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UN Says Tasers Are a Form of Torture

The use of Tasers "causes acute pain, constituting a form of torture," the UN's Committee Against Torture said. "In certain cases, they can even cause death, as has been shown by reliable studies and recent real-life events." Three men — all in their early 20s — died from after tasering in the United States this week, days after a Polish man died at Vancouver airport after being tasered by Canadian police. There have been 17 deaths in Canada following the use of Tasers since they were approved for use, and 275 deaths in the US. "According to Amnesty International, coroners have listed the Taser jolt as a contributing factor in more than 30 of those deaths."

816 comments

  1. So remember... by Verteiron · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's lethal rounds or nothing, peacekeepers!

    --
    End of lesson. You may press the button.
    1. Re:So remember... by Nimey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      like shooting a big gob of glue to stop someone in their tracks And if they're unlucky, the glue lands on the perp's face and they asphyxiate.

      You can kill a person with pretty much anything, which is why the government refers to those as less lethal weapons.
      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    2. Re:So remember... by oncehour · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not really an issue of lethal rounds or nothing, it's the lower barrier of entry and lower accountability of using a taser. Would this Polish guy at Vancouver airport have been shot in the heart? Unlikely. Would he even have been clubbed? Again, unlikely. Tasers seem to take on this extra appeal. There's no accountability to using them. You don't feel the force of your impact, you're detached from the fact that your volts very well could be killing this person. In essence, you've got no negative feedback for tasering them, and thus a taser becomes an acceptable weapon at a time when weapons are not needed.

      Pepper Spray, clubs, Handguns, and even hand to hand all have different negative feedbacks which inhibit their abuse, at least a little bit. A taser has none. Look at the guy that tasered a handcuffed 17 year old girl. They dropped the case, citing there wasn't enough evidence. The police force's current taser policy is clearly pretty unacceptable.

    3. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you seriously post that link just do you could sneak in an affiliate code? Shady. I like how you even tried to hide it by making it numerical.

    4. Re:So remember... by billcopc · · Score: 1

      'Course he/she/it did. Have you not noticed how the entire internet has been overrun by ad-whores ?

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    5. Re:So remember... by pem · · Score: 1

      If you'd RTFA (I know, I know, this is Slashdot) you would have found out that, all too often, Tasers FIRE lethal rounds...

    6. Re:So remember... by hpavc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One of many abuses with no accountability forthcoming, the ability for the normal patrol car to lookup information of licenses places for purposes of stalking, abusing, and harassing people has been around for years. The patrolling near a bar, finding a vehicle with an owner low on points, then as they leave give them an ticket for leverage or excuse them from a ticket for leverage has been well documented.

      Efforts for oversight (i know get ready for this) ... pre-911 ... we forthcoming, but now would obviously be impossible. Nobody is going to have oversight on what people are querying outside a bar, near a beach or out on the highway.

      --
      members are seeing something, your seeing an ad
    7. Re:So remember... by BakaHoushi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is the major problem with "non-lethal" weapons. When you have a pistol, the consequences of using it in any situation other than "he's charging at me with a knife and going to stab me" are rather dire. The penalties for misusing a taser are far less serious. If there are any penalties at all. A taser becomes a one-shot fix to any situation. Any "non-lethal" device can have serious side-effects or become lethal when done to the wrong individual, but I think tasers are being shown to be too dangerous. Rather than a last resort when you can't even wrestle someone to the ground, it's a first-resort.

    8. Re:So remember... by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....Would he even have been clubbed? Would he even have been clubbed?......

      Why not clubbed? Before there were tasers, cops routinely used their billy clubs on unruly people that resisted them. Tasers or clubs are not used by the police when they first encounter a suspect. The usually talk to them first. Maybe tell them him/her that he/she is under arrest. If the suspect then submits, he/she can call a lawyer who will tell their side of the story to the judge. No taser or club gets used. If I had to choose, I'd probably choose the taser rather than getting my skull cracked with a billy club, like they used to do. I've had some rather nasty electric shocks from TVs and other electronics without permanent harm.

      --
      All theory is gray
    9. Re:So remember... by b4upoo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Police actions depend upon pain compliance when handling subjects who are dangerous or resistant to arrest. The question is whether more
        harm would be done if the cops had no tazers. In addition to the injuries and deaths to subjects who are tazed the next consideration is how many
        cops would sustain injury if tazers were not used.
                    There is another type of tazer which the public rarely hears about. It is a belt that is securely attached to people being led around the
        jails and court houses. When an inmate or suspect starts to act out a simple remote control button stops them cold by activating the tazer in the
        belt.
                    So far my general opinion is that tazers save suspects and cops from injury. Yet there will always be a few suspects whose systems are full
        of drugs or who have strange medical issues which cause death when they are tazed. Yet a night stick would surely cause more injury and more deaths.
                    Keep in mind that failure to obey a cop is a very good reason for physical action. In the U.S. we have far too many people who feel that rather
        than making their point before a judge that they should argue with cops and impede them in their duties. Frankly the cops probably should use those tazers a lot more often than they do.

    10. Re:So remember... by nerdsv650 · · Score: 2, Informative

      In the US, cops can only carry a taser after they've been tased themselves. I've been tased as part of a demo, I have trouble imagining a relatively healthy person suffering any long-term effects, but since I've read it on the web it must be true.

    11. Re:So remember... by FeTrut · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think it behooves us to also look at the other side of it, impossible as it may be to properly quantify. How many lives have been saved by the use of Tasers? For instance, without a taser it may indeed be much more likely for cops to have to resort to guns and/or other less predictable violent means to protect themselves. Or, if using the traditional hand-to-hand or club route, there's a much more significant risk of the suspect outmaneuvering the cop and gaining the upper hand, thereby putting him/her in more danger.

      I won't argue with the fact that tasers are painful, probably over-used and sometimes lethal, but that's not to say they should be banned. Perhaps more oversight on its use? Like guns (forgive me if i make assumptions here, TV is my only education in this matter), if they are discharged in the line of duty there should be some sort of hoopla, an investigation of some sort and severe punishment if it was found to be used as a first-resort, they would likely be used more cautiously.

      Education is also an important factor, it's possible that the cops that have killed with them were not properly educated as to their lethality and would have exercised more caution if they were.

    12. Re:So remember... by Torvaun · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, but it looks a lot worse when you club a 6 year old kid into submission.

      --
      I see your informative link, and raise you a pithy comment.
    13. Re:So remember... by 0123456789 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How many lives have been saved by the use of Tasers? For instance, without a taser it may indeed be much more likely for cops to have to resort to guns and/or other less predictable violent means to protect themselves. I would speculate that a very, very small number of lives have been saved by tasers. I would assume, in a country like the US where the cops routinely carry guns, that when a police officer thinks they are in serious danger, they'll reach for their gun. Just like they did before tasers.


      I would imagine the cops only reach for the taser when they know they are safe. It would be interesting to see whether there was a reduction in accidental/mistaken police shootings after tasers were issued to cops. Certainly, here in the New York area, the cops seem to mistakenly shoot someone every 3 months or so.

    14. Re:So remember... by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      mod parent up, parents get upset when another adult has a stern talking to their child for doing something nasty, and police can put 50kvolts through a child instead of taking the piece of glass off him? bullshit.

    15. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have trouble imagining a relatively healthy person suffering any long-term effects So how do they know how healthy the target is? Heart conditions are not always obvious.
    16. Re:So remember... by 0123456789 · · Score: 1

      When I said 'cops seem to mistakenly shoot someone' above, I was of course talking about the shooting appearing to be a mistake with the benefit of hindsight. Being a cop is not a job I envy; unlike most jobs, when they make a mistake, the results can be terminal, either for themselves or others.

    17. Re:So remember... by anagama · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Why is failure to obey a cop a good reason to get tasered? Cops are NOT the arbiters of the law. Cops are wrong a lot. Hell, even the president of the united states and his FBI goons or whoever are felons (illegal wiretaps are a felony punishable by up to five years in prison and nobody but the president and Gonzales interprets congress' authorization to fight the idiots' (plural possessive on purpose: Bush and all who voted to allow it) war in Iraq as overturning the original FISA requirements).

      So, aside from the gun and the attitude, I don't really see much reason to listen to cops. Following the law, that's something different, but it would be awfully nice to live in a country where the cops, congress, and the executive branch respected the law. And if they don't have to, why should anyone?

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    18. Re:So remember... by number11 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      it's possible that the cops that have killed with them were not properly educated

      That may be true. And exactly what leeway do we want to give to people who kill because they are "not properly educated "? Should a cop (who is supposed to be so educated) get more leeway than any other bozo (who may not have such occupational credentials)? Or should "I was not properly educated" be a fitting defense for everyone?

    19. Re:So remember... by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The problem is it pretty apparent (at least to me) that the taser is quickly becoming the 21st century version of the rubber hose. We have seen time after time that in situations where in times past they simply would have restrained the individual or attempted to diffuse the tension they now reach for the taser as the FIRST choice, instead of what it should be, which is a last choice before drawing their weapon.


      In fact, that is the standard I think should apply to taser use-Would you have used your gun in that situation? The whole point of the taser was to give a cop the a less lethal alternative to lethal force. But as we have seen all over the Internet lately, it has become either a "He/She was looking at me funny" tool of intimidation or a "Don't tase me bro!" tool of torture. I think until a higher standard of conduct can be written in regards to tasers a moratorium should be in place. It has just become another torture device as it is now.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    20. Re:So remember... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Would you rather be nightsticked, tasered or shot? Those are basically the options when you decide threatening or assaulting a police officer is a good idea. Take away tasers and then you're down to nightsticked or shot. Oh, I guess you could be pepper sprayed too. That's not painful at all.

