e-bag · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is why google bought youtube... they bought it for the power of its media distribution...

    --
    Does it go on forever?
  9. Panopticon becomes reality by m0nkyman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nice to see that the introduction of street corner cameras is being matched by our ability to watch them.

    --
    ~ a low user id is no indication I have a clue what I'm talking about.
  10. Re:Say it's a fake by Doomstalk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A) You don't need "beyond reasonable doubt" in a civil suit. B) There were a couple dozen witnesses on the scene, most of whom appeared angry enough to testify in court. C) You get clear views of several of the officers' faces. D) The officers' voices can probably be identified.

    On a side note, it'll be interesting to see how the officers justify their refusal to give their badge numbers (which was reportedly followed up with a threat to the person who asked). It makes it appear that they knew what they did was an excessive use of force, and were trying to hide their identities. That will look EXTREMELY bad to a judge and/or jury.

  11. Re:Got what he deserved by DwarfGoanna · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Say what you want about this kid's motives or lack of discretion, but the thing that struck me while watching this was that nonviolent protest (poorly represented or not) is truly dead in America. The widespread and almost casual use of "non-lethals" in these situations clearly goes beyond their intended purpose. Well...ostensibly intended, anyway.

    --

    "You know why you do not see me styling wit my homies? Because I have no homies!!" -Mojo Jojo

  12. Since Im out of mod points... by tempest69 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Sure the kid got some attention, and may have been a bit of a jerk in the process. I could care less. The problem lies with the fact that with four officers around, and a non-violent suspect of a non-violent offense decided that tazering the guy would be the appropriate measure. One officer could have easily placed the "suspect" under arrest with simple handcuffs without a wrestling match, as the "suspect" was simply going limp. But in their wisdom they decided that getting him to comply via shock was the correct procedure.

    Four Officers... one kid come on.. They could have talked this kid into the handcuffs, while he was a jerk he wasnt exactly a threat.

    Sorry the police are here to serve and protect, their actions are the actions of thugs who enjoy weilding power. So while I might not be deeply sorry for the kid, I am deeply ashamed of the actions of the law enforcement officials.

    Storm

  13. Bystanders by lspd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What's up with all the sheeple standing around watching? It's shameful that such a large crowd was too timid to stop the police from doing something so obviously wrong. What exactly would it take to get the crowd to intervene?

    1. Re:Bystanders by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 2, Informative

      They did try, didn't you hear them saying "officer, I want your name and badge number". There were claims I read that students asking for that were threatened with arrest. If they'd rushed the police, there could have been deaths - the crowd handled it as best they could, short of calling for backup themselves, or chanting something to get the police to feel intimidated and back off temporarily.

    2. Re:Bystanders by heli0 · · Score: 2, Informative
      What's up with all the sheeple standing around watching?


      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bystander_effect
      --
      Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
    3. Re:Bystanders by macrom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Laws that allow a crowd to intervene, maybe? I dunno about you, but I wouldn't want to go to jail for assaulting an officer. And whether or not you think it would be justified doesn't matter. AFAIK citizens aren't allowed to directly intervene in the affairs of a police officer. That's what the courts are for.

  14. surveillance society by bcrowell · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The words "surveillance society" scare a lot of people, but I would actually love to live in a surveillance society that worked the way this event worked out: the surveillance is carried out by individuals, in a public place, voluntarily, and all they're doing is recording something that they saw with their own eyeballs anyway.

    Similarly, I would love to see photo red light reimplemented so that if other drivers saw you run a red light, they could slap a button on their dashboards, and the video would be posted on you-tube. Hell, we wouldn't even need a DMV anymore. Insurance companies would just hire people to watch traffic videos, and log patterns of stupid behavior by certain individuals. The insurance companies would then refuse to offer insurance to those people.

    I'm a teacher, and over the past 10 years of teaching, I've had the following experiences: (1) a student gets upset and disrupts my class for 10 minutes (10 minutes is a long time); (2) a homophobic student harasses a gay student while I'm out of the room; (3) a student attacks me in the hall, throws me in some bushes, and threatens to kill me. In all three cases, I would have loved to have the whole thing recorded on you-tube, because significant disagreements arose later about what really happened. In incident #2, in fact, a room full of students were unable to identify the harasser, and it turned out that it was more of a two-way thing than the initial witnesses (the gay student's friends) had claimed. A room full of witnesses is nice, but a video is a lot nicer.

    The good or bad effects of this kind of technology depend a lot on who uses the technology. It's like guns. Guns in the hands of Nazis stormtroopers: bad. Guns in the hands of individuals: good.

  15. Why didn't anyone help? by Slipgrid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There was 60+ students standing around. If you ever see something like this happening, and you don't help, then you are just as bad as the police were in this case.

    1. Re:Why didn't anyone help? by TrappedByMyself · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There was 60+ students standing around. If you ever see something like this happening, and you don't help, then you are just as bad as the police were in this case.

      It was non-lethal force. If someone were to "help", then that allows the cops to use lethal force to protect themselves. Bad idea.
      The students did the best thing by watching and videoing the thing. We need to keep civility and let law enforcement do their job. If you disagree, then the courtroom and legislation are your tools to try and fix the problem.

      Now...if the cops were causing permanent harm to the guy AND the guy posed no danger to anyone, then helping is justified and should be expected.

      --

      Help me take back Slashdot. When did 'News for Nerds' become 'FUD and Conspiracy Theories for Extremist Nutjobs'?
    2. Re:Why didn't anyone help? by clickclickdrone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The awful truth is that in the 60's students knew that intervening would be a bit of a beating and a night in the cells. In todays climate, intervening in police business would put you on a track that would pretty much finish any chance you have of a life/career/future.

      --
      I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
  16. abuse of power? I don't agree. by Essequemodeia · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A UCLA student and a member of the crowd that witnessed this event posted his reaction on a board that I moderate, www.blogwars.com. Forgive the reference, but the tally of the first-handers who witnessed this event points toward the victim being a gigantic jackass, refusing to show his ID and not cooperating with campus police. When I was in college being asked for my student ID was never a protestable offense. In order to get into my dorm, enter the student recreation center, the campus gym, a football or basketball game, etc... we had to pony up our student IDs. If the police have to deal with an angry, shouting person who won't identify themself, show ID, or cooperate... what are they left to do?

  17. Re:Got what he deserved by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The widespread and almost casual use of "non-lethals" in these situations clearly goes beyond their intended purpose.

    Nonlethals have just become a substitute for good police work.

    The number one test of a good officer is how well he (or she) can solve a problem without resorting to the use of force. If he can look someone in the eye, figure out what is going through that person's head, and assert the authority or voice the reasoning necessary to get compliance with a lawful request, he has done his job properly. Resorting to force to compel behavior is already a kind of failure. Of course there are some people out there who are just hell-bent on harming others - that's why the option of force exists - but clearly that's not what Tabatabainejad was about.

    And resorting to force to compel behavior when the person in question is not being violent and is causing no harm to anyone, well, that's beyond failure as an officer, that's failure as a human being.

    The officers who did this are a far greater threat to safety on the UCLA campus than that student would ever be. I do hope the university administration recognizes this and responds accordingly. If they do not, then we must seriously question the administration's commitment to protecting their students.

    --
    "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
  18. Re:Got what he deserved by aitikin · · Score: 3, Informative

    I really shouldn't even bother, but here goes:

    First of all, how many people do you know that first of all would go through the trouble of getting tased just to get one belief out there? Second of all, how many people do you know that actually expect to get videoed just because they're shouting their beliefs in the library? Third, how many "morons" do you know that become "rich" because they saying what they felt was true so they were tased by police 5 times? Furthermore, he was tased while on the ground being told if he didn't get up he'd be tased again!

    According to an article by Silja J.A. Talvi, "People who have experienced the effect of a Taser typically liken it to a debilitating, full-body seizure, complete with mental disorientation and loss of control over bodily functions."

    So next time you think you're going to be wise and bitch about how people can make so much money off of such an easy thing, try it before you do it!

    --
    "Don't meddle in the affairs of a patent dragon, for thou art tasty and good with ketchup." ~ohcrapitssteve
  19. To be expected. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And this surprises you ... why?

    I've seen cops and bar bouncers smack around people on various occasions, some of them deserving, some of them probably not, and in each case there were people standing around and watching. I've never seen anyone who wasn't directly connected in some way to the person getting the beating involve themselves unnecessarily.

    Most people will happily stand back and watch Bad Things Happening To Other People Who Probably Deserve It Somehow. It's probably humanity's oldest form of entertainment.

    To most of the people in that library, the whole thing was just like watching COPS, but in the ultra-ultra high definition sometimes known as Reality(TM).

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    1. Re:To be expected. by ThePhilips · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Taking a picture/video to report to the proper authorities, like this student, is probably the best course of action.

      You can hardly report anything if you have your brain splashed all over the floor.

      First they would assault you, then to prove themselves they would call you communist/terrorist/whatever anathema-of-a-day you have over there in U.S. And then it would already impossible to argue against the law enforcement: he is Iranian, amongst his friends most likely there people who might be condemned for working for radical Iranian gov't. And so on and so forth. Check up the list of books he was reading: Math? Chemistry? Physics? - "he was making a bomb", Literature? Philosophy? - "we was brainwashing his friends". That what the law enforcement would say.

      Similar things happen all the time in Russia. Bush moves U.S. steadily in the direction. In one aspect the U.S. and Russia are similar: they have abolished slavery in mid-19th century, only one and half centuries ago. Value of human life isn't really yet caught up over there.

      In the end, witch hunts are never changing, really. Who plays the role of scapegoats are changed many times - communists, jews, terrorists - but importance of the entertainment for mob remains.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
  20. Re:old news by Surt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Much like Kuroshin before it, the sign of the end for Digg is when they start begging slashdot's community to come over for fresher news.

    Slashdot is a discussion forum. The power here is not timeliness, it's the audience.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  21. Video shows nothing, starts too late by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem with that video is that we enter midway through the true story, where he is down and been tazered once already. But why are there four cops around? What exactly was he doing that made them ask him to leave in the first place? It would seem that in order to be asked to leave from a library you would have to have done more than be speaking loudly or bring in a sandwitch.

    That combined with how he was screaming about the "patriot act" made me more than a little suspicious that the victim went in with the goal of mixing it up with some law enforcement people, angry at The Man to start.

    That video raises more questions than it answers, about both sides of the conflict. Next time, if anyone else is in the same situation can't you stand on a chair please!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Video shows nothing, starts too late by jjohnson · · Score: 4, Informative

      To be in the library you're required to present student ID on request by staff. He said he didn't have his on him. He refused to leave when staff told him to, so they called campus security, who told him to leave. He still refused, and the police were summoned.