    21. Re:So remember... by chrispycreeme · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Cops get tased in very controlled circumstances (spotters, padded floor with ems on hand) and only for extremely short durations and only once. They then feel like they can tase people who are standing on concrete, in poor health, for as long as they want, and as many times as they want. Just once I'd like to do some real world testing on cops like they do on citizens routinely. If they got pissed at how much I was enjoying it, well I'd just give em another jolt to calm them down. This would continue until they saw my the logic of my superior reasoning.

    22. Re:So remember... by drsmithy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Education is also an important factor, it's possible that the cops that have killed with them were not properly educated as to their lethality and would have exercised more caution if they were.

      Here's a rule that would lead to some restraint: no police officer should be allowed to carry a taser until they've experienced being at the wrong end of one.

    23. Re:So remember... by Kierthos · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The thing is, we only hear about tasers when they kill someone or it's one of those YouTube videos where some college kid is getting hauled away by 4+ campus security guys. Hell, I don't even think the local crime report columns list taserings, but you damn well do hear about it when there's a shooting.

      --
      Mr. Hu is not a ninja.
    24. Re:So remember... by compro01 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here's a rule that would lead to some restraint: no police officer should be allowed to carry a taser until they've experienced being at the wrong end of one.

      I believe they're already required to.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    25. Re:So remember... by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1, Informative

      A taser is NOT an alternative to a cop's sidearm.

      it's an alternative to them beating the piss out of you with a nightstick.

      and frankly, I for one would RATHER get tased than beat with a club.. but hey, that's just me.

      Taser use IS a bit excessive.. that's really unquestionable.. but to damn the device because of overuse neglects to take in to account the fact that police DO need less-than-lethal means of dealing with people who refuse to cooperate, and if you don't give them any other options that means will be beating you until you go limp.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    26. Re:So remember... by anagama · · Score: 1

      Whoever modded me troll doesn't understand what America is supposed to be about. Hint. America is not supposed to be a police state.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    27. Re:So remember... by anagama · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can't possibly be asserting that cops/security only taser violent dangerous people. Peruse youtube a little and you will see a bunch of thugs making copious over-use of their authority.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    28. Re:So remember... by JustOK · · Score: 1

      One guy says it didn't bother him(her/it), so it must be okay for the other 6 billion + people on the planet, so it must be true.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    29. Re:So remember... by JustOK · · Score: 1

      the thing about the less than lethal means...uh, if a taser is killing a significant number of people, then I'm kinda thinking that its NOT a "less than lethal" option.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    30. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Here's a rule that would lead to some restraint: no police officer should be allowed to carry a taser until they've experienced being at the wrong end of one. As far as I'm aware, in both the USA and Canada, this is already the case. Same goes for pepper spray and tear gas..
    31. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 2

      Yup, just like the way U.S. infantry soldiers get to experience tear gas.

      That guy's statement is so ridiculous, it's almost beyond belief. What possible legitimacy could exist for the idea that only a recipient of something is in a position to take a related action? Used as a principle, that idea means pure anarchy.

    32. Re:So remember... by edwardsdl · · Score: 1

      I bet those YouTube videos constitute 100% of the Taser use by police! Did it cross your mind that you're only seeing a tiny fraction of the picture? Just because there aren't any videos showing how Officer John saved the children using his big bad taser gun doesn't mean it hasn't happened. Yeah so they get misused - any non-lethal weapon will be! That doesn't mean we should scrap them, it means we should work to increase responsible behavior and accountability. Just because you've seen a small group of officers misuse their authority doesn't mean it's right to demonize them all. The vast majority of police officers are responsible individuals.

    33. Re:So remember... by Josef+Meixner · · Score: 1

      Would you have used your gun in that situation? The whole point of the taser was to give a cop the a less lethal alternative to lethal force.

      And that shows that the taser has no place in the arsenal. Honestly, if an officer can't judge the situation to be not lethally dangerous, but that it might be or could become so, then his only choice is drawing a gun, because I don't see that anybody can safely handle both, a gun in one hand and a taser in the other. So the taser can only be drawn in a situation which doesn't threaten the officer lethally. But what is the point then to even use the taser? If someone is no danger, there is no reason to inflict pain so he can't harm you.

      So I am not surprised that the taser seems to be mostly used when there was no real danger, because otherwise the officer would have drawn his gun, knowing fully well what it will do.

    34. Re:So remember... by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between "LESS than lethal" and NOT lethal.

      If you RTFS, you'd see that of all those deaths associated with tasers being used.. the coroners only ruled them a contributing factor in 30 deaths.

      That's a lot less than if those people were "restrained" using traditional means. Those means are, as I said, beating the piss out of you.

      Most of the deaths associated with tasers are due to cardiac events. Heart attacks. Often due to.. get this.. being fat, being on coke / meth / crack, and fighting with cops. That's not good for your heart. You're probably going to have a heart attack whether you're shocked or not.. but you'd be more likely to have a heart attack if the cops started hitting you with nightsticks.

      Nobody is saying that tasers are 100% safe -- they ARE far safer than shockaganda says they are -- but what they ARE is far safer than other means of dealing with certain situations.

      They ARE overused -- and so become LESS safe than other ways of handling THOSE situations -- but that's because they're used when they should not be, not because they are inherently a flawed device. For what they SHOULD be used for, they are a safer alternative. Not 100% safe. Safer than night sticks. Safer than fire hoses. Safer than police dogs.

      A significant number of people are not being killed, and it's less than lethal because the vast majority of people who it is used against do NOT die. A small fraction die. RTFS, only 30 even had tasers ruled a contributing factor. That's.. negligible. That's less than lethal.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    35. Re:So remember... by Sique · · Score: 1

      This is the major problem with "non-lethal" weapons. The other is, that there are people studying medicine for five years in order to know how to acutally calculate how much of a dose you need to sedate or stun people without threatening their lives too much. And somehow all this knowledge is supposed to be condensed in a single handgun and 100 milliseconds for pulling the trigger.

      If if was so easy why don't we stun people with a taser before an operation?
      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    36. Re:So remember... by iamacat · · Score: 1

      A police officer's goal is to make sure nobody, including crime suspects, gets hurt on the scene. They are even supposed to risk their lives to a significant degree to ensure that, for example try to talk down the guy with a gun. Knowing what kind of hurt they are going to inflict on civilians is vital to help them choose an appropriate means of restraint for adversaries that do not appear very dangerous, like college students in a protest.

      Soldiers, apart from possibly UN peacekeepers, do not have such a mandate and on the contrary are routinely commanded to kill a large number of small children and other innocent bystanders by dropping bombs. I would love to have this changed, but since US soldiers are not allowed to use chemical weapons, I wouldn't make them experience effects of tear gas.

    37. Re:So remember... by iamacat · · Score: 2, Informative

      The law actually requires you to follow directions of a police officer and even help him in his duties when deputized. However, once detained you are entitled to have your charges explained to you and be released from custody once it's determined that you broke no laws.

    38. Re:So remember... by jotok · · Score: 5, Funny

      The current policy is awful, but the voltage policy is improving.

    39. Re:So remember... by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Most of the deaths associated with tasers are due to cardiac events. Heart attacks. Often due to.. get this.. being fat, being on coke / meth / crack, and fighting with cops. That's not good for your heart. You're probably going to have a heart attack whether you're shocked or not.. but you'd be more likely to have a heart attack if the cops started hitting you with nightsticks.

      Bullshit! If a taser disrupts muscular action, it implicitly causes a mini heart-attack. If you're not healthy enough, the heart doesn't start again properly and you get a full-on heart attack. Unless the cop bangs his baton into your xiphisternum or under the ribs and into your heart, it's not likely to cause a heart attack.

      A baton against the head could easily kill you, either directly through crushing a major artery in the temple or, if untreated, by bruising of the brain causing swelling. Crushed kidneys from hits against the lower back? Sure. Burst blood vessel causing a clot that leads to a pulmonary embolism, maybe. But a heart attack? You're more likely to break a rib and drive it into the heart.

      As for being fat, apparently, that's over 1/2 the US population now, so if that's the criteria for making a Taser a lethal weapon, retire the things now.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    40. Re:So remember... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Would this Polish guy at Vancouver airport have been shot in the heart?

      This is a bit of a tangent, but, I finally got to see the camera phone video of that incident, and I'll be damned if he didn't have the exact same look in his eye as Ballmer in the "Developers!" video. Seriously, check it out--you expect the guy to start tossing chairs.

      He was tazed for our safety.

    41. Re:So remember... by gravesb · · Score: 2, Informative

      They do experience tear gas during NBC training. And, get tazered if they are going to carry a tazer- at least when they first were issued.

      --
      http://bgcommonsense.blogspot.com
    42. Re:So remember... by niiler · · Score: 0, Troll
      I want to reinforce your opinion. I would think that tasers would be used in place of guns as the less lethal alternative. Where one would have the right to fire a gun, one could also, in theory use a taser. All the uses I've read about lately most certainly do not fall under this heading. As for the parent to your post:

      How many lives have been saved by the use of Tasers? For instance, without a taser it may indeed be much more likely for cops to have to resort to guns and/or other less predictable violent means to protect themselves.
      You know, if tasers had been around for more than about 10 years, I might be inclined to take this argument seriously. Besides in some of these cases, the tasers were used after the "perpetrator" had already been subdued and handcuffed. The use was sort of like a "take that for resisting" motive. Can you imagine police in the US or Canada shooting a perp after having handcuffed them?
    43. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1, Informative

      You really don't know what you're talking about. Terror bombing isn't effective and hasn't been the U.S. strategy since WWII. Neutralizing enemy ability to wage war is the goal. Soldiers who are exposed to tear gas in training are being given experience so they can learn to handle exposure and degraded ability to function. They aren't allowed to use BC weapons but they have decontamination equipment and protective suits. They're not suicide zombies.

    44. Re:So remember... by tonsofpcs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      [cite]You know, if tasers had been around for more than about 10 years, I might be inclined to take this argument seriously.[/cite]
      If 1992/3 [depending on where you read] were 10 years ago, I might be inclined to continue reading your comment.

    45. Re:So remember... by Booya72 · · Score: 1

      I think that the pain delivered by pepper spray would be greater than the pain from a taser..so if a taser is considered a form of torture why not pepper spray? but then again, I could be wrong.

    46. Re:So remember... by yakumo.unr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There are nonlethals on trial at the moment that have similar results to the sick sticks using a special light strobe if I remember correctly.

      The joke is of course the increase in perps wearing sunglasses..

    47. Re:So remember... by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      I'm sure all these Vietnamese and Laotians of the 60's and 70's would like to agree with you regarding terror bombing.

    48. Re:So remember... by niiler · · Score: 0, Troll

      OK, so fifteen years instead of ten. Wow! What a difference! In either case, this is not a heck of a lot of time to compile statistics on effectiveness. And for that matter, how exactly DO you quantify how many lives were saved by using tasers when from TFAs it's fairly clear that the tasers are not being used only in life threatening situations. (In short, you can't make the assumption that a gun would actually have been used in place of a taser had tasers not been invented.) Perhaps you can explain to me exactly how tasing someone in handcuffs preserves lives?

    49. Re:So remember... by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

      until they've experienced being at the wrong end of one That will never do. Experiencing a taser is a nice sentiment, but how many of these officers will have health issues that may result in their death?

      I'm sure there are many who experience real fear when being faced with a taser. Fear and medical issues aren't normal components of training exercises. An officer would never be expected to endure a taser if he had any medical condition that could result in his death when mixed with a taser.

      Even if the officer did agree to the tasing, the department wouldn't want the liability of his possible death. They seem more than willing to shrug responsibility when they kill anyone else though.
      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    50. Re:So remember... by ShadeOfBlue · · Score: 1

      I won't argue with the fact that tasers are painful...

      Not to deny that many people find tasering painful, but I felt like I'd share my personal experience here. When I (voluntarily) got tasered by my friend (for reference, one barb entered near to my nipple and the other just below my belt line), it actually wasn't what I would call a painful sensation. It was certainly uncomfortable, but mostly it was an overpowering wave of de-motivation. I had originally planned to see if I could walk towards my friend while being tasered. I managed to take like 1~1.5 steps while slowly sinking to the floor. It wasn't that I totally lost muscular control or was blinded by pain, but that I no longer felt any impetus to do anything. If the floor had spinning saw-blades everywhere, there might have been enough motive force to keep me standing (although balance might have been difficult with my abs all clenched up), but it's a tough call. Correspondingly, while I wanted it to stop, because it didn't register as strong pain, I might have been able to withold national secrets (as that involves not doing something).

      On the other hand my friend dropped like a rock and started screaming "Stop! Stop!" as soon as he got tased, and said it was very painful. In his case the barbs were taped on his bare skin. With me one barb implanted into the skin, but the other, being below my waistline had a harder time penetrating my clothing and just grazed my skin. One thing that does worry me, though, is that my friend wasn't very far away and the spread was roughly 2 feet. If I had been moving around a little, or he had been a bit farther away, a barb very easily could have hit my neck, face, or nuts, all of which sound like very bad options.

      I wonder if any of the deaths involved being hit in such non-conventional areas.
    51. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work on a college campus that has a Criminal Justice department/program. They train the cops here. If they can't use a taser, they don't get to carry one. (Even if it's medical reasons that prevents it.) No Tase, No Carry. End of story.

    52. Re:So remember... by mikael · · Score: 3, Informative

      He had travelled on a long 12 hour flight from Europe (Poland) to the west coast of North America. He had then spent another 10 hours waiting in the baggage collection lounge for his family (who had instructed him to wait by the doors with his luggage). Altogether, he had been without decent sleep or a solid meal for 20+ hours. Anyone who has taken such a journey will probably agree that you can become irritable, annoyed and confused by simple things.

      Why was he allowed to spend 10 hours in the baggage collection zone in the first place? Didn't anyone from the airport notice someone hanging around, and ask them if they had a problem (missing bags, wrong carousel, damaged suitcase, etc...).

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    53. Re:So remember... by Error27 · · Score: 1

      In San Jose they said tazers would reduce police shootings but it actually went up. I'm not sure why...

    54. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Your speculation is way off base. I personally know of one situation where it did save someones life. In fact the man that was tasered actually thanked us for tasering him afterwards. Also, this scenario is not very unlikely. We had a suspect who had gone off his meds and barricaded himself in his house with a knife threatening to kill himself and his wife. Thankfully his wife had managed to break free and run to a neighbors house to call 911.

      When we went in, we ordered him to drop the knife several times which he did not. Luckily we had a taser handy and when he lunged at us, we were able to deploy the taser and safely end the situation. Pepper spray in a situation like this would have done nothing, and our only resort to someone charging us with a knife would have been to shoot him. When we got him to the hospital he thanked us for using the taser rather than resorting to a more violent means because at that point he was trying to commit suicide by cop.

      So before you speak out of your ass and say that tasers haven't saved that many lives, maybe you should do some research. There is a lot of statistical information out there showing a decline in deadly force interactions after police departments are supplied with tasers. Maybe you are too young to remember this, but pepper spray used to be considered "dangerous" at one time. The same vocal critics who are now yelling about tasers are the same ones that complained about pepper spray back in the day. You want to take away a safe means of subdueing someone in favor of the more violent means.

    55. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      First, my reaction to the UN's declaration was that yes, a Taser can be used as a torture device. So can't a gun, knife, lead pipe, car battery, bamboo splinters, fire, torches, soldering irons, rubber shirts, spoons, etc...

      Heck, even bare hands and feet can be used.

      Used properly(1), a taser is not only supposed to be a substitute for a gun, it's also a substitute for pepper spray(2), baton(3), and various forms of barehanded submission techniques like beating the subject on the head until he's too disoriented to resist being handcuffed while three or four officers put their weight on him.

      As for risk of death - people die suddenly all the time; for reasons that make you go 'huh'. It's kinda like how sex can kill somebody with a heart problem. The trick is, the sex was frequently just the 'last straw'. It could have been the flight of stairs a few days later, that slammed door resulting in a shock and adrenaline burst, or just going to wake up, or even just out of the blue. Heck, nominally healthy people like highschool football players have a nonzero chance of dying of heart attack. A simple hit, merely bruising could dislodge a clot or something and result in a lethal stroke. There's 300 million people in the USA. I can't find the number of arrests other than '800k' for weed. Marijuana arrests are a big chunk, but I don't think that's the majority. Most arrests are non-violent on the other hand. Let's go with 500k-1M physical force arrests - that's enough that you'll have some weird stuff pop up.

      At least some tasers have recording devices in them - the police can tell how many shocks were delivered, the length of each, how far apart, etc... In at least one of the cases it WAS used as a torture device - how else can you explain 30 shocks over a 5 minute period? Still, go after that officer for torture, not ban the device. Make sure there's good training as well.

      Interesting post by Lawdog on the subject of tasers and force usage.

      My conclusion? Taser usage needs to be monitored; should not be used alone, should be used for it's purpose: disrupt the individual enough that other physical controls such as handcuffs can be emplaced. Should definitely not be used as a torture device. As you're using a taser, you should be arresting somebody - have the details of the usage, along with justification, be in the report.

      (1)As we've already determined that improper usage can turn more devices into torture implements than can't be.
      (2)Still a nonzero risk of death; asthma, patients with breathing problems, and pain is longer than necessary
      (3)You're clubbing the person into submission - risk of death is very real, as is lasting injuries.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    56. Re:So remember... by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      mod parent up, parents get upset when another adult has a stern talking to their child for doing something nasty, and police can put 50kvolts through a child instead of taking the piece of glass off him? bullshit.

      Sorry, but the fact that some parents have a ridiculous obsession with their child's sense of self worth is completely irrelevant to this situation. This child was threatening to harm himself, had already cut himself more than once, and was successfully subdued by the police on scene and went away without any serious injuries.

      The article and in fact posters on this site are suggesting that the adults on scene should have been able to control the child on the scene. Sure thing. They could have approached from two or three sides and grabbed the child's arms and torso just as the glass entered his neck and blood spurted all over them. How would the news article read then?

      But hey, like all of us here, you weren't there so feel free to comment on how much better you would have handled the situation than the trained officers who responded to the call.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    57. Re:So remember... by quax · · Score: 1

      I'd be interested to learn if you still think this way after watching what happened to this dad in Utah who was stopped on a ride with his family for alleged speeding. I find this incident highly instructive of how some cops use their tasers.

      At the time that I am writing this youtube seems to be done. So here's the written account - although words don't really do this incident justice:

      A man was tased and arrested on a Utah highway after being stopped by an officer and refusing to sign a speeding ticket because he did not understand what offence he had committed or why he had been pulled over.

      The encounter, captured on the police car camera on September 14th and released this week, is the latest in a long string of incidents involving the unacceptable use of Tasers by officers on citizens whom the evidence reveals are in no way threatening, acting unlawfully or resisting co-operation.