      According to other articles, at the time the video starts, he'd stood up and starting walking towards the door. One of the cops grabbed his arm to escort him, he yanked his arm away and yelled "don't touch me!" Whether or not he then passively resisted leaving by going limp, or was simply thrown down and tasered, depends on who you ask.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  22. Re:As always, two sides to EVERY story by SilverJets · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are two sides to EVERY story.

    And on what side of the story is the fact that the officer tasered him while he was handcuffed? Its right before they walk out the door. The camera is shooting over a counter, and they are telling him to stand up. One officer on either side and by the angle of his arms, his hands are cuffed or restrained behind his back. Tasering him in restraints is nothing less than unjustified use of force.

  23. Re:abuse of power? I don't agree. by creysoft · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I dunno. Maybe arrest him, bring him to the station, charge him with disorderly conduct, and tell him that if he causes trouble like that again, he's gonna spend a few days in jail? I know, it's a little bit "out there," but I really think this strategy could work.

    --
    Formerly GNU/Anonymous Coward. This message has been determined to cause cancer in laboratory animals.
  24. Tasered in handcuffs by SilverJets · · Score: 2, Informative

    Watch the video again. As they are going out the door telling him to stand up the officer tasers him. He is in handcuffs/restraints. It is not justified. Rehearsed rants or no rehearsed rants, tasering him when he is already restrained is excessive force.

  25. Old News But New Perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The description of the incident does not indicate how cooperative that the Iranian was. In fact, his refusal to show a student ID card suggests that he was very uncooperative and is sufficient for the police to take action.

    If he did show his ID card and the police still fired the taser, then he has a case against the police. However, in this case, he refused to show a card.

    In my opinion, the police acted properly. As a former university student, I do not want strangers or uncooperative weirdos floating around campus.

    1. Re:Old News But New Perspective by MicrosoftRepresentit · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you watch the video, you'll notice that security ask the guy to get up about a hundred times before stunning him. Then they ask another hundred or so times, and he still doesn't move, so they stun him again. Really, the guy got what he deserved, the security where incredibly patient with someone who was blatantly trolling for abuse. It should have been obvious to them that he was just going to keep provoking them until they did something, at which point he would pull the racism/police brutality card...but in those circumstances, what can the police do?

    2. Re:Old News But New Perspective by pakar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, after getting stunned do you really think you got good control of your legs? If they wanted they could have just carried him out of the building without having to zap him even once, but what's the fun in that.

    3. Re:Old News But New Perspective by SerpentMage · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Huh, are you nuts? The person was unwilling to show his card. Fair enough, then escort him out. If necessary handcuff him. But don't taser and then keep yelling, "stand up, stand up, stand up" like a bunch of freaken drones. The student has a case against the police for excessive force.

      The supreme court has said the following: (http://www.fbi.gov/publications/leb/1997/oct975.h tm)
      1) the severity of the crime; The guy did not show his student card! This is not a severe crime!

      2) whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others; The guy is a student who fell to the ground and did not move. He did not fight, nor raise a fist, nada!

      3) whether the suspect actively is resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight; He resisted arrest, but did not run away. He became a clump of lead.

      Put these factors in, and the security guards went way over the line and used excessive force. There is a civil lawsuit here. Some people said "why did he mention the patriot act?" Simple because of my referenced link where the supreme court explicitly said, "Hey you can only use so much force, which the patriot act nullifies."

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    4. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Kijori · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You should watch the video, it's pretty clear from that that he didn't deserve to be tased, or at least didn't deserve to be tased over and over again.

      Background (not in the video): After 11 you have to have a Bruincard. He didn't have his and was told to leave by a CSO. When he didn't leave immediately, they called campus police.

      From what you can see/hear, the first contact with the security comes when they grab his arm - according to other students, he was leaving, having been told by a CSO that he had to - and he tells them to "get off". At this point they tase him to the ground. When he's finished screaming in pain, you can't see what's happening, but it sounds like they've dragged him to the door. There are a couple of security guards there at this point. They tell him to get up. He doesn't, instead trying to explain that he was trying to leave, and begging them not to tase him again. It's been pointed out that due to the effects of the taser he may not physically have been able to stand at this stage. They tase him again. He still doesn't stand. They tase him again. After a while, they seem to realise that this isn't getting him on his feet. At this stage, several students have asked for their names and badge numbers. One of them was told he would be tased if he didn't shut up. The officer was holding a taser when he said this. The others were simply ignored.

      Now that the student is no longer deemed to be a threat to the (at least) 3 armed police standing over him, he is handcuffed. Before being dragged out of the room, he is tased one last time.

      I couldn't watch the whole video in one go, so I'm not sure where the fifth use of the taser comes in.

      I'm disgusted by what I saw in the video. Seriously. The taser was their first resort against a student who was - according to the other students - cooperating. Even after using the taser to knock him down, they didn't search him for weapons, they didn't handcuff him. They just kept on tasering. Once the guy's already on the floor and surrounded, I don't understand why you would keep using weapons to hurt him.

      According to the article, the taser is used by officers when there is "a potential for injury to the officer(s) or others" or a "potential risk of serious injury to the individual being controlled." He was on the floor, shouting that he was trying to leave. He was clearly no threat to anyone, least of all himself. And the officers obviously knew that they were in the wrong, since they threatened witnesses with violence to try to buy their silence.

      To me it's obvious what should happen. Every one of these officers should be immediately fired while a criminal case is prepared for torturing a helpless young man. They should go to jail under federal anti-torture law, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years.

    5. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Casual+Maritime · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm not sure where you get your information from, but University of California police officers are state police. They have the same authority that other state police officers (such as highway patrolmen) have to arrest or detain.

    6. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Progoth · · Score: 2, Insightful
      2) whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others; The guy is a student who fell to the ground and did not move. He did not fight, nor raise a fist, nada!


      um, have you watched the video? listen for him yelling for the other 50 students to attack the police.
    7. Re:Old News But New Perspective by numbski · · Score: 2, Interesting
      There is something very specific that disgusts me about this: no one stepped in to stop it.

      Yeah, it's the police. Big freakin' whoop. Maybe because I have friends or family on the police force, but they're human beings. "They might throw obstruction of justice at me." Ya know...it saddens me how everyone will stand back and watch a spectacle like this and not take action against it when it's happening. Perhaps it's just choosing your battles, I dunno. If I'm standing there, I at least attempt to intervene. Now, perhaps we're seeing this out of context. We got tossed in after the tasering begins. I seriously doubt he did anything to that point to deserve it. He may have been a jerk, an a**, whatever, but enough to deserve getting a taser? Look, I've been unlucky enough to forget to turn off the TV after a football game and have "Cops" come on. You wanna see people acting stupid? There you go. Tasers come out on occasion, but I don't recall ever seeing someone tasered for failing to produce ID or failing to move when told.


      Everyone stands around watching the show, and no one is principled enough to stand up and say, "This is wrong, stop it. Cuff him, carry him out, do what you want, but stop inflicting pain upon him wrongly." Are we all either that entertained by the abuse of others or that afraid of our own persecution that we won't act? Or the last one....we just don't care? :(

      --

      Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

    8. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Kijori · · Score: 3, Informative

      I didn't try to claim the video shows everything, it doesn't. I know he was handcuffed, I just believe that should have happened much earlier - and that once he was handcuffed he shouldn't have been tased.

      According to all the sources, the officers were using the "drive stun" mode of the taser. Rather than using the famous barbs, this simply functions like any other stun gun, requiring the officer shocking him to bend down over him to use the weapon. As with all uses of stun guns, it causes extreme pain, and uses a mixture of pain and nerve disruption to subdue a resisting offender - although it is worth noting that this particular application focuses mostly on the pain aspect. Considering that there were at least three armed officers present and that the suspect was on the floor shouting not "nonsense" or incitement (this is an accusation made by the officers - it isn't born out by the video and is directly contradicted by the students), but rather screaming that he had been trying to leave and begging them not to hit him with it again. What possible reason could there be for tasing him three times before handcuffing him? What possible reason could there be for tasing a handcuffed person? And if the officers were so blameless, why did they threaten witnesses asking for their badge numbers?

      Yet another hint - once the police have been called for trespassing, "cooperating" doesn't involve trying to run away when you're being questioned.

      He didn't try to run away. He was trying to leave. And he was trying to leave not because the police were trying to question him, but because he had been told to leave. By all available accounts, he was on his way out when he was stopped by the police (I can't seem to find a police response). When accosted by the police he didn't try to run, he fell limply to the floor - hardly a perfect response, but not one that I would immediately associate with violent intent! If the police were trying to handcuff him, they could have asked him to put his hands flat on the floor. They could have overpowered him. They could have used their taser to subdue him and then handcuff him. Instead, they chose to tase him over and over again first. Why?

      I don't claim to have a perfect response to the situation. But if I was a police officer, supported by two of my colleagues, I hope I would have behaved well enough to be comfortable giving out my badge number instead of threatening the student asking for it.

    9. Re:Old News But New Perspective by PriceIke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're going to ATTACK the police? That's almost as smart as refusing to comply with police (and screaming like a baby to manufacture a scene) and getting yourself tasered. If you're "principled" at all, you'd see that the person in the wrong here was the Iranian student (?) who a) did not produce identification when asked b) did not leave when asked and c) tried to incite a racial standoff with police.

      There were some students uncomfortable enough with the situation to be asking for badge numbers. That's what you do when you see something police are doing that offends your sensibilities. Aggressively attacking the police is EXACTLY the wrong thing to do.

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
    10. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Robber+Baron · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You're going to ATTACK the police?


      Louis XVI's Versailles palace guards were attacked (and defeated).
      At some point it may become necessary to do just that...are we there yet?
      Tasering some guy because he doesn't have ID tells me we might be close.
      --

      You're using her as bait, Master!

    11. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Jtheletter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about YOU try to respond to a trespassing call as a police officer, while surrounded by 50 idiot college kids screaming at you with an EXTREMELY suspicious individual also screaming nonsense at you and trying to incite the stupid kids to attack you.
      So according to your account of the events an otherwise routine trespassing call had 50 kids screaming and ranting at cops BEFORE the cops had done anything? The crowd was not what provoked the situation, the guy screaming brought the crowd and the repeated tasering of him while on the ground is what got the crowd angry. Next, please find the quote in the video or other accounts wherein the suspect was inciting the crowd to attack the officers. Hint you won't find it, yelling "this is your patriot act, this is your police brutality" is NOT incitement to riot/attack police. Saying somthing like "get these fucking cops off me" or "someone do something" might be construed in that fashion, but nothing he yells is anything like those statements.