      The video shows the Utah Highway Patrolman pull over Jared Massey and his pregnant wife who also had their baby with them in the car and ask for Mr Massey's license.

      Mr Massey tells the officer he does not understand why he has been stopped or what he is being charged with, at which point the officer orders Massey to get out of the car. The officer then puts down his clipboard and immediately takes out his Taser and points it at Mr Massey without any provocation whatsoever, yelling "Turn around and put your hands behind your back" as Massey attempts to point out the speed limit sign and engage the officer in conversation.

      (Article continues below)

      A shocked Massey asks "what the hell is wrong with you?" and backs away, turning around as the officer had demanded, at which point the officer unleashes 50,000 volts from the Taser into Massey's body, sending him screaming to the ground instantly and causing his wife to jump out of the car and yell hysterically for help.

      Watch the video:

      Lying face down on the ground a shell shocked, Mr Massey says "officer I don't know what you are doing, I don't know why you are doing what you are doing" to which the officer replies "I am placing you under arrest because you did not obey my instruction."

      Mr Massey then once again asks the officer several times why he was stopped and what he is being charged with. He then asks for his rights to be read and points out that the officer cannot arrest him without doing this. Instead of reading Massey his rights the officer then addresses another patrolman who arrives on the scene sardonically commenting "Ohhh he took a ride with the Taser" to which the other officer answers "painful isn't it".

      The icing on the cake comes at the end of the video when the officer LIES to his own colleague about the encounter, clearly stating that he verbally warned Massey he was going to tase him, as is the law, when there was no warning whatsoever.

      Mr Massey is planning to file a lawsuit against the Utah Highway Patrol. He says he was already slowing down as he approached the 40 mile per hour sign in the construction zone outside of vernal. All charges except for the speeding ticket have been dropped.

    58. Re:So remember... by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      You can't possibly be asserting that cops/security only taser violent dangerous people. Peruse youtube a little and you will see a bunch of thugs making copious over-use of their authority.

      Great. So a few officers make poor (or even just plain bad) judgments and we should take a non-lethal alternative weapon out of the hands of all officers?

      What, then, is your alternative suggestion for safely detaining a violent suspect without using a baton, pepper spray or a firearm?

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    59. Re:So remember... by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      Those means are, as I said, beating the piss out of you. They should not be anything of the kind. Here in Britain the police have the following: CS Spray, Metal Side Handled Extendable baton and some have a small metal extendable cosh (Called an ASP I believe). Very rarely do you see them use any of it.

      Generally the preferred method of subduing a single suspect is to use their vast array of control and restraint procedures. This usually means the suspect suddenly finds himself face down on the floor with one arm held up behind his back. If you are any good there is no need to actually strike the suspect at all. You simply grab his arm and then use it to make him do what you want.

      If the suspect has a knife, the easiest solution is to use the metal truncheon (or an ASP works even better) to smack the back of his hand. This hurts, a lot. They the drop knife. If they don't, you can do it again or choose to escalate to CS Spray. Using a truncheon on somebodies head is ineffective as the skull is too thick. It might hurt them, but it doesn't help you restrain them. Smashing their hand however does usually make it difficult to use it any manner, let alone to try hitting or stabbing someone with it.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    60. Re:So remember... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      As the other reply points out, you only see the abuses on YouTube. There are FAR more cases of good cops using tasers properly.

      The videos on YouTube are shocking, but how many of them are actually abuses? A video of someone being nightsticked into submission by the police, or shot, or even subdued by hand (which also causes death on occasion) would be pretty disturbing too, yet there are situations that occur all the time in which the police have to do those things. YouTube videos really are selected specifically for their shock value -- they're Fox News without even the veneer of balanced reporting.

      The video of the guy in the Vancouver airport shows a guy throwing furniture at a glass partition in an airport, then some cops showing up and him getting tasered. We don't really know what the situation was, and won't until the public inquiry finishes investigating. It seems to me that there was definitely a mistake made when the officers didn't immediately check to see if the man was okay, but other than that I can't say. He was certainly being violent, and potentially dangerous.

      The other recent one is the highway patrol guy doing the traffic stop and tasering the motorist when he gets out of the car. If I were a cop in the land of the right to bear arms, that guy would have been tasered before his foot hit the highway. A lot of cops get shot on traffic stops in situations just like that one.

      RCMP officers are pepper sprayed before they're allowed to carry pepper spray. If their policy towards tasers is the same, and it should be, any officer carrying a taser will have experienced it. Officers need to be properly trained and the idea that tasers are LESS-lethal, not NON-lethal reinforced, but they do provide a valuable alternative to hand restraint, the nightstick and pepper spray and shooting, all of which are unfortunately potentially lethal.

    61. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      A police officer's goal is to make sure nobody, including crime suspects, gets hurt on the scene.

      Though the fallback position is that only the criminal gets hurt/killed. Finer than that is generally up to the officer under high pressure having to make a snap decision. There's also the problem that sometimes committing a minor harm early avoids a greater harm later.

      By this I mean that a competent felony arrest is over quickly - extending it out only increases the risk of injury to all parties involved.

      on the contrary are routinely commanded to kill a large number of small children and other innocent bystanders by dropping bombs.

      While collateral damage happens, especially with air dropped munitions - I have to take offense at the 'routinely' part. Most militaries aren't in the business of dropping bombs on children - indeed, we take pains to avoid that stuff. When opposing forces follow the laws of war, the chances of a bomb being dropped on children is pretty low - schools aren't to be used for military purposes or storage, housing areas are low density targets, etc...

      When Saddam and others turn around and use these areas as storage points for equipment and fighters - it gets complicated. Often we decide NOT to hit a target because of civilians. In at least one case we used concrete dummy bombs* to take out vehicles that Saddam had parked next to a school.

      but since US soldiers are not allowed to use chemical weapons, I wouldn't make them experience effects of tear gas.

      The tear gas thing is more along the lines of a training tool because we have to at least worry about chemical weapons being used on us. Tear gas is much more forgiving than nerve gas in training. Making sure people pay attention to the proper wear of their chemical suits, proper mask seal.

      *Talk about expensive. The guidance package is just as expensive whether the payload is HE or concrete. HE's not much more expensive than concrete, at least to militaries. You end up hooking a $200k guidance package to a $20k bomb.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    62. Re:So remember... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I think it behooves us to also look at the other side of it, impossible as it may be to properly quantify.

      Whaa?? This is Slashdot — the cops are always wrong. No matter how the cops subdue a violent criminal attacking them, the moonbats here will find fault. The correct thing for the cops to do is let the perps continue their rampages with impunity and hope nobody videotapes them with discourteous expressions on their faces.

    63. Re:So remember... by SirMeliot · · Score: 1

      Just be glad you don't live in India where it seems anyone with a mobile phone has been able to do that.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/7103585.stm/
    64. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Then you do what you do to police officers who abused their authority/powers before the advent of tasers - you discipline them, fire tehm, even convict them if the offense justifies it.

      Should we remove all officer's firearms because a few have used them to commit murder?

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    65. Re:So remember... by iamacat · · Score: 1

      Do you mean that US military does not drop bombs on strategic targets in urban areas? How have we managed to kill 84 thousand civilians in Iraq if we "take pains to avoid that stuff"? Why have we been bombing foreign embassies and weddings? Do we or do we not impose economic sanctions on countries that are not an imminent threat in full knowledge that hundreds of thousands of children will starve to death or die in need of the most basic medical care?

      Granted, if we want soldiers to act more like police officers we must send many times more troops, institute draft and suffer far greater casualties from our side. Death of people forced into military can also be considered civilians deaths, so perhaps it's better them than us. But lets not sugarcoat the very ugly reality or let real police officers act like soldiers in foreign land.

    66. Re:So remember... by iamacat · · Score: 1

      What do you make of the self-described "shock and awe" campaign? How about use of vacuum bombs that are specifically design to terrify the enemy by killing victims in a particular slow and painful manner?

    67. Re:So remember... by Sparr0 · · Score: 1

      simple solution to that is to cover or remove your license plate when you aren't driving your vehicle. cover isnt infallible, and remove would be a PITA with screws, but I imagine a quick-removal mount would not be hard to come up with, just a latch or two.

    68. Re:So remember... by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      If an officer pulls the trigger on his service weapon, there's usually (always?) an investigation. If it's determined that the bullet hit something substantial, the officer may be temporarily reassigned to desk duty pending the outcome of the investigation. If a person is hit by the bullet, the officer is just about always reassigned to desk duty, if not given some paid time off.

      It's unclear how often taser use is investigated, and while I'm generally favorably minded towards them, it may still be a good idea to review procedures of use and follow-up.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    69. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Do you mean that US military does not drop bombs on strategic targets in urban areas? How have we managed to kill 84 thousand civilians in Iraq if we "take pains to avoid that stuff"?

      We take pains to avoid that sort of stuff. The terrorists/insurgents* unfortunately seem to try to take pains to ensure civilian deaths - part of the rules of warfare (as practiced by western civilizations) are NOT to put military assets around civilian ones.

      Besides, I can tell that Iraqbodycount is including ALL violent deaths - not just ones by US/coalition forces.

      Very first page:
      Baghdad: 4 bodies.
      Falluja: 2 bodies.
      Mosul: roadside bomb kills policeman; 2 bodies -a university student and her mother.
      Samarra: car bomb kills 3 policemen.
      Hilla: 2 worshippers shot dead outisde mosque.
      Tuz Khurmato: body found.
      Wajihia: body found.

      Are you trying to argue that we're setting car bombs ourselves, having snipers shoot random people, or leaving bodies** out to be found by random people?

      Per this page, it's 600 Iraqi civilians in 5 months. At that rate, it's 1440 per year, or more than 58 years to come up to the death toll you cited as though it was all caused by the USA. Given that, it looks like the terrorists are killing Iraqies better than four times as much as the US - even with far fewer resources.

      I'm not saying that this is good - but it does show the difference between deliberately targeting civilians and collateral damage. Can collateral deaths be avoided? In my opinion, while more can be done, it would be in substantial cost in manpower, time, effort, and probably casualties - the longer the conflict runs, the more casualties there likely are going to be.

      *No, they are NOT necessarily the same.
      **Sometimes this happens - we're not able to get to the scene(bomb/artillery fire), the body is from somebody shot from a convoy under attack that wasn't about to stop, etc...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    70. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Cute reply but ignorant of US military doctrinal and technological history. You are also confusing area denial with terror attacks. Doctrine always follows behind technological advances. Guided munitions weren't available then so rough saturation still needed to be used to take out targets.

    71. Re:So remember... by Renraku · · Score: 1

      They should never be called non lethal. More like less lethal.

      A baton strike to the chest has a small chance of killing someone by disrupting the heart's rhythm and having it send confusing information to the brain stem. Pepper spray can kill people who have trouble breathing or have asthma/allergies. Tasers can kill people with heart conditions or that are on some drugs.

      Now, if you're acting up and throwing punches at the police officers..which would you rather have happen? You can get a baton, you can get pepper sprayed, you can get tazed, or three people can beat the shit out of you until you're too weak to stop resisting.

      In days of old, the baton used to be the primary melee weapon. Easy to break bones, teeth, skulls, etc..its not always easy to have fine motor control when the adrenaline is pumping and a guy just hit you in the face a few times. A little more power than necessary in the right place and you die. The court would of course look into it and dismiss it unless they just jumped you with batons for no reason. Pepper spray is a medium range weapon. If you're being a dipshit but aren't a direct threat to anyone but yourself yet, pepper spray will probably be used. What if you're sitting there with that knife to your throat and are threatening to cut yourself? They peppper spray you, causing you to drop the knife. Of course you die because you have asthma and are hopped up on PCP. Lets say you're the local retard that has retard strength and it takes 4 people to keep you from going crazy and hurting someone or yourself. You get tazed after hitting and beating on a few officers. You die because of your heart defect. Case is dismissed because either you were going to stop, or they were going to stop. Guess who has the right-of-way?

      Look up occupational hazards. Its real lame when a police officer gets hurt for doing his job. In very few other jobs do people obviously try to injure you. They're only going to NOT injure you if you successfully resist. What if you were in a factory that had no lines on the floor, no safety meeting, and no safety gear? What if you had to work there? Don't know the range for those robotic arms flailing and assembling the shit? What about the autowelders? Not a very good place to work, huh? That's what being a police officer is like. People can turn violent in an instant. If you don't want to be tazed, don't resist arrest. Don't be a little bastard. Do what they say and let the court figure it out.

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    72. Re:So remember... by adolf · · Score: 1

      Anarchy? Hardly. More like being in-keeping with expectations of other non-lethal deterrents.

      An officer carries a club, but likely has been hit hard (or fallen, or something) at some point in their life and understand that it will be a painful experience for the recipient. An officer therefore carries an understanding that being hit by a club is going to be painful, and has a reasonable expectation about the level of pain a particular blow might produce, verifiable by the feel and sound of each hit.

      An officer carries his fists. A very common weapon, and certainly one that they've been on the receiving end of before. There is also good feedback as to the level of deterrence being administered, as registered by the officer's own pain.

      Pepper spray and tear gas. I don't know if officers are hit with pepper spray during training, but being exposed to CS tear gas is certainly a regular part of training, and the experience of this is probably adequate to cover usage of pepper spray. (I have experienced CS as a part of military training. It was unpleasant, to say the least, but did do wonders for clearing my lungs and sinuses of all manner of goo.)

      Tazer? There's no feedback, except for the convulsions of the subject on the ground. Given the low probability of the officer having otherwise experienced such an intense electric shock, it seems to me that they'd have no reasonable way to genuinely estimate what it is that they're doing to the subject. That is, of course, unless they themselves have been tazed.

      It is obviously very important that an officer be able to use a level of force which appropriate for the matter at hand, and in order to determine what that level is an officer needs to have an understanding of what each deterrent will do. Without the experience, an officer's decision on what level of force needs to be used will be (at best) misguided, and the results of that decision might be far more dangerous than the situation should dictate.

    73. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      "Shock and awe" meant shock and awe of decapitation of the ability to wage war. The press and Joe Blow don't have any real comprehension of the modern ability to use guided munitions. They tend to see lots of WWII and Vietnam-era film of dumb weapons and think that's the current reality. Knocking out the air defense of the 3rd largest (manpower count) military in the world in about 24 hours is pretty darn "shocking" and "awe"ing. It demonstrated, very conclusively, that the miilitary capabilites of the U.S far outpace those of any other country. It was also quite reserved. The goal was to remove the ability to wage war, period. That's why Iraqi officers were told, in very direct indivisualized messages, what to do and what not to do. "Dear x, do not go to your office at xxxx street tomorrow. Signed, the U.S. military" was pretty effective in bringing the destructio of the means to wage war while minimizing human casualties. The attacks against Saddam Hussein's regime were not a theatrical presentation for the entertainment of the media.

      I have no idea what you mean by vaccum bomb unless you are confused and don't know what a fuel-air explosion is and does. "specifically design(ed) to terrify the enemy by killing victims in a particular(ly) slow and painful manner" shows extreme ignorance of the weapons, what they do and their use. That comment isn't one that would be expected from anyone with even a moderat understanding of military history. Intimidating the enemy is the primary goal. The ultimate goal is to get the enemy to capitulate without taking action. Anyone who doesn't want their enemy terrified is a fool. Fuel-air bombs work by dispersing a mist of explosive so there is a large area and plenty of oxygen to feed the rapid burn known as an explosion. They are designed to create a massive pressure wave, first positive, then negative as air rushes to fill the void. The softer an item within the blast area, the more likely it is to sustain damage. Damage comes primarily from pressure waves, not burning so residual damage is far less than with "conventional" bombs. There are plenty of examples from both Gulf Wars in which smart and brilliant munitions were used to take out huge numbers of troops/vehicles in an incredibly short time, followed by the absolute surrender of troops who witnessed the attacks. Which is better, a single targeted attack which takes out the military objective and creates fear or hundreds of dumb weapons? Fuel-air explosives have been in use for quite a while. The U.S. daisy cutter (nicknamed for the shape of the explosive effect) was used in Vietnam and the updated version used only a couple of times against Saddam's Iraq. The Soviets used something similar in Afghanistan. They're great for clearing confined spaces like caves and tunnels. Remember, the goal is to get the enemy to capitulate WITHOUT having to fight to minimize casualties on both sides. The only way to do that is intimidation. Technology has provided the means to do this which is why combat fatalities (military and civilian) are so small. I have no idea how any sane person would think a fuel-air bomb is specifically designed to create pain more than any other explosion. That idea certainly wouldn't come from anyone who has an elementary understanding of explosives. Pressure with minimalresidual fire is very humane. I see how the accusation could be made for agitprop reasons but it won't stand up to scrutiny.

    74. Re:So remember... by thepainter · · Score: 1

      For some departments the Taser is considered soft empty hand control (i.e. if you can touch them you can tase them). The problem becomes that officers who are not confident resort to the Taser quickly in cases where the suspect was offering only passive resistance or, in come cases of abuse, none at all. A more effective strategy can be seen in departments that consider the Taser a "intermediate" weapon. This is the level just below deadly force and includes impact weapons (batons). So, the Taser is only deployed in cases where the suspect is showing active aggression (attempting to assault the officer) or in cases where lesser means to effect the arrest have been exhausted. On a side note, while I agree that Tasers should be considered "intermediate force" and pepper spray remain "empty hand control", I personally rather be tased than pepper sprayed (again).

    75. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you missed the point I was trying to make when I used the word, "anarchy." I was specifically commenting on the idea that only someone who has experienced something can really know the effect. I don't have to be a Meth addict to know it's bad. Likewise, I don't have to be hit with a taser to know it's bad.

      CS probably also reliever you of some solids and liquids, too.

      Clubs and fists require the police officer to put their own body at risk, don't they? They also won't work at a distance. Your analogy doesn't hold.

      The idea that a police officer isn't capable of having feedback during taser use is...really very arrogant, when you think about it unless police officers are braindead zombies. They do have a tendency to become rather callous compared to the average person but they exist to deal with the bad guys, not the good guys, so that's part of they price they and society "pay."

      "Given the low probability of the office having otherwise experiences such an intense electric shock, ..." Please cite verifiable references for your assertion and define "low probability". It is common for tasers and tear gas to be used on police officers for familiarization.

      A few cases of misuse of a control tool by police does not mean the tools should be removed. Some reports say the Polish guy in Canada was on a rampage. People are fallible. That doesn't comden the tool.

      They carry guns but aren't shot with bullets during training, are they? Would you propose their guns be removed because they have no ability to appreciate the damage a gun can cause?

    76. Re:So remember... by T-Bone-T · · Score: 1

      I'd like to be the first to welcome you to the 21st century. These days, we can drop bombs through a specific pane of glass on a window if we have to and the bad guys often still get away because of their proximity to religious buildings or other protected areas. War-fighting has changed a lot since the 20th century.

    77. Re:So remember... by gbulmash · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know, if tasers had been around for more than about 10 years, I might be inclined to take this argument seriously.