      Another hint - he WAS handcuffed
      Here's a hint for you, after the suspect is handcuffed and subdued it's excessive use of force to taser him again unless he is violently resisting. He's not violently resisting (key word 'violently') at any point, and especially after he is in cuffs. It's very straightforward in law: if the suspect is subdued, further use of force, in this case tasering, is unjustified.

      The officers did what they were supposed to do when confronted with a non-cooperative individual who is lying limply,
      Bzzzt wrong again, what they are supposed to do when someone is lying limply is subdue them and place them under arrest. Officers are taught numerous techniques for immobilizing a suspect and handcuffing them. After the first taser shock while he is on the ground it would have been trivial to handcuff him and place him under arrest which was not done. Are you seriously saying here that any time an officer encounters a limp person who doesn't cooperate they should first taser them? Yeah, that sounds completely reasonable and very legal. I challenged you to produce any police procedure, training manual, or law that indicates that is the proper course of action.

      I agree the kid was being a complete ass, and yelling at an officer is never a good way to resolve things. In fact I will go so far as to say the first use of the taser may have been justified. However, once the taser has been employed the subject needs to be subdued, the officers chose instead to give him orders and tase him when he did not follow them (nevermind the legitimate argument that because of the shock he MAY not have been physically able to comply). A taser is not designed or issued to officers as a motivational tool, or to induce subjects to comply with orders, it is for incapacitating a violent or forcefully uncooperative suspect, the next step being taking them into custody and/or handcuffing them. Police training stipulates these are non-lethal takedown devices, not motivational aids, to be used in lieu of other uses of force when required. And the law also requires that any force used be justified and PROPORTIONAL to the threat. Tasings 3, 4 and 5 in this particular case were no longer in proportion to the threat, no matter how legitimate the first two may have been.

      The force used in this video is necessary for some violent suspects, and in many other cases might have been warranted, but in THIS CASE the use of force appears to be patently gratuitous and needs to be addressed by a formal review of the officers actions and some form of punishment if found to be in violation of police procedure/the law, which it most likely is.

      --
      -- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
    12. Re:Old News But New Perspective by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative
      But... these are "Campus Police." Security Guards. Rent A Cops. They don't have the legal authority to arrest anyone. I doubt they have the authority to tase anyone unless they're trying to defend themselves or others.

      Look, you don't know what you're talking about like 99% of the people contributing to this thread.

      Point the first: Nearly every school of higher education in California is patrolled by real cops; certainly the public ones are pretty universally covered. Even 12 years ago when I went to community college for the first time, in Soquel California which is a terribly sleepy and practically crimeless (compared to most places in Cali anyway) location, they had real cops on campus - in fact they have their own PD there. This is typical.

      Point the second: Any citizen can arrest anyone they like, including a police officer, if they witness them committing a misdemeanor or have reason to believe that they have committed a felony. The difference between cops and citizens is that cops can also arrest you if they have reason to believe you have committed a misdemeanor (they don't have to witness it) and they can cite you for infractions. That's it. Well, and we give them a license to carry a weapon, but in some places (like New Mexico) that doesn't differentiate them from anyone else.

      In order to arrest someone for trespassing, first they have to be trespassing. All that is required for this is that an agent of the agency owning the property must tell you to leave. Bing! Now, if you do not leave, you are trespassing. At this time, you are committing a misdemeanor, and so anyone who witnesses it can place you under arrest for trespassing, although I wouldn't personally do it unless it was my property because of the potential legal entanglements.

      Once you have placed someone under arrest, you have the legal right to use necessary force to subdue them. Resisting arrest is legally equivalent whether you resist against a police officer or a citizen, although depending on your locality there may be additional laws prohibiting violence against a police officer.

      Point the third: No one has the right to use violence against any other person except in self-defense, defense of another, or as necessary to execute an arrest. The cop grabbed the guy's arm long before any arrest was made - this is simple assault. The guy went limp and fell to the ground rather than get into a shoving match with the cop. This was not only smart, but also the right thing to do. It is a de facto announcement of an intent to avoid violence. No one can argue that he was violent, because he was explicitly passive.

      The taserings also preceded any arrest, making them assault as well. Because a weapon was used, they may be considered aggravated assault, making them more serious crimes. Each attack - the grabbing of the arm and each individual tasering - may be a separate count of assault.

      I hope this clears things up for you, and that next time you save your comments for things you actually know something about. Hell, save them for something you know anything about, unlike the current scenario.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Old News But New Perspective by Himring · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, but girls will dump the nice cop for the jerk cop....

      --
      "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  26. police POV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a police officer, I have two things to say about this:

    1) This kid sounds like an ass and I'm certain that there will be more than enough "He got what he deserved posts." I might even agree in the moral sense, but not in the ethical or legal sense, because....

    2) This cop should never work in law enforcement again. This is inappropriate use of force by any professional standard. One post is not nearly enough to recount the things he did incorrectly, but I'll hit the high points;

    General rules for any controlled encounter (one where you aren't in danger from the get go) include finding out what the issue is, telling the subject what he/she needs to do, and explaining what will happen if they do not. There is almost never a need to place your hands on anyone for any reason until you are ready to take them into custody unless you are suddenly attacked. This "officer" is grossly incompetent. Understand we deal with aggressive people that posture by yelling and swearing at us all the time - this should not disrupt the officer on bit. Keep. Your. Cool. So, screaming/swearing or not, this encounter should have been over with three sentences from the officer.

    A) "Sir, per university rules and regs, I need you to show me your valid student ID or leave the library."
    B) "I need to to show me your valid student ID or leave the library right now, or I'll have to take you into custody for trespassing and disturbing the peace."
    C) "Sir, I am placing you under arrest." Then Mirandize him and be done with it. If he does anything but exactly what you tell him ("Sir, place your hands behind your back.") then....

    Now and only now, if he/she resists (NOT if he simply fails to cooperate i.e. passive resistence), you may use force sufficient to subdue him to the point of having him cease to be a danger to the officer or bystanders. That's pretty simple stuff, folks. Basically, never be the first to use force, but when you do - do it quickly and overwhelmingly then STOP when he's restrained. You are a trained professional who owns the situation and NOT a street brawler.

    From what I can tell, he never told the subject he was under arrest until after at least five taserings, some of which occurred while he was in cuffs and all but the first while he was on the ground unable to stand under his own power. This "officer" grabbed the guy's arm while he was leaving. Bad move, even if it seems like a little thing. Physical contact constitutes use of force, and any trained officer knows this is a big line to cross. I don't care if he didn't leave immediately - in that case place him calmly in custody early on and be done with it, no argument needed. You're the cop; you NEVER need to be in an argument. You aren't asking him what he wants to do, you're telling him. Never ever let a subject think they are in control. Arguing tells the subject they have some power.

    What he did is inexcusable. If this power-tripping bully didn't have a badge what would you think of somebody tasering a defenseless person on the ground FIVE TIMES some while he was handcuffed and yelling at him to "get up." A badge doesn't free you from responsibility, it adds to to it exponentially.

    This sadistic SOB gives all true professional LEOs a bad name and is part of the reason so many distrust cops. I've had training on most of the common less-than-lethal systems (lawyers don't let us call them non-lethal) including tasers, stun guns, pepper spray, rubber bullets and even conducted some training on the same. Unless this guy was issued a system with no training, he knows damn well the individual won't be getting up immediately after one tasing, let alone five. Frankly, I hope this guy answers for assault charges.

    To summarize, to non-cops this might appear to be a case of overreacting during a tense moment with a belligerent person. To most professionals, this is about as vanilla an arrest as there is where the cop did basically everything wrong. So wrong, in fact, I intend to use these videos as a training aid.

    This was so absurd that I actually laughed when the guy threatened to to taser the bystander who asked for his name and badge number. It's almost like he was trying to get fired and sued.

    1. Re:police POV by finkployd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You sir, are a shining example of what police SHOULD be. I hope the vast majority are like you.

      I have talked to a few police officers I know about this incident (naturally everyone knows about and is talking about it) and while they agree with you, nobody went as far as saying the officers should be fired. I suspect there is still a little of "we protect our own, no matter what" there. One alarmingly raised the point that the proliferation of camera phones is damaging law enforcement and something needs to be done about that...

      Finkployd

    2. Re:police POV by Procyon101 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Assuming you are really a police officer, I have a question for you:

      Would it not be prudent, when an officer refuses to give his badge number and responds with threats of violence, and you, as a citizen have witnessed the officer in the commission of a crime, simply and calmly announce that as a citizen you are placing the officer under arrest and that since the original suspect is subdued, he must immediately refrain from any use of force or himself be resisting arrest?

      If I'm not mistaken, assuming the original threat is subdued, you are now the cops until other, non-involved police backup. If the officer(s) does not back down, I also believe the students can enact their Posse rights, relieve the police officers from duty, and use any force neccissary including lethal force to ensure that the crime they are witnessing is stopped... not that this would be the best course of action against armed police officers, but gently reminding the most calm of the officers of this possibility might defuse the situation.

      Please correct my understanding if I am wrong. I would like to know what my rights are as a bystander.

  27. Professional behavior by nexeruza · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I read a post above that claimed the student involved loved to make trouble. And what I saw from the video would lead me to believe that is likely true. However it shows just how primitive the police force at the scene was. They were led into "abusing" the student and took it hook line and sinker. You could classify the person as mentally ill by definition he obviously was making bad choices that would only further his situation. Yet the tough pigs thought force would fix the problem. I blame both sides, a disruptive irrational person got the best of the police force. There was no need to injure him; a professional team would have kept him subdued and safe from escalating the situation and waited for time to let him calm down until he could quietly leave the area. Instead they strutted their big balls and made the situation worse. If they don't have training in this then I really do wonder if the next time I'm upset and the cops show up I'll take a few slugs for behaving badly. What makes me blame the police is their unprofessional handling of the situation. They're supposed to be "peace officers" but obviously they chose to turn this into an aggressive situation in which the hammer won. From the moment they arrived, many of them, they had physical superiority, there was no weapon, there was a person that wouldn't stand up. God forbid they seek other options instead of harming the individual to cement their power over them.

    For those that don't know, this is very far from unordinary. I've hung with "bad" people and the police act like this all the time. They have the gun, they have the badge, in court they are a credible witness. Go up against them and you WILL LOSE without proof. Even with proof you are unlikely to win unless they kick the shit out of you while you stay absolutely motionless, even then you better hope your arm didn't move more than 2 inches cuz if it did you were attempting to violently assault an officer. I am exxagerating a bit but if you think this is uncharacterstic of police behavior you are ignorant (meaning that you just don't know).