      I remember watching the inventor of the TASER (it should be capitalized, because it's an acronym) being interviewed. TASER stands for "Thomas A. Swift's Electric Rifle". I recall this, because I saw it when I was of an age to be reading Tom Swift books, meaning that this was in the late 70s.

      So I looked it up... and whaddaya know, the TASER was invented in 1969. I don't know about you but 38 > 10 in most countries I've visited. In all likelihood, the TASER is older than you.

      10 years... How do I mod his comment "-1 ignorant"?

    78. Re:So remember... by adolf · · Score: 1

      Straw man.

      "Otherwise," as in, "other than being tazed." I don't think I need to come up with evidence to support the plain and obvious notion that an officer has a low probability of having experienced an intense electric shock, outside of a tazer. It simply isn't a common thing; most people in the US have never been exposed to voltages beyond 120VAC no matter how careless they've been when working near electricity.

      I don't condemn tazers, or their use by police officers. I merely suggest, in support of a previous poster, that tazing officers as a matter of course during their initial training would level the playing field with other forms of non-lethal force, in terms of experience.

      I do not think that requiring it would be ridiculous, as you've previously suggested. Instead, I believe that it is the only sane way to allow them to understand exactly what it is that they're doing; watching someone be tazed, or learning about it through books and videos is simply not sufficient. They need to actually -be- tazed to fully comprehend what level of force such an action actually applies.

    79. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Straw man? Hardly. You made an assertion of probability related to police training and I challenged you to show substantiation. You don't have to meet the requireent of validating your claim in which case it's clear you have no factual basis for your comment. Ergo, it's a fabricated "fact" you invented to support your assertion.

    80. Re:So remember... by fuliginous · · Score: 1

      Only problem is the lethals are banned too because they 1/ cause extreme physical pain (before and briefly before you die) 2/ cause obscene psychological pain through the intimidation and expectation you are about to die.

    81. Re:So remember... by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      Here's a rule that would lead to some restraint: no police officer should be allowed to carry a taser until they've experienced being at the wrong end of one.

      By this logic, police should not be allowed to carry a gun unless they've been shot.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    82. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do I mod your post "-1 missed the fucking point"?

    83. Re:So remember... by mcmaddog · · Score: 1

      The purpose of exposing military personnel to tear gas is not to give them experience with the effects, but rather make them confident that their gas masks are effective. When I went through boot camp at Great Lakes for the Navy, they preferred to call it the 'Confidence Room' rather then gas chamber. In combat the enemy are not too likely to use tear gas, but rather biological or fatal chemical weapons and the military leaders don't want troops panicking because they fear their gas masks won't keep them safe.

    84. Re:So remember... by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      simple solution to that is to cover or remove your license plate when you aren't driving your vehicle. cover isnt infallible, and remove would be a PITA with screws, but I imagine a quick-removal mount would not be hard to come up with, just a latch or two.

      I think you'll return to find your vehicle impounded. In many jurisdictions an unplated vehicle in a public place isn't legal and will therefore be towed by either the police or an over zealous tow driver on a slow night. If not, of course, you'd give any police officer a great reason to run your place when you return to your vehicle and bolt the plates back on.

      The simple solution is to not do anything illegal. Don't speed, don't drive overly aggressively, don't drive under the influence and you shouldn't have a problem when leaving the bar.

      It drives me nuts when I hear about the poor repeat drunk driver (or the person with 12 speeding tickets, or a couple careless charges, or or or ... ) who's harassed when leaving the bar after having "just one too many" and the mean police officer who pulled, tested and ticketed him. Did you ever think of the side effects of that same jackass being allowed to remain licensed and on the very roads you drive on with your friends and family? Did you ever think about their civil rights to not be killed by a drunk driver?

      Now move away. Your heart is bleeding all over my shirt.

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    85. Re:So remember... by hpavc · · Score: 1

      If in a public parking area that would likely be 'vehicle abandonment', which often has a hefty fine and a quick tow.

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    86. Re:So remember... by hpavc · · Score: 1

      Pretty much the same scam and likely the same punishment.

      The guy that stalked and harassed a woman in michegan got a solitary single day for what seems to me a pretty substantial abuse of power.

      I look up your age, how many points you have, address (apartment/home) out of state address and are likely a student, if you have previous court issues related to divorce or marital issues. Manufacture a stop right before you enter your driveway by a few blocks, deserted road type deal multiple times. Yeah thats just one day suspension, lol.

      The multiple cops pressuring groups of people 'this is my third ticket from you people' is pretty insane stuff. Basically the above only on a 'game theory' approach to casting a wide net looking for successes.

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    87. Re:So remember... by 0123456789 · · Score: 1
      I don't normally respond to ACs, but I get the impression that you're a cop, and hence in a position to enlighten me a little. You mention:

      a lot of statistical information out there showing a decline in deadly force interactions after police departments are supplied with tasers. Can you please point me towards some of it? My curiousity has been piqued about this issue now.


      You also mention that pepper spray used to be considered dangerous; I would argue it still is. Not for the person being sprayed, but for whoever is wielding it. If you're confronted by someone who is a sufficient danger that you need a weapon, aren't you better off with one that doesn't require you to be that close to them?


      Finally, I'm British, our police are not routinely armed. When I do see American police (I live near New York now), the fact that they're armed is something that makes me cautious. I suspect this effect is less on an American, since they're used to seeing police with guns, but I would still expect that a police officer with a drawn gun still has a massive deterrent effect. You presumably have more experience in this regard; does it help you to control a situation, or does it tend to exaggerate the situation? Does a taser have a similar effect?

    88. Re:So remember... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you but when I vomit it feels like I've been beaten in the gut with a baseball bat. Plus it usually causes my ulcer to flare up and gives me a bloody nose.

      Yeah, that's a nice thing to do. And knowing how tasers are used now something like a 'sick stick' would be used whenever the cop felt like it.

      --
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    89. Re:So remember... by tjstork · · Score: 1

      For the most part, the 84,000 dead in Iraq, even if you accept the statistic, is because of Iraq on Iraq violence. However, in the grim game of accounting lives, the 84,000 dead in Iraq due to the war is a much smaller toll than the sanctions had caused before. What people do not get is that sanctions are an act of war, and if you are going to engage in a war, it is better to be quicker about it, then longer.

      --
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    90. Re:So remember... by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First, my reaction to the UN's declaration was that yes, a Taser can be used as a torture device. So can't a gun, knife, lead pipe, car battery, bamboo splinters, fire, torches, soldering irons, rubber shirts, spoons, etc... Heck, even bare hands and feet can be used.
      Or waterboarding. My take is that the UN is practising displacement activity: they are afraid to confront the Bush administration over undeniably brutal and often murderous acts of torture such as waterboarding (interesting how, when used in Korea, the US called it "Chinese water torture" but it got renamed when we started doing it), so instead they whinge about tasers. A functioning UN would be preparing world (especially US) public opinion for Bush, Cheney and gang's future trials for crimes against humanity, not picking this easier but less worthwhile fight.

      I'm no fan of tasers either, and the last thing we need are more excuses for the police to use excessive force on us. But even more important is for the US government and its proxies to stop torturing people now. No exceptions. And those who have condoned and practised it should be put on trial and locked up. No exceptions to that either.

      --
      Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
    91. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Knocking out the air defense of the 3rd largest (manpower count) military in the world in about 24 hours is pretty darn "shocking" and "awe"ing. It demonstrated, very conclusively, that the miilitary capabilites of the U.S far outpace those of any other country. It was also quite reserved.

      Except, that's not what happened. Most forward positions were taken out in the 9 year blockade before the war. Most of the remaining forward positions were taken out by special forces/laser guided munitions in the 3 months before the 'shock and awe' campaign even began. The shock and awe campaign was aimed at urban targets like television stations, government buildings and power generating plants, to completely disrupt the goverments ability to govern and to terrify the civilian population.

      Remember, the goal is to get the enemy to capitulate WITHOUT having to fight to minimize casualties on both sides. The only way to do that is intimidation. Technology has provided the means to do this which is why combat fatalities (military and civilian) are so small.

      Actually, this is a specious argument. Casulties in war are generally a function of time. The US military took Bahgdad in about 70 days, with about 35 KIA. This is a 1 KIA per 2 days. From that point, there have been ~3,874 US KIA in the subsequent 4.5 years (1642 days), which is .42 KIA per day. This of course does not taken into account the wounded, currently estimated at 28,451, which is ~17 per day.

      So while it's true that the force multipliers you talk about reduce the rate at which the stronger force takes casulties, the total casulties continues to be a function of time. Should the US decide to 'stay the course' in Iraq, I estimate that it will take at least another 5 years of futile ineptitude before you call in the UN to sort out your mess again, which at the current rate of attrition means another 766 KIA and another 31025 WIA. Fortunately for the US tax payer and the imperial subjects of McIraq, the US economy probably cannot sustain another $463 Billion hit without some ROI on your jolly in the Middle East, so you may just have to cry 'Uncle' sooner than that.

    92. Re:So remember... by atamido · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In at least one of the cases it WAS used as a torture device - how else can you explain 30 shocks over a 5 minute period?

      You would be surprised how persistent some people can be. While it can be painful to be tasered, and you aren't able to move while it's happening, the shock doesn't last for long. Once the shock is over (usually just a second or two) the person is able to move again just fine. If a person is sufficiently persistent (and hopped up on whatever drugs) they can go for quite a bit of time. If a person is violent enough, and an officer is alone enough, 30 shocks over 5 minutes from an officer (or two) trying to keep someone on the ground until more backup arrives is not outside of possibility.

      Personally, I think the biggest step towards preventing abuse was the prevalence of audio/video recording systems in patrol cars. Officers are more cautious about doing the wrong thing while being recorded, and people have difficulty wrongfully claiming abuse in a fully recorded situation. Everybody wins. It's certainly not 100%. Really dirty cops just moved further into the shadows, but it does mean the mediocre ones are less likely to fall into the wrong things.

    93. Re:So remember... by Tolkien · · Score: 1

      You can shoot someone with a gun in the thigh and they won't die. Tazer them and you never know. Electricity travels throughout the entire body and anything or anyone the victim is touching. This leaves it up to the victim's constitution and chance, whether or not they survive.

    94. Re:So remember... by fredklein · · Score: 1

      Though the fallback position is that only the criminal gets hurt/killed.

      Surely you mean "the SUSPECT", right? Or was there a trial I was unaware of?

    95. Re:So remember... by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1
      > Taser usage needs to be monitored

      How does that work? Is there some kind of Heisenberg principle at work that makes tasers hurt less when they're monitored?

      > a Taser can be used as a torture device

      Oh, now I understand. When you use a taser as a starter motor for your car or to light a cigarette it doesn't cause suffering. It's only when you use them to electrocute people that it constitutes a form of torture.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    96. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know this is a biased source, however TASER International provides quite a bit of documentation on this. I reference this article as it is the single best collection of TASER related statistics.

      http://www.taser.com/SiteCollectionDocuments/Controlled%20Documents/Legal/TASER%20Device%20Liability%20and%20Litigation%20Risk.pdf

      Believe it or not, a gun is not as big of a deterrent as you would think. Most criminals when ordered at gun point are not that compliant because they know that we are not going to shoot them unless they escalate the situation to a deadly force encounter. However with the TASER, they are more compliant because they know that we are able to use it at much lower levels of the force continuum.

    97. Re:So remember... by adolf · · Score: 1

      Straw man, indeed. You created an argument from my post which I myself did not make, and then responded to that creation in earnest.

      And you'd like me to validate what, exactly? My assertion that training does not equate to experience?

      Heh.

      If that's the case, then you really are a dense one, but I'll play along:

      Being trained about rebuilding an engine and doing it are two different things.
      Being trained about homebuilding and constructing a house are two different things.
      Being trained about structural engineering and designing bridges are two different things.
      Being trained about hand-to-hand combat and being punched in the face are two different things.
      Being trained about driving and actually doing it are two different things.
      Being trained about fucking and doing it are two different things.
      Being trained about tazers and actually being tazed are two different things.

      It is obvious (much like it is that the sky is blue) that both of our life experiences in other matters show that training and experience are two very different things.

      I eagerly await your rebuttal, which I do hope will include citations to support the notion that training about tazers is equal to actually being tazed, which would indeed be a rather unique facet of life were it to be true.

    98. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      You were caught lying by your own admission. Good day.

    99. Re:So remember... by tchall · · Score: 1

      >>At least some tasers have recording devices in them - the police can tell how many shocks were delivered, the length of each, how far apart, etc... In at least one of the cases it WAS used as a torture device - how else can you explain 30 shocks over a 5 minute period? Still, go after that officer for torture, not ban the device. Make sure there's good training as well. So far there are no 'generic' TASERS... and the ones that are sold to Law Enforcement do have recording devices that tell when, what, and how... recording the discharge of the cartridge and each pull of the trigger to stun the subject... These aren't toys, they are only "Less Than Lethal" when used properly... So far; though, the deaths I've read up on were all complicated by drugs or health issues... As far as TASERing a handcuffed subject, that officer ought to have had the book thrown at him... she was already under restraint... In any good program of training every officer that becomes certified has been subjected to the jolt... and KNOWS exactly how it feels... These are tools, good reliable tools, but just as subject to misuse as a firearm, nightstick or folding chair... I've read about cameras that can be installed on TASER weapons to add another level of accountability... that sounds like a local issue... My local police/sheriff's jurisdiction(s) are spread out over 100 miles of valley and some fairly inaccessible wilderness... adding a camera to a LTL weapon used once in a blue moon doesn't make any financial sense... It's highly likely that someone in the UN will consider speaking to a subject in a loud voice torture... (especially if they were to hear my mother in law's voice) but pain for compliance in effecting a capture is IMHO, preferable to using bullets... I can't see anyone using TASERS in the classic dungeon situation either... not when a couple of car batteries or even the traditional AC zipcord wires are so much easier to obtain and cheaper by far (not to mention the intimidation factor with nice bright sparks) This seems to be a non-issue as most military organizations aren't issuing TASERS to their troops... as hard as the company is marketing their products, the cost per shot is pretty steep for general military use... My conclusion is that, with adequate training of troops on the line and their supervisors, personal responsibility and reasonable oversight ought to prevent any misuse...

    100. Re:So remember... by instarx · · Score: 1

      Learning how many lives have been saved by tasers when the police would have otherwise shot the person would be a valuable statistic that we don't see. I'd also be interested to see how many people have been saved from simply being shot (not just shot and killed). Because tasers are so often mis-used I go back and forth in my mind as to whether it is a good idea to have police carry them.

      The barrier to using tasers by police is far too low (I'm not going to deal with tasers purposefully used as torture devices, which is clearly wrong). For example, the student at the John Kerry speech should not have been tasered - just restrained (as I think he was at the time he was tasered). The police tasered him just to shut him up. That is mis-use of a device that has the potetial to kill. They would not have banged him on the head with a baton in front of witnesses to shut him up, would they? Then why should they feel comfortable tasering him?

      There seems a useful cut-off point that any police officer could guage on the spot: if you are willing to pull out your gun and shoot the person then the use of a taser is justified - if you are not willing to shot him then don't taser him either. If that is too high a bar for some, then not using the taser if you aren't willing to hit the person in the head with a club would also greatly reduce taser abuse.

    101. Re:So remember... by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      So the solution is not to get rid of tasers, but to make their firing require as much accountability as firing their side arm. Paperwork, inquiry and if necessary suspension, fines and prison time. There's movement in that direction already with all the negative press. Excessive force should not depend on the tool, but on the harm inflicted, the threat to bystanders, threat to the cop and the crime involved. Shooting a shop lifter is excessive. Tasing a mad gunman 15 times is not.

      How about this: To gain certification to wield a taser, the cop must experience it. If they know what it is like, they might show more restraint in using it.

      Hey, UN. A bullet in the gut or kneecap is painful too.

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    102. Re:So remember... by Upphew · · Score: 0

      Good luck not hitting thigh artery or any vital parts in torso. Or hitting at all. I would like to be tasered any day instead of being shot.

      Cops should use taser only when they would also use gun.

    103. Re:So remember... by Floritard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What part of "don't tase me bro" don't you understand. But seriously, tasers should be in a locked box in the cruiser, some place where an officer has to go and physically procure it for a dire situation that is getting out of hand. Something that should require logging out and not something to be carried about in a holster. Say if some rhino-sized individual cranked up on speed is having a field day with a group of struggling officers. Then you tase the guy and bring him down. Anything else is just laziness on the part of municipal workers trained and paid to do a dangerous job. I don't think it's out of line to suppose a good majority of cops have the personality of someone willing to get in a scuffle or two with the odd "bad guy" considering it part of the job. That personality should not be linked via button to a device that effortlessly electrocutes whatever it is pointed at. I don't need to UN to tell me that sounds like a torture device, and I don't see the merit in arguing away the potential harm of such a device as a mere statistical minority.

    104. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      While it can be painful to be tasered, and you aren't able to move while it's happening, the shock doesn't last for long.

      The disability tends to last at least a few seconds longer than the shocks; part of the operating procedure should be to hook & stuff the perp in that period.

      If a person is violent enough, and an officer is alone enough, 30 shocks over 5 minutes from an officer (or two) trying to keep someone on the ground until more backup arrives is not outside of possibility.

      If the officer is alone he/she should not be using the taser. The officer's sidearm is a better choice in such a situation.

      It's certainly not 100%. Really dirty cops just moved further into the shadows, but it does mean the mediocre ones are less likely to fall into the wrong things.

      I agree, though I also think that states should pass laws that government officials such as police officers(especially uniformed) should have the expectation of being recorded at all times while performing their duties*. IE they CAN'T confiscate or arrest somebody who recorded them while they were being stupid, just for recording them. That ordering them to stop recording is a violation as well - an illegal order.

      *Caveat to prevent legalizing tapping of police bathrooms. A lawyer could probably phrase it better.

      --
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    105. Re:So remember... by bcattwoo · · Score: 1

      You can shoot someone with a gun in the thigh and they won't die.
      You have been watching too many movies. Hit a major artery and they will be dead before the paramedics get there.

    106. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Is there some kind of Heisenberg principle at work that makes tasers hurt less when they're monitored?

      Yes, it's called 'The cop, being aware that he's in trouble if he abuses the taser, uses it less'.

      Oh, now I understand. When you use a taser as a starter motor for your car or to light a cigarette it doesn't cause suffering. It's only when you use them to electrocute people that it constitutes a form of torture.

      I think that it's a result of the UN(and many others) defining torture as 'any amount of pain/suffering'. Personally, I think that a certain amount of pain is to be expected when you resist arrest. Heck, life itself involved pain&suffering. As long as the officers don't go out of their way to cause pain/suffering beyond that needed to expeditiously arrest the suspect, it's not torture.

      Yes, it can be considered something of a fine line. Still, I do not consider a submission hold, taser strike, even a baton strike in the course of a felony resisting arrest as torture. If they do it during questioning, then it's a different story.