    Officers obviously need more training on how to handle a non dangerous situation. This comes up every time Joe Blow Black man with a rake is capped. They need to understand that having a gun, having control, does not mean using it to expedite the situation. If they have to spend 2 hours trying to calm the man down so be it. That's what they are payed to do, to keep everyone safe. Force should only be applied when NECCESSARY, and that is the downfall of this whole situation.

  28. Re:A taser by jtorkbob · · Score: 2, Insightful

    :: Insted its ment to be used to defend yourself from a target that will cause harm to you, thus paralyzing them for your own safty.There were 5 policemen and one student, i really dont think any of those police were in danger.::

    Ever try to restrain a person who's resisting with all his might? It takes a lot to wrestle a guy into handcuffs when he's kicking and flailing. Not to mention, it was not '5 policemen and one student'; it was 5 policemen and some unknown number of students forming what could loosely be described as a mob. The police have to pay attention to the bystanders to make sure the sitation doesn't get out of hand. If they're wrestling the person to the ground, they cannot maintain control of the situation around them, and a person whose intent is worse than civil disobidience might steal a sidearm and cause a real problem.

    I can understand, in today's tense world, how this young man might have felt that he was being targeted. Heck, maybe he was. The fact is that if you resist the police, you deserve whatever comes to you, becuase the police in the US are easy to get along with.

    "Hold up, you must be a white man," you say. That's true, but it's all about respect. If you treat the police with respect, they will treat you with respect, and we have a system where conflicts - even with the police - can be solved peacefully if you can keep your emotions in check. It doesn't matter the disposition of your DNA.

    --
    AC: Only on slashdot... could the sentence "My hovercraft is full of eels." be moderated "+4, Insightful
  29. Re:Ass kissing karma whore. by Surt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have max karma. It's just true. I said the same thing back when the fading star was b4 and Kuroshin was trying to be the up and comer. Now Kuroshin is pretty much forgotten and digg wants the good readers. For whatever reason, the most desireable posters (and lets be fair: the least desireable too) stay with slashdot.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  30. Re:old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    The power here is not timeliness, it's the audience.

    Really? I thought it was the same old stupid fucking jokes, repeated endlessly... now THAT'S power!

  31. Unsaid at my current threshold... by ET_Fleshy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Haven't heard anybody mention it yet, but the kid was handcuffed when they were shocking him. That, according to multiple claim-to-know people, is against pretty much every district's / precinct's rules.

    Also, the guy was in the process of leaving when the officer(s?) grabbed his arm, that's why he shouts out "let go of me." Now I agree that the guy probably shouldn't have been such an asshole when he was asked to leave the first time, which provoked the staff to call the "cops," but he definitely didn't deserve any of this.

    Also, "this is your patriot act!" --> wtf???

  32. bullshit by Scudsucker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First, we're not catching anything before the video, which firsthand accounts make it seem like the guy should be tasered.

    Based on what.

    Second, they repeatedly warned him before tasing him each time.

    Irrelevant. They had no business tasering a handcuffed suspect for being uncooperative.

    Third, according to firsthand accounts and the story, he was provoking the crowd.

    Watch the video. He wasn't doing anything more than screaming "here's your Patriot Act, here's your fucking abuse of power."

    Sure, it looks like the cops overreacted, but not to the extent that you're saying.

    Yes, they did, and they belong in jail for assault.

  33. Re:Bull shit by Scudsucker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A civilian using a taser on someone in an argument has nothing to do with a cop using a taser to deal with people resisting arrest

    You're right - the cops are held to a much higher standard.

    Tazers were developed so that cops wouldn't have to resort to violence

    Using a tazer is violence.

  34. Re:Noticed something about this by zerocommazero · · Score: 4, Interesting
    But he didn't physically shake the cops off. The story says he fell limp. If he resisted using physical actions then i could see where the taser was warranted. But in reality, he fell limp, an obvious sign of non-violent protest. The cops could've tasered him, then two cops could've cuffed him (he was wearing cuffs but i don't know when they were put on), picked him up and carried him out. Wouldn't that've been the correct response?

    Whether you or i agree on his opinions, he does have a right to protest and he was doing it non-violently. We don't know if this guy was just stirring shit or has been a repeated victim of profiling by the campus cops in the previous weeks. But what we do know is that the cops took it too far as shown clear as day on video.

  35. Weird for a uni to require ID by Anomolous+Cowturd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know the University of Sydney, where I studied, usually has tons of people on campus and at the library who are not students or staff of the uni. After all it's got a huge library that is useful to more than just students. Sounds like it's a bit harder to get into a decent library over in the land of the free. Why?

    --
    Software patents delenda est.
  36. Re:Noticed something about this by crossmr · · Score: 3, Informative

    Unless it appears people are respond to him no. In the beginning a crowd gathered (natural when something is going on). However they didn't become unruly until the Police overstepped their bounds.
    Had they just arrested him quietly in the overwhelming numbers they had, then this wouldn't have occurred.

    It was their poor choice that lead to the escalation of the situation and the danger it created. The guy acted like an asshole, they're trained to deal with it. They chose to obviously ignore that training and throw caution to the wind and go with the most violent and reaction inducing method out there short of shooting him or beating him.

    If a police officer grabs you for no good reason then its assault and/or false arrest/confinement.
    Just because they're police officers doesn't mean they can go around grabbing whoever they want for whatever reason just because they feel like it.

    He may have told the security guard he wasn't going to leave, but he was in the process of leaving when the police arrived and grabbed him. As far as I understand trespass law, if he was making his way towards the nearest exit, he should have been fine.

  37. Bears repeating: Are cops as mature as fry cooks? by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Again and again, the police apologists come out in droves saying "Oh, but you don't know how HARD it is being a cop!" and "The guy was definitely asking for it!" I'm just going to say what I said last time this came up (original post: http://ask.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=192848&cid =15830849) Full text:

    The perfect reply to this argument (which comes up every time someone mentions that most cops are assholes) is this: a McDonald's employee has more accountability than a cop does. As a 16 year old burger-flipper, if a customer acts like a complete asshole--even going so far as to yelling and cussing you out--you are NOT allowed to verbally abuse the customer in return in any way, shape or form. At most you can ask him/her to leave the building, that's it.

    Years ago, I worked at McDonald's for four months and a very good friend of mine was punched in the face. Through a plate glass window. A woman tried to order at the pickup window, was told she needed to drive around again, so she punched through the drive-through window, hitting my friend in the face. If she (my friend) had hit her back, there's not a doubt in my mind that she would have lost her job. Instead, she walked away calmly and called her supervisor and the police.

    Now, I'm not implying that the police shouldn't use force when necessary. I'm also not denying that they're human too, that it's a nasty, dirty job and I'm sure it's really rough on them. But you know what? Working at McDonald's is in many was rougher (if you doubt this, I could tell you some more horror stories... absolutely the worst 4 months of my life, period.), and yet their workers are held to a much higher standard than the police. Why is that? Why do so many of us make allowances for the police to exercise HUGE leaps of personal discretion, to bend the law whenever it suits them? It's a tough job, but they chose it and we shouldn't let them bend the rules (or ignore them) whenever they feel like it. I saw a TON of asshole customers at McDonalds, yet I didn't say a foul word to any of them. I didn't spit in their food either (no one did--they would've been fired on the spot.) I did my job as professionally as I could, regardless of how shitty I was treated.

    And I was a fucking fry cook!

    Please please please please PLEASE tell me we can hold our police officers up to the same standards as our burger flippers.

  38. Re:abuse of power? I don't agree. by creysoft · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree with you that the guy was most likely being a jackass, and should have been forcefully removed by the premises. I was just pointing out, as you have, that there are far more civilized ways to go about it.

    A lot of people are making the point that, "He was just begging for an ass kicking." Quite possibly true. However, it is not law enforcement's role to provide him one. The only, and I mean _ONLY_ time law enforcement is justified in physically attacking (as opposed to restraining) someone is when they pose a danger to themselves or those around them. Then they are to use the minimum amount of force necessary to subdue and restrain the person. Tasers are not tools of expediency.

    --
    Formerly GNU/Anonymous Coward. This message has been determined to cause cancer in laboratory animals.
  39. First Rate Education by porkface · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It sounds like this guy got a highly effective lesson in the fact that Americans are not prone to martyrdom.

    In all of these taser threads, I see a lot of people assuming they're not safe, but I have yet to see one single supported claim that they are inherently unsafe. I can imagine if a person has a pacemaker it's unsafe, but at this point I'm not seeing any evidence it's unsafe.

    That said, I can't imagine why 5 police officers were unable to move a handcuffed victim safely to a squad car. And then for them to use a disabling device as a means of getting the guy to move is something I'm sure was at least wrong on their part. Maybe not criminal, but definitely poor tool selection at the least.

    The video does demonstrate audibly that there were at least a handful of vocal students yelling at the police to stop using the taser after the first one. The impression I got was that it was an unpleasant and somewhat inhumane sight to see.

    At this point I just want to hear the police justification for this painful and botched attempt to remove the guy. I can't imagine how it will go well because the guy appears to offer no physical threat or significant deterrant to simply picking him up and hauling him away.

  40. Used in same manner by hopopee · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A finnish guy filmed two mall guards beating up a man and posted in on YouTube. The press got a whiff of it and now one of them was suspended, the other one fired and there's an ongoing criminal investigation. Yay for YouTube. A link to the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvsUA-qEzy0

  41. Re:A taser by Random+Data · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The fact is that if you resist the police, you deserve whatever comes to you, becuase the police in the US are easy to get along with.

    "Hold up, you must be a white man," you say. That's true, but it's all about respect. If you treat the police with respect, they will treat you with respect, and we have a system where conflicts - even with the police - can be solved peacefully if you can keep your emotions in check.

    Bullshit. I've met cops in the US and Australia (where I live) who were basically jerks. The majority of those I've had interactions with are great people, doing a shit job I wouldn't wish on anyone, but there are arseholes as well.

    If you were minding your own business and a few cops made a beeline for you and strated asking for ID although everyone else was being ignored, would you feel hassled? If you asked why you were targeted and were told to shut up, would you be annoyed? If you were asked to leave, would you get vocal? What if it was a regular event?

    It's the job of a law enforcement officer to be as polite and restrained as possible while getting their job done. They don't threaten force if it's not required, they don't go for a taser when there are other options, and they deinfitely don't repeatedly shock someone for exhibiting behaviour that's reasonably typical of being shocked.

  42. Re:Iranian Bigot by dam.capsule.org · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow... Every time someone mentions here something about ID cards, everybody is raising the Holly Privacy Bible. Today, A guy which has done nothing but wanting to keep his privacy is beaten by the police and you say it's a good thing ?

    Terrorism is, you know, about, uh, terror I think. It seems its working with you. By saying you are happy that this guy got tasered, you are entering their game. You acknowledge that you are afraid of them. And beside, now they can tell: "See, Americans are not respecting the rights they are promoting".