      I think that my point would be that there are relatively few dedicated torture devices - we seem to manage just fine with improvised ones. Declaring tasers one of those few dedicated devices is overblown. It has legitimate uses. Sure, if abused it's a torture device - but so isn't many of the things in your average house.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    107. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Generally, in my mind at least, if a suspect is engaging in such behavior that police are considering shooting him to prevent harm to others than he's a criminal.

      From my understanding, the vast majority of these cases involve people with prior convictions - often parole violations. So yeah, they'd be criminals.

      To be honest, now that I think about it it might have been a subliminal thing where I don't mind seeing a violent criminal harmed(IE no doubt that he's bad), especially if it saves innocents, but object when it's a suspect(only suspicion he's bad, even if highly likely).

      I was thinking about cases like hostage situations or the guy's shooting at police, where the situation is fairly cut and dried.

      --
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    108. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 2, Informative

      As a former US Marine, I can assure you of two things:

      1) We all got to spend a couple of minutes locked up in a shed with a Drill Instructor cooking up some CS gas.
      2) That experience had nothing to do with empathy.

      The purpose of gassing our combat troops with CS/Tear gas is because we are likely to encounter it in the line of duty. Having experienced it you know how it will effect you, how to recognize the smell and sensation before being hit with the cloud, and how to minimize the effect on you. It isn't about some deeper level of understanding of what our enemies will go through if we gas them. It's about preparing us in case the wind shifts and we get a dose of our own medicine, or in case some one uses it on us.

      As for Tasers, I think they can be USED for torture, but they are just a tool. And like all tools, they can be used correctly, or incorrectly. Used correctly, they are a solid way to imobilize a violent person long enough to cuff them. The problem I see is a complete lack of training and oversight, and a piss poor official use policy and enforcement.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    109. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 1

      Soldiers don't drop bombs. Airmen do.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    110. Re:So remember... by atamido · · Score: 1

      Most of the taser videos I've seen (if my memory isn't failing me) have been around two seconds of actual shock (officers being shocked). Recovery time for movement and cognition seemed to be around a second or two, though nobody just jumped up from it. This may be different in less controlled environments with longer shocks. I don't really know.

      I'm afraid I don't know when it is appropriate to draw a firearm instead of a taser, though I suspect it is a matter of department policy. I've seen them pull a taser with two officers on the scene on some clips from the TV show Cops. (I don't watch Cops, just random clips. I'm not an officer, and other than taking a concealed handgun class, I have no training. I don't own a handgun, I just took the class out of curiosity.)

      Personally, I think that any government official should be recordable while in the act of any public duties. And I think it should be a federal law that should be passed. That said, there was an interesting experience last weekend here at a political rally. There were some protesters across the street from the entrance carrying signs and yelling at the people going into the entrance, with at least one person swearing. One of the officers went over to quiet down the most vocal fellow swearing. The officer came back with disturbing the peace and impeding traffic. A rather amusing dialog. He also chewed out one of the protesters with a video camera. He wasn't trying to get the guy to stop video taping, he was trying get out of his face while talking to the other guy, and to get out of way so people wouldn't have to walk in the street to get around them.

      Talking to this officer afterwards, it was obvious that he didn't care for the political rally (Obama, incidentally), but that wasn't his concern. His job (as he saw it) was safety and atmosphere. For safety, he wanted people out of the way so everyone wasn't walking in the road that had vehicle traffic. For atmosphere, (I'm a bit fuzzy on the specifics of this) he didn't want people creating a scene with all of the swearing. I'm curious about the legality of that.

      Anyway, it got me thinking about the camera guy. I wonder how many claims of first amendment suppression are really just officers trying to get people out of the way for safety or so they can deal with some other more pressing issue. Obviously there are all sorts of wrongful situations, but I wonder how often it's a "don't tase me bro" guy calling wolf.

    111. Re:So remember... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      As for Tasers, I think they can be USED for torture, but they are just a tool. And like all tools, they can be used correctly, or incorrectly.

      That statement is completely absurd.

      Used "correctly", a taser is meant to shock someone into incapacitation. That's torture in my book, and apparently the UN agrees.

    112. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 1
      So is beating someone with a billy club, but I haven't heard about the UN denouncing that great tradition.

      And actually, by law (United Nations Torture Convention of 1984) torture is defined as:

      "Any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity." When used appropriately, tasing someone is not used to obtain information, confessions, punishment, revenge, intimidation, or coercion. It is for the purpose of reducing the risk to the officer, the public, and even the person being apprehended. In fact, the UNTC goes on to explicitly exclude pain and suffering "inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions". Which means if you take a swing at a police officer, and they crack your head open with a billy club, it is NOT torture. And in cases where the assaulter has a dramatic advantage over the officer in weight, strength, and physical ability, a billy club is not going to allow the arresting officer to control the situation.

      In those cases, where the officer is physically unable to arrest a person who is a threat to the officer and the public, a taser is a perfectly acceptable tool. By the UN's own convention, it is NOT torture.

      The problem is that tasers are used when they should not be. The infamous Kerry speech tasing is an example of this. The suspect had been apprehended. He had 4+ police officers holding him down. At that point, he was no threat to the police, or to the public. He should have been hand cuffed (ankle cuffed as well if needed) and hauled out. The officers had superior numbers, strength, and force to deal with him with out beating him or tasing him into submission. In that case, the tasing officer should have suffered serious repercussions because what he did was at least an excessive use of force, and at worst was flirting with the UN's definition of torture.

      -Rick
      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    113. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Recovery time for movement and cognition seemed to be around a second or two, though nobody just jumped up from it. This may be different in less controlled environments with longer shocks. I don't really know.

      Even a second is plenty of time to have most of the cuffing part done.

      I'm afraid I don't know when it is appropriate to draw a firearm instead of a taser, though I suspect it is a matter of department policy. I've seen them pull a taser with two officers on the scene on some clips from the TV show Cops. (I don't watch Cops, just random clips. I'm not an officer, and other than taking a concealed handgun class, I have no training. I don't own a handgun, I just took the class out of curiosity.)

      Departmental policies aside, I think that a reasonable policy is to have at least two officers on scene if you're going to use a taser - a taser isn't anywhere near 100%. Even a firearm isn't 100%, but all the tasers I've seen are single shot, if you miss or the barbs don't catch, it's no longer useful until you can reload. A gun, even if you miss, should still have more rounds available to try again. Even if you hit, you need somebody to use the taser while somebody else does the physical restraining(cuffing). If a taser fails and you're the sole officer on scene, the suspect can be on you before you can pull your sidearm*.

      If nothing else, a firearm usually intimidates suspects into playing quiet; more are willing to risk a taser than a lead projectile.

      Personally, I think that any government official should be recordable while in the act of any public duties. And I think it should be a federal law that should be passed.

      I broadly agree with you, though I'd place exemptions for classified and privacy act type stuff - we don't have to worry about the office worker quite as much. And allowing people to record stuff like intel analysis doesn't help us.

      He also chewed out one of the protesters with a video camera. He wasn't trying to get the guy to stop video taping, he was trying get out of his face while talking to the other guy, and to get out of way so people wouldn't have to walk in the street to get around them.

      Which is why I had a clause in my statement - as long as the fellow isn't breaking laws, he's allowed to record. Impeding traffic is a violation. Violating personal space is also another no-no. Most cameras today should have plenty of zoom to get a good picture even 15 feet away. Even without zoom, they should have enough resolution to get facial features - and the wider scope of the picture gives more useful detail. I don't think being able to see somebody's pores would be much of an added value over being able to see the whole person and a good chunk of area around him.

      His job (as he saw it) was safety and atmosphere. For safety, he wanted people out of the way so everyone wasn't walking in the road that had vehicle traffic. For atmosphere, (I'm a bit fuzzy on the specifics of this) he didn't want people creating a scene with all of the swearing. I'm curious about the legality of that.

      Some areas have 'fighting words' clauses in the laws that basically ban stuff like inciding a riot, words to encourage someobody to attack you, etc... Using profanity is frequently one of the tests -because profanity isn't very useful in convincing people not already sharing your viewpoint. In reality, shutting up the guy spouting profanity probably helped his cause, not detrimented it.

      Anyway, it got me thinking about the camera guy. I wonder how many claims of first amendment suppression are really just officers trying to get people out of the way for safety or so they can deal with some other more pressing issue. Obviously there are all sorts of wrongful situations, but I wonder how often it's a "don't tase me bro" guy calling wolf.

      I wonder as well, though some of the cases, like the officers who crossed the street to try to stop people recording(and get the video) an incident seemed pret

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    114. Re:So remember... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      When used appropriately, tasing someone is not used to obtain information, confessions, punishment, revenge, intimidation, or coercion.

      Excuse me. How are tasers *not* used to "[punish] him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed", and of course for "intimidating or coercing him or a third person". Last I checked, they were explicitly used to coerce people into cooperating with the police, and punishing those who remain non-compliant.

      In fact, the UNTC goes on to explicitly exclude pain and suffering "inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions".

      Yes. Lawful sanctions. As handed down by a court of law, not a cop on the street. Further, the text explicitly states that such actions must be "consistent with the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners". Interesting that you excluded that bit of text. I wonder what said rules state? Well, among other things, they state that:

      "Corporal punishment, punishment by placing in a dark cell, and all cruel, inhuman or degrading punishments shall be completely prohibited as punishments for disciplinary offences."

      Which, in my mind, clearly rules out tasers. It also states:

      "No prisoner shall be punished unless he has been informed of the offence alleged against him and given a proper opportunity of presenting his defence."

      Last I checked, most taser victims aren't given a chance to defend themselves before the shock is administered