    --
    What sig ?
  43. Re:A victim? by Frogbert · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sure that's all true, but for which of those points would he deserved to be shocked the fuck out of five times?

  44. from the latims by mtenhagen · · Score: 4, Informative

    he UCLA police officer videotaped last week using a Taser gun on a student also shot a homeless man at a campus study hall room three years ago and was earlier recommended for dismissal in connection with an alleged assault on fraternity row, authorities said.

    UCLA police confirmed late Monday that the officer who fired the Taser gun was Terrence Duren, who has served in the university's Police Department for 18 years.

    Duren, who was named officer of the year in 2001, also has been involved in several controversial incidents on campus.

    In an interview with The Times on Monday night, Duren, 43, defended his record as a campus police officer and urged people to withhold judgment until the review of his Taser use is completed.

    "I patrol this area the same way I would want someone to patrol the neighborhoods where I live," he said. "People make allegations against cops all the time. Saying one thing and proving it are two different things."

    While he would not directly talk about why he used the Taser on the student, he said a videotape of any arrest doesn't necessarily tell the whole story.

    "If someone is resisting, sometimes it's not going to look pretty taking someone into custody," he said. "If you have to use some force, it's not going to look pretty. That's the nature of this job."

    A student's cellphone video of the incident has been broadcast around the world and focused much criticism on the officer.

    But Duren -- who was back on duty at the UCLA campus Monday night -- said he can roll with these punches and wants to explain himself to students critical of his actions.

    "In this line of business, you have to have a thick skin," he added. "I am proud of my service as a cop."

    The incident occurred about 11 p.m. Nov. 14 in a library filled with students studying for midterm examinations.

    Senior Mostafa Tabatabainejad, 23, was asked by Duren and other university police officers for his ID as part of a routine nightly procedure to make sure that everyone using the library after 11 p.m. is a student or otherwise authorized to be there.

    Authorities said Tabatabainejad refused repeated requests to provide identification or to leave. The officers decided to use the Taser to incapacitate Tabatabainejad after he went limp while they were escorting him out and after he urged other library patrons to join his resistance, according to the university's account.

    The video shows portions of the incident, in which Tabatabainejad can be heard screaming in pain when the Taser shocks are administered.

    The tape, which has been broadcast on the YouTube website and TV newscasts, prompted widespread criticism both on campus and from outsiders. On Friday, more than 200 students held a march to the police station, while acting Chancellor Norman Abrams tried to quell the critics by announcing an independent investigation of the Taser use. Abrams said UCLA had received numerous e-mails and calls from concerned alumni and parents.

    Tabatabainejad's attorney, Stephen Yagman, said his client was shocked five times with the Taser after he refused to show his ID because he thought he was being singled out for his Middle Eastern appearance. Tabatabainejad is of Iranian descent but is a U.S. citizen by birth and a resident of Los Angeles.

    Duren said Monday that he joined the UCLA police force after being fired from the Long Beach Police Department in the late 1980s. He said he was a probationary officer at the time and was let go because of poor report-writing skills and geographical knowledge.

    In May 1990, he was accused of using his nightstick to choke someone who was hanging out on a Saturday in front of a UCLA fraternity. Kente S. Scott alleged that Duren confronted him while he was walking on the street outside the Theta Xi fraternity house.

    Scott sued the university, and according to court records, UCLA officials moved to have Duren dismissed from the police force. But after an independent administrative hearing, officials ove

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  45. citizen's arrest? by casehardened · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Here's a question for ya: if I see a cop do something flagrantly illegal, which poses a physical threat, do I get to perform a citizen's arrest on the spot? I mean, seriously, these cops weren't tasing the guy because they were physically threatened (he was in handcuffs). They were tasing him because, well, they wanted to. That's assault. Shouldn't someone have, you know, done a bit more than ask for a badge number? I'm not saying it's the wisest strategy, since you'll likely get beaten down, but is it _legal_?

  46. Re:old news by Mike89 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Slashdot is a discussion forum. The power here is not timeliness, it's the audience.
    This is completely true. A lot of the reason I visit Slashdot daily is to get some insight onto whatever the news is (even if it's not 'Breaking News').

    I used to read Digg quite a lot, but I was a Slashdot reader first. Digg has basically become somewhat "mob rule" - regardless of how well-planned or well-argued a point is, if everyone on Digg doesnt agree is "dugg" into oblivion. Then, in every thread, you also have to guy spouting "Digg me down!", who, of course, has close to 100 "diggs" up.

    Diggs threading is also a joke. Threads end up extremely long with people doing followups to followups.. but since it only supports a 'depth' of 1, it's just a giant mess.

    So, Mr Digg User, you enjoy Digg while we enjoy Slashdot. I'm suprised you even have time to troll over here, considering how up to date and fast news reaches you guys!

  47. Action Must Be Taken and Stern by indierockcafe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You can't argue with the video and audio evidence in the tazer incident, just as you can't with the Michael Richard's racial rant (both events were captured on cell phones). It is outrageous behavior, and a sad commentary on where we are nowadays in America. It proves there is still a lot of mending and healing that needs to be done. The alternative is very bleak.

    Thankfully, web sites like Slashdot allow people to debate these issues and overall that is a great thing for democracy and for reinforcing the American Value that racism in any form will not be tolerated. We need to be one big team regardless of race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, whatever.

    --
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  48. civil rights by zeromorph · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The UCPD is a separate law enforcement agency with the same powers as CHP officers run by the University of California.

    Can anyone explain to me what run by the University of California means in relation to a law enforcement agency?

    I'm not an US citizen and more than a little bit confused about what I have read/seen, and think if the whole issue is half as bad as I understand it, you guys should better start to worry.

    --
    "Hannibal's plans never work right. They just work." Amy/A-Team
  49. Re:I think you guys are over-estimating a taser by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The other board all seemed to think the same thing, so why's this groupthink and not that? :P

    This is a complicated issue, and anyone coming down fully on one side or the other probably hasn't thought about it long enough. The cops were facing a noncompliant student of decent size. He may or may not have been actively resisting to leave. Some people say there was a disconnect between what he was yelling and what he was doing. He was certainly trying to rile up a crowd of students, most of whom are probably looking for some kind of cause to get behind. Tasing the guy might've seemed like the best way to disable him.

    On the other hand, the cops threatened onlookers. Bringing out a taser in front of a mob is a bad idea if you don't absolutely have to. It's hard to imagine what five taser stuns will do that one or two will not. After the second, and even the first, did not have the intended effect, they should've probably switched to another tact.

    Personally, I think the officer threatening the student asking for the badge number and the repeated tasings are misconduct, and should be dealt with appropriately. It seems this kid might've been looking to start trouble, but it still doesn't justify the response. I don't think this is a widespread issue of civil liberties, it's cops in a very tense situation that made a couple poor decisions.

  50. Ridiculous by Mad-cat · · Score: 5, Informative

    *disclaimer: I haven't seen the video due to restricted net access*
    It's this sort of crap that's going to get a very useful and life-saving tool taken away from cops who use it right.

    There's no reason to deploy a taser on someone who is ALREADY ON THE GROUND AND NO LONGER FIGHTING!

    I have used my taser as a police officer twice. The first time, the wires broke on contact and I had to chase him. The second time, the guy fell to the ground and became verbally and physically compliant.

    Tasers cannot be used as FREAKING CATTLE PRODS! They're a sophisticated, useful tool that is meant to incapacitate a VIOLENT criminal in order to protect *both* the officer and the offender from serious bodily injury. When deployed in a sensible, responsible fashion, tasers save lives. When used 3 to 5 times on a compliant subject on the ground, they don't help.

    In Florida (where I am a sworn law enforcement officer), most agencies are not allowed to use a taser unless a subject is actively resisting arrest (i.e. fighting and/or running away). A large powerful agency nearby was using them on everyone for passive resistance (i.e. "I'm Ofc. Jones, who are you?" "Screw you pig!" *taser*)

  51. Racial Profiling by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 4, Funny
    Hey, Timothy McVeigh converted to Islam. He converted posthumously, but he did do it. Word is that his ancestors, long ago, came out of Africa. So he was also, in point of fact, black. A black muslim terrorist? That's all I need. And don't even get started on Ted Kaczynski. I have it on good authority that he was a wiccan Nazi -- just look at the name! I'm surprised he didn't start lobbing V2 rockets at London. James Garfield was really trampled to death by wild mustangs. James Hinckley Jr was actually a Canadian with a forged birth certificate.

    The simple fact is, Americans aren't terrorists. Anyone who tells you otherwise has been corrupted by public education, sharing, or evolutionists.

  52. The alternative is shooting??? WTF?? by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The alternative was shooting? Shooting an unarmed, handcuffed person lying on the ground? Are you nuts?

  53. Dumb Cops + Dumb Student by Blaaguuu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ive seen a lot of people commenting that the Cops in the video are idiots, and a few saying that the student was an idiot.

    I move that all involved parties are atleast a little retarded.

    The student was stupid for refusing to leave when asked politely, then complaining and screaming when told by police officers to leave. Then more idiotic yet for not cooperating after being tased, and told he would be tased more - something he obviously knew he wouldn't enjoy. The whole time screaming about how our justice system is working. Yes, my good sir... the police officers are in place to enforce rules set in place by society - rules you certainly knew you were being violated by yourself, even after being told to stop.

    The cops are idiots because they continued to tase the student when he obviously was set on not cooperating, after being tased multiple times. theres a point when you have to go old-school and just haul his out kicking and screaming.

    But in the end, ive really gotta side with the cops in the situation... Tasers are a nice piece of equipment. they definately made too liberal of use with theirs, but i think calling "police brutality" in the situation is too much. People who intentionally violate laws need to understand that being arrested wont be a pleasant experience if you resist.

    --
    My hand touched her hand. Her hand touched her boob. By the transitive property, I got some boob! Algebra is awesome!
  54. Re:Ass kissing karma whore. by Shawn+is+an+Asshole · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Kuro5hin is still good, though. It's not as active as before, but it does have original articles added every few days. Plus I like the diaries feature.

    --
    "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks
  55. Re:Iranian Bigot by L4m3rthanyou · · Score: 3, Informative

    Whoa, slow down there.

    Yes, the student was carded randomly, around 11:30 PM, in a library that is only for students, at least after hours. And not just in the library, from what I understand, but in the computer lab, where (iirc) there is a posted policy that you must have your BruinCard if you're using the lab.

    This town has a lot of homeless people and the campus has a lot of younger kids running around, also. For security, it is necessary to do these random checks at night and remove people who are not supposed to be there.

    And besides, how is one's privacy invaded if they're asked to prove that they're a student in an area that requires ID anyway? It's not any more of an invasion of privacy to have to swipe that same card to open the door to a dorm building, call the elevator, let yourself into a dining hall, or even enter your res hall after hours. The UCLA BruinCard is critical to access just about anything on campus, including said computer lab. I'm sure most campuses are the same way...

    --
    One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces.
  56. Re:Iranian Bigot by L4m3rthanyou · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not allowed. The library itself is closed entirely to non-students after 11PM. Hell, you can't even bring non-student guests into your dorm with you after 9PM unless you sign them in as a guest. There are people waiting in the lobby that check in anyone who passes through.

    They take student security very seriously here.

    --
    One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces.
  57. Re:UCLA slogan: by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In fact, some British universities (Cambridge, for example) are so old that they have bizarre/amusing legal trivia of their own. IIRC, the Proctors at Cambridge (who are senior university officials) technically have the authority of a constable and not a member of the public, while various public authorities including the police themselves may not enter the grounds of certain colleges without the advance permission of the Master or Head Porter. (Your vague memories may vary; please check the books before relying on this!)

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  58. Both; neither. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think it's like they're campus security, but then they went and got themselves deputized as police officers. So the have police powers and can act like police, and do most of the things that you'd expect police can do, but they get paid for and have their equipment provided by (and probably, their area of jurisdiction limited to) the University of California.

    It's not uncommon for the 'Campus Security' forces at a lot of state universities to be deputized. The universities want "actual" police protection, as opposed to more powerless rent-a-cops, but the local municipalities don't want to pay for more police officers out of the tax budget, or divert police resources from the rest of the community, so basically the universities run a quasi-private police force.

    Arrangements like this are more common than you think. On railroads, the Amtrak Police or other transit police ("bulls") are privately employed, but have police powers within their area of jurisdiction. In California, bus companies can do similar things. (At least they could, a while ago.) In most states, they also have to complete regular police training at the State police academy or pass an equivalency test. WP has an interesting discussion here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transit_police

    Basically, the line between 'security officers' and 'police' is blurrier than many people think, and has been for a long time. This isn't a bad thing -- the municipally-employed police don't have the resources to do many of the things that transit/metro/campus police forces do, and it saves a lot of public tax burden as well.

    --
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  59. Re:Iranian Bigot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The Iranian bigot deserved what he got.

    You honestly believe that being tasered 5 times is the appropriate reaction for not producing your papers on demand? Once wouldn't me enough? 6 times is too much? I'm hazy on your logic here... 5 times for not producing papers...what's appropriate for looking at an officer oddly? Or saying something politically incorrect?

    I could see the officers escorting him out of the library... I could even see them hauling him down to the police station until they could positively identify him... But getting tasered 5 times for not producing ID? And you think this is appropriate?

    What this does is create fear of our authority figures. You better do exactly what they say, when they say it, or you'll get tasered repeatedly. You better not do anything questionable because they can taser you if they feel like it. You know what it's called when you use fear as a tool to achieve your goals? Terrorism.
  60. Life Imitiates Monty Python by bshroyer · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Using a Tazer (or four!) to enforce ID card possession makes as much sense as this:
    Headmaster: Well... Well... Well, it's all got to do with the library, you see. We've had a lot of trouble recently with boys taking out library books without library cards. Your son was caught, and I administered a beating, during which he died. But you'll be glad to know... You'll be glad to know that the ringleader was caught, so I don't think we'll be having any trouble with library discipline. You see, the library card system...
     
    Mr Perkins: I'm sorry...
     
    Headmaster: ...was...
     
    Mr Perkins: You beat my son to death?
     
    Headmaster: Yes, yes, so it would seem. Please, I'm not used to being interrupted. You see, the library card system was introduced...
     
    Mr Perkins: Well, exactly what happened?
     
    Headmaster: Well, apparently, boys were just slipping into the library and taking the books!
    (excerpt from civfanatics )
    --
    The cure for cancer is coming: Reovirus
  61. Re:A victim? by Keeper · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's a misdemeanor. Right up there with jaywalking.

    The police are permitted to use force, however they aren't permitted to use an arbitrary amount of force. They can't shoot the guy. They can't beat him to a bloody pulp. The police required to use the least amount of force necessary to accomplish their goal (which is to eliminate the trespass) -- in this case, they should have just dragged the guy out. Shooting a guy sitting on the ground with a taser 5 times (which prevents the subject from moving) accomplishes nothing.

  62. Re:Hahh!! by gerrysteele · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can the last one out of the free world please turn off the lights?

  63. Re:Iranian Bigot by alienw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First, he didn't get beaten, he got tasered. That's quite different. You can't injure someone in normal health with a taser. It's SUPPOSED to be used on people resisting arrest, which is exactly how it was used. It is far safer than manhandling the suspect, or using batons.

    Second, the "privacy" argument is bullshit. If he wanted to stay anonymous for whatever reason, he should have used the library during normal public hours. Otherwise, he should comply with whatever rules they had in place. He does not have a constitutional right to be in the university library at night with no ID. This is trespassing, which is a crime.

    Third, he was a whiny, obnoxious bitch, who was trying to cause a scene and incite a crowd. THIS is the reason he got tasered -- he repeatedly refused to follow police instructions and resisted arrest by refusing to get the hell out and whining about the Patriot act. If he quietly complied, none of this would have happened. Police are not supposed to have a lot of patience for this kind of thing. If a cop tells you something and you ignore it, expect consequences.

  64. May cost me karma points but....... by rspress · · Score: 2, Insightful

    May cost me karma points but the truth usually does. If he did the same thing in Iran, getting tasered would be the least of his problems. Just changing for the Muslim religion to Christianity gets you the death penalty. The problem with video is that we don't know what happened before the person started recording. To me it sounds as if the guy was a real Dick. Why did he not leave and get his card and return. If you have a gun and the police tell you to drop it and you don't....well expect bad things to happen. Is it racial profiling....could be. Do you expect a black man to be a Ku Klux Klan member? Is that racial profiling. Could it be that he was just a Dick and that is what got him tasered? That is what my money is on.

    If this happened to me I would go on TV and say "I was being a big Dick and it was all my fault". Then again I believe in personal responsibility. If this view costs me karma points then so be it.

  65. Re:Bears repeating: Are cops as mature as fry cook by finkployd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously, comparing a fry cook's job to a cop's job is just silly.

    You are quite correct. A fry cook has no authority over the general population. He is not given powers and privileges far above the common citizen. A fry cook can lash out and abuse his position and the consequences for society are minimal. A law enforcement officer must be held to a much higher standard.

    There should be no second chances for a LEO abusing their power or violating the law. Given the responsibility and power we as a society give them, the consequences of them abusing that position of authority and power are severe.

    Police put their lives on the line, and for that they should be paid much more and trained much better than they are today. However, that is no excuse for bad behavior, and it should never be tolerated. Every one of the police involved in this debacle need to lose their jobs immediately, they are clearly not responsible enough to hold the position of authority they were given and are much more of a danger to society than a punk kid to wouldn't stand up when told to.

    Finkployd

  66. Re:Hahh!! by ericlondaits · · Score: 2, Funny

    And killer chances for ad placement!!!

    When watching this video Google Ads are offering me:

    Stun guns: Free Shipping
    Free shipping on all Tasers and Stun
    Guns. Great Prices!!

    Too bad there isn't an UCLA ad right next to it...

    --
    As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
  67. Re:You wouldn't ASK that question in a police stat by pla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you really think that the obviously absurd expectations and low level of training exhibited by the campus cop(s) involved is an indication of what "police" (as in, "all police") do?

    Since we could have heard about this from NY, or FL, or LA, and this particular one just happened to occur on a college campus - Yes, I'd say this does reflect the generally brutish quality of police in general.



    Have you suddenly stopped seeing the firing of cops caught doing this sort of thing?

    Better question - Have you suddenly started seeing cops fired for shit like this? Departments cover it up as much as possible, the cowards hiding even their names behind their "LEO's Bill of Rights"; When it makes the press, the chiefs talk about investigations and appropriate discipline, then give the offending cops a few weeks of paid vacation.

    Rodney King, Humboldt County (Earth First vs Pacific Lumber Co), the present example... And do cops go to prison for grossly abusing their authority? Hell no! Given one cop testifying against two dozen dirty hippies, the courts show just a wee bit of bias there...



    how we'll be treating all students that refuse to show ID in an area where you have to show ID.

    Trespassing does not negate your basic human rights, nor the responsibility of the police to act humanely and with as little force as the situation requires. Some punk taking a bit longer than they want to pack his books up does not justify tasering.



    we were talking about someone having captured video of a person (without ID) who got into a secured part of the campus and assaulted a student.

    A college campus doesn't count as a war zone. You don't have a "Green zone" where you only expect to see familiar white faces, and if you want to survive to see tomorrow you must view anyone unfamiliar as carrying a bomb. This didn't happen in Baghdad, it happened on a goddamned American college campus.

    Get a sense of scale, here! 9/11 did not change everything, regardless of how those who want an authoritarian government may spin it.



    In your imaginary, rhetorical "police state," you wouldn't be having this conversation.

    Chinese and Egyptian students keep blogging, regardless of the risk.

    But
    that
    doesn't
    happen
    here,
    right?

  68. GIve them enough rope to hang themselves by _KiTA_ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, they did the right thing by simply observing and recording.

    Simply put, if they had interjected, the Police would have had a reason and opportunity to turn this into a riot, and flush it all down the memory hole. The guys with cameras? Arrested, and the "evidence" confiscated for the "investigation" of the "riot that evil Iranian Muslim terrorist" caused.

    Instead they watched, recorded, and let the police do their bad things all on their own, and the cops will get theirs when the time comes.

    Personally, if I was the UCLA students, I'd be carrying a camera everywhere I went from now on. Because if these cops are stupid enough to do this on camera and in front of a crowd, just what do you think they'd do in front of 1 or 2 witnesses in a more questionable situation?

  69. Re:Good job UCPD by Unit3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "sworn police officers acting totally appropriately."

    So you think multiple uses of a taser even after the person is handcuffed is appropriate use of force for someone forgetting their student ID? And threatening to taser bistanders who ask for the cop's badge number?

    Wow. Just wow. And you wonder why all of us outside the US look at you like you're monsters. BECAUSE YOU ARE!

    --
    -- sudo.ca
  70. Re:Iranian Bigot by Achoi77 · · Score: 2, Informative
    I just saw the video. That kid was being a total ass. You couldn't count the number of times security was telling him to get up. He didn't, not becuase he couldn't. He just did not because that was his choice. You could even hear other students in the background yelling at him to "just get up!"

    This was not an unsolicited behavior by security, he was the one causing the scene, being disruptive and disobeying authority. If he had is ID everything would have been fine, but he didn't, and he refused to leave. You thing security asked him once and he was on his way out when they decide to stun him? You could tell he was throwing the dramatics out in full force. It was enough yelling and screaming on his part to get students to whip out their video phones, at least.

  71. Re:Iranian Bigot by Dare+nMc · · Score: 2, Insightful
    First, he didn't get beaten, he got tasered. That's quite different. You can't injure someone in normal health with a taser.

    I am guessing you have never been shocked to the point of lossing controll, I don't mean touching 110/220V I mean something closer to the 5000V stun guns use.

    It is quite the opposite, you are guranteed to injure someone when you use a stun gun. They will feal the effects for days (I have) every muscle in your body will be sore and you will be tired. not so much that you can't walk, but so much you don't want to.
    I would much prefer a good beating than a Taz, just because you can't see the after effects doesn't mean they aren't bad, why do you think that is the most commenly used method of torture?
    he repeatedly refused to follow police instructions and resisted arrest by refusing to get the hell out and whining about the Patriot act.

    no doubt this guy was being a pain in the ass, and needed a lesson, that is not the police job. But I can gurantee you, quite the opposite of what you think, once you are tazed/shocked, most people just want to lay still and gather themselves, that is why it is used for the purpose of bringing people down, they don't want to get back up no-one would. Thats why it's extreamly important that people who are going to use these weapons first experience them first hand, so they know you can't use them to try and get someone to move.

  72. Re:Good job UCPD by n9hmg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So you think multiple uses of a taser even after the person is handcuffed is appropriate use of force for someone forgetting their student ID?
    I expected to see police brutality, not a model of LEO restraint and professionalism. If the jackass had left when told, he wouldn't have forced that situation. I was astounded at the restraint the cops showed. In my opinion, once he'd taunted them and refused to walk, they should have hog-tied him and dragged him by the feet face-down out of the building. Three or four marble steps, maybe some textured concrete, and he'd be begging to be allowed to walk. And it wasn't asking for badge numbers that was getting him testy with the jerk poking him in the chest. Any appendage thrust violently at a police officer should come back as a bloody stub. I hope the video can be enhanced enough to prosecute some of that mob.

    Just because somebody screams a lot doesn't mean you have to let them have their way. Those students obviously come from backgrounds where screaming got them their way, and to them, refusal to defer to a tantrum is socially unacceptable.
    Oh, and near as I can tell, unit3 doesn't speak for most of Canada. All the ones I've met are intelligent, reasonable people with minds of their own. Their government seems an anomaly. It's almost as glaring a contrast as France. As a country, they seem almost entirely worthless, but I've never met a Frenchman I didn't respect. I'm seeing a pattern here. Probably my closest friend is a Sunni muslim Arab. Maybe it's just that the best and brightest from all the world find their way here, which gives me an unrealistically high opinion of mankind in general.

  73. Re:Iranian Bigot by de+Selby · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It's SUPPOSED to be used on people resisting arrest, which is exactly how it was used. It is far safer than manhandling the suspect, or using batons.
    Obvious false dichotomy. The asshole student didn't struggle, wrestle, or resist in a threatening way. All he did was lay on the ground handcuffed. Nobody would have used any rough treatment or batons in that situation, nor should these police have used a taser. Grab him by the armpits and carry him to the squad car. Done. Charge him with resisting. If he flails around, then taser him.

    Third, he was a whiny, obnoxious bitch, who was trying to cause a scene and incite a crowd.
    True, but he would have failed completely had the police not tasered him. The crowd grew to the size it did, and the students became as hostile to the police as they were, only because the police stood around tasering a handcuffed kid lying on the ground rather than taking him in. Drag him to the car. Done. No crowd.

    [...] he repeatedly refused to follow police instructions and resisted arrest by refusing to get the hell out and whining about the Patriot act.
    Multiple witnesses say he was trying to leave when the police came, but the police wanted him to stop for questioning. It's for trying to leave despite police instructions to the contrary that he should have been arrested. And yes, that patriot act bit of his was asinine.

    If a cop tells you something and you ignore it, expect consequences.
    Yes, arrest and charges. But not a charged taser.
  74. Asshat by msaver · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sigh...

    For the sake of this argument, we'll assume your account of how this incident started is accurate -- even though he clearly had his books packed up and was reportedly walking towards the door when the police arrived. We'll also treat the first tazing as appropriate, even though it seems it wasn't necessary.

    At this point the student is guilty of criminal trespassing, something that can't be waved away if he were to leave now. He has been ordered off the premises and blatantly refused the order.

    No he is not. He is entitled to the court system to decide whether or not he is guilty.

    You have an unidentified criminal, trespassing on government property, acting violent in the vicinity of young students, resisting arrest, moving in a violent manner. What would you propose, other than using force?

    Despite your use of the word 'violence' twice in this description, you cannot honestly tell me that this student was any threat after being tazed. If he was, put handcuffs on him. These officers were clearly using the tazer as a compliance weapon. You know what? Sometimes police work isn't fun. Sometimes police have to be patient and listen to someone saying mean things about them. Tough shit -- do your job properly. Us taxpayers pay their salaries because they do a service to us. When officers break the law because they don't feel they should have to wait or carry someone out of a library, the punishment needs to be harsh. These cops are lazy at best, cowards at worst. Pussies like these have no place in law enforcement.

  75. Re:Good job UCPD by pluther · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Oh, im sorry I zaped you 3 times already and you still won't move.

    Ooh, the irony.

    Maybe if they should have broken his kneecaps with their clubs, maybe then he'd wise up and walk away!

    --
    If the masses can keep you down, you're not the Ubermensch.
  76. Re:Good job UCPD by twiggy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh, im sorry I zaped you 3 times already and you still won't move. I guess I should just let you go so you get your way. Have a nice day.

    I can't believe how stupid some of you are. Seriously.

    1) If 3 officers are incapable of restraining someone who is resisting verbally but isn't even resisting physically, they shouldn't have a job.

    2) If 3 officers are unable to carry a guy out of there, they shouldn't have a job.

    3) Tasers and other "nonlethal" weapons are meant for self defense against a threat of violence, not for passive (albeit annoying) resistors.

    4) Hey, you dumb fucks wondering why he still wouldn't move after the 3rd time -- many people's muscles are immobilized to the point of being unable to walk for about 10 minutes after the first time.

    --
    http://www.babysmasher.com
    http://www.openingbands.com
  77. Reading some eyewitness accounts by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I'm not convinced what the officers did was all bad, just some bad.

    Remember, you only got to see a tiny piece of the situation, and not even very well at that.

    After reading some accounts like this one, it seems pretty clear that tasing the guy once was justified. Tasing him again while in handcuffs, of course, was unjustified.

    During "after hours" in Powell, they send security around every half an hour or hour to check ID's and ensure that you're actually a student. The guy refused. Loudly. Was told that was fine if he didn't want to show it, he would just have to leave. Refused. Campus security couldn't get him to leave, and the police couldn't get him to leave. He was absolutely not trying to leave on his own power. At one point they started to try and drag him out, and he just went limp and started grabbing onto things.
    Another eyewitness said that the officers had already tried unsuccessfully to restrain him with compliance holds before using his taser. I'm having a hard time coming up with a reason why the first taser use was excessive given the background information. Again, tasing a restrained, unarmed person is never justified.

    Regarding threatening to tase a mob participant while the officers were in the process of subduing a belligerent person, it may have come out poorly, but that was not the time or place to demand a badge number. Wait until the officers have the situation under control, and then you can ask for whatever number you want. Heck, if you wait a few hours, you can go read the arrest report and get every detail down to the serial numbers of the tasers fired.

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    1. Re:Reading some eyewitness accounts by RexRhino · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We only got to see part of the situation, because the police unions overwelming oppose all attempts to put cameras in cars, have cameras mounted on guns, or have portable shoulder mounted cameras for evidence gathering in the field (all which already exist as products right now any could be put into use at any time). If it was true that "we only see part of the picture" and we would be much more sympathetic to cops in these situations if we could see the whole picture, why not give cops shoulder mounted cameras? Then the whole picture would be on tape, and there would be no question of what happening.

      It is the cops themselves who desperatly don't want people to see the whole picture, which is why they make sure their union fights hand and tooth to make sure cops are not videotaped!

  78. Re:fp by AgentSmith · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I watched the video. You could barely see the begining of the incident. You could hear some of it.

    Before anyone bitches one way or the other, I have something to ask.
    Have any of you been tazered?
    I have. Not as a result of a crime, but during training to know what it feels like.
    After being tazered once, I had to have someone help me up. This was at a time when
    I was young and physically fit. When you tazer someone, they are not always going to
    "get up" under their own power. I keep thinking in my head "If you want him to get out
    after the first taze you will need to move him. Duh."
    Being tazed for a no show on ID is a little extreme, but he did continued to be uncooperative.

    As a security officer (I'm not talking real law enforcement), you usually give your badge number if someone has a complaint.

    I'm kinda surprised the mob didn't rush them. When they started going too far.

  79. Incompetence, mishandling, and needless escalation by Miamicanes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The university's employees mishandled the situation from the start. Had the CSO responded to Mostafa's refusal by calmly announcing that he would check the IDs of everyone in the area:

    * The surrounding students would have been mildly irritated

    * Mostafa would have probably ended up feeling pretty silly had they unceremoniously presented their IDs, and either presented his own (if he had it) or left quickly (partly because he'd feel the angry vibe from the others who were ID'ed as well due to his complaining). By standing his ground and demanding to see ONLY Mostafa's ID, the CSO did a wonderful job of validating and reinforcing the beliefs of Mostafa and every other student on campus who thinks they're being unfairly picked on.

    * Or, alternatively, the CSO could have asked for the IDs of only the students vouching for Mostafa's status as a student.

    Either way, the policy's goal would be achieved: giving police an excuse to kick homeless people out of the library who'd otherwise sleep there overnight. Of course, braindamaged antisocial bullies for whom rulebooks are the equivalent of softcore porn will bitch... but they're kind of like diehard fundies whose own words do a better job of making them look like complete tools with stakes up their butts than anyone else's writings possibly could.

    Another example of incompetence and stupidity: the first actual police officer to encounter Mostafa apparently proceeded straight to the "grab him and drag him out" strategy, as opposed to looking straight at him (while maintaining a nonthreatening, respectful distance) and calmly informing him in a "look, I really don't want to do this, but..." tone of voice that he WOULD be forcibly removed if he didn't leave voluntarily, and that if he were subject to forcible removal and resisted, he could be tased and/or subject to real, honest-to-god arrest... something that might very well have not occurred to him up to that point.

    God knows, if I were pissed and embarrassed about having been singled-out for an ID check (or believed myself to have been), threw in the towel & conceded defeat by heading towards the door, and THEN had a cop grab my arm so he could bully me some more and rub some more salt into the wounds... yeah, I'd have probably reflexively tried pushing him away and had some angry words for him too.

  80. WRONG by johnpaul191 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    did you watch the video? they *randomly* grabbed the guy as he was leaving the building. they zapped him, then zapped him again when he would not stand up. the point of tasers is that they incapacitate the person for a bit of time. you are not supposed to zap somebody to get their attention. you zap them to knock them down. to then zap them again because they can't hop up and comply is crap. those cops/guards should know that. real police use them to knock somebody out of commission enough that they can cuff them or put them in a car or whatever.

    i realize we do not see what precedes the situation, but after they start zapping the guy they can not expect him to just hop up and be docile. they also had a crapload of cops around an unarmed student. they could have just as easily picked him up or something if that was a concern. they obviously were not worried about his safety by zapping him 5 times in that few minute span. there is no reason they could not restrain him some other way if they really felt it was that important.

    being a cop/guard on a college campus means you signed up to deal with potentially obnoxious students. it might be rough, but how could you not realize that was going to happen? i can't imagine a situation where some rude student that did not have his ID deserved that kind of battery.

  81. Re:Good job UCPD by Kijori · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I've replied to this sort of comment with my own opinions in a couple of other places, so I'm not going to do that again here. But I found this quote from a police officer after seeing the video, and it seemed appropriate to post it as a reply to the idea of them having behaved 'professionally':

    As a police officer, I have two things to say about this:

    1) This kid sounds like an ass and I'm certain that there will be more than enough "He got what he deserved posts." I might even agree in the moral sense, but not in the ethical or legal sense, because....

    2) This cop should never work in law enforcement again. This is inappropriate use of force by any professional standard. One post is not nearly enough to recount the things he did incorrectly, but I'll hit the high points;

    General rules for any controlled encounter (one where you aren't in danger from the get go) include finding out what the issue is, telling the subject what he/she needs to do, and explaining what will happen if they do not. There is almost never a need to place your hands on anyone for any reason until you are ready to take them into custody unless you are suddenly attacked. This "officer" is grossly incompetent. Understand we deal with aggressive people that posture by yelling and swearing at us all the time - this should not disrupt the officer on bit. Keep. Your. Cool. So, screaming/swearing or not, this encounter should have been over with three sentences from the officer.

    A) "Sir, per university rules and regs, I need you to show me your valid student ID or leave the library."
    B) "I need to to show me your valid student ID or leave the library right now, or I'll have to take you into custody for trespassing and disturbing the peace."
    C) "Sir, I am placing you under arrest." Then Mirandize him and be done with it. If he does anything but exactly what you tell him ("Sir, place your hands behind your back.") then....

    Now and only now, if he/she resists (NOT if he simply fails to cooperate i.e. passive resistence), you may use force sufficient to subdue him to the point of having him cease to be a danger to the officer or bystanders. That's pretty simple stuff, folks. Basically, never be the first to use force, but when you do - do it quickly and overwhelmingly then STOP when he's restrained. You are a trained professional who owns the situation and NOT a street brawler.

    From what I can tell, he never told the subject he was under arrest until after at least five taserings, some of which occurred while he was in cuffs and all but the first while he was on the ground unable to stand under his own power. This "officer" grabbed the guy's arm while he was leaving. Bad move, even if it seems like a little thing. Physical contact constitutes use of force, and any trained officer knows this is a big line to cross. I don't care if he didn't leave immediately - in that case place him calmly in custody early on and be done with it, no argument needed. You're the cop; you NEVER need to be in an argument. You aren't asking him what he wants to do, you're telling him. Never ever let a subject think they are in control. Arguing tells the subject they have some power.

    What he did is inexcusable. If this power-tripping bully didn't have a badge what would you think of somebody tasering a defenseless person on the ground FIVE TIMES some while he was handcuffed and yelling at him to "get up." A badge doesn't free you from responsibility, it adds to to it exponentially.

    This sadistic SOB gives all true professional LEOs a bad name and is part of the reason so many distrust cops. I've had training on most of the common less-than-lethal systems (lawyers don't let us call them non-lethal) including tasers, stun guns, pepper spray, rubber bullets and even conducted some training on the same. Unless this guy was issued a system with no training, he knows damn well the individual won't be getting up immediately after one tasing, let alone five. Frankly, I hope this guy answers fo

  82. You contradict yourself. by Khyber · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Their presence wasn't logged - the ID was shown at the door to ensure that only students were admitted to the all-hours facility.

    So how the fuck did the student get in? He was already down, at a computer, with books. If ID is required to be shown at the door for entry, why would he be caught LEAVING the building to begin with, unless he had already shown his ID and was granted entry?

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  83. Re:Iranian Bigot by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful
    When someone is asked by the police to leave and doesn't, what is the appropriate level of response?

    It depends on the level of resistance, which in his case was entirely passive. The appropriate response when dealing with a passively resisting subject is nonviolent.

    Tasering someone five times is violent.

    This was completely inappropriate use of force, but no one is surprised, since it's in LA.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  84. Boing Boing by PWNT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Boing boing has some background on one of the kids attackers. apparently he was dismissed from the real police force for shooting an unarmed homeless man he was recommended to be dismissed from the UCLA for previously choking a student. http://www.boingboing.net/2006/11/21/ulca_tasercop _has_a_.html

  85. Re:Good job UCPD by Squirmy+McPhee · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This reminds me of an attorney I once knew who worked as a prosecutor for a major U.S. city. The city included several universities, and whenever one of the university police forces turned over a case to her there was a far higher than average chance she would have to drop it because of the lack of professionalism of the police. Generally it was because proper procedures were not followed, so evidence was either (a) missing or (b) inadmissible in court, though I do seem to recall her mentioning a case where someone was arrested for doing something perfectly legal. I can't recall any stories of gross misconduct like this one, though.

  86. Re:Good job UCPD by itsthesmell · · Score: 5, Informative

    Tasers and other "nonlethal" weapons are meant for self defense against a threat of violence, not for passive (albeit annoying) resistors

    While I agree that this episode is a pretty clear example of excessive force, the above statement is not accurate. Although my department doesn't use tasers, I presume that the courts consider tasers as occupying the same rung in the ladder of escalating force guidelines as pepper spray. Police officers (I am one) are trained to use non-lethal force options such as these when the arrestee is actively resisting but not threatening violence. Examples of active resistance include fleeing, attempting to break free from a compliance hold, etc. If the officer were actually be threatened with bodily harm, the guidelines stipulate that he should escalate to the baton (as long as the suspect is not himself armed).

    I can't really tell what's going on from the video but if the arrestee was already handcuffed and was simply not walking then use of the taser should not have been authorized. Realistically speaking, the courts tend to give arresting officers a lot of leeway because they feel that it is difficult to judge officers' heat-of-the-moment decisions when one has the benefit of time to weigh and reflect upon the facts. In my opinion, the courts give too much leeway. While there are certainly instances where the best use-of-force decision is not clear, the majortiy of officers make bad decisions not because they're afraid or anxious, but because they are bad officers who are either unable or unwilling to effectively balance law enforcement and constitutional protections.

    The reality of the status-quo is that police work attracts high-school grads and GED's whose priorities are being respected and retiring with a decent pension. As civilians, you have the power to affect this problem. If you want consciencious yet capable officers, you have to pay for them. Force your local politicians to fire and prosecute consistently and have them pay officers enough to attract educated individuals who want to positively affect their communities.

  87. Re:Good job UCPD by sbrown123 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's a lot of assumptions, and it's not really possible from the video to figure out all the events. But what we do know is that in two cases he is immobile. This is helped by the police yelling at him to get up. There were three cops and not a single one of them tries to physically remove him (which they can legally do) or restrain him (again, legal) in any fashion, but rather just yell at him and use a taser (illegal on the taser part since it was used against police procedure).

    You would have to assume that the officers could be highly suspicious of this possible ploy to get them in close so he could bite them since they knew he was perfectly capable of walking.

    Police are trained to restrain and move people. Try catching an episode of COPS on television. If this weren't the case, criminals could just lie on the ground and wait for the cops to leave. So your assumption there is dead wrong.

  88. Re:Good job UCPD by iamhassi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "The officers did act professionaly. the guy was just stubborn."

    Taser's are not suppose to be used when a suspect is "stubborn":
    "TASER systems use proprietary technology to immediately incapacitate dangerous, combative or high-risk individuals who pose a risk to law enforcement officers, innocent citizens or themselves."

    I don't see "use Taser's on stubborn individuals" in there. Would you want to be tasered because a cop believes you're being stubborn? Because remember we're using the cop's definition of stubborn not yours, he might have had a long night and think you're being stubborn because you didn't produce your insurance card quickly enough.

    Can you imagine what they would have done to that guy if he wasn't surrounded by a mob of students moments away from rioting? Think 5 tasers would have turned into 20.

    I think all cops should have that line in the Taser FAQs memorized and if they break that rule they should be fired, we don't need cops going around tasering stubborn people because god knows that's 90% of /.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  89. Re:Turn on the lights? Most are in the dark alread by cold+fjord · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The whole idea is that you know it's illegal, and choose to risk arrest and/or punishment anyway, because you believe the cause is just.

    I wonder what cause he thinks he was fighting... if any?

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  90. Re:Bullshit! by Kijori · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Regardless of whether the poster was a real cop or not - I have no idea - he does raise some interesting points. I agree that the student shouldn't have screamed or refused to leave. But once you've tasered someone they aren't going to get up immediately. The exact amount of time varies from a few seconds to 15+ minutes, but there's a real chance that he was unable to obey orders because of the police and so was tasered. Would this still be reasonable if they had handcuffed him and then tasered him for not raising his hands? And using a taser on someone for not standing up is an unreasonable amount of force when he's only surrounded by armed officers, let alone once he's handcuffed.

    This guy is an 18-year veteran following policy.

    Could you post proof that UCPD policy is to taser handcuffed suspects? I suspect that it isn't. And the '18 year veteran' has repeated complaints for excessive force against him in the past, and was the officer that shot dead a homeless man - coincidentally managing to escort him out of the room with CCTV beforehand - causing the adoption of tasers. (Source: Dailybruin)

    How many times does a police officer have to ask someone to follow a lawful order before using force? 1,000?

    There are lots of degrees of force, not all of them equal. Handcuffing and carrying him out would have been a use of force. So would beating him to death. I don't believe they chose the right level. And they didn't either - why else would they threaten the witnesses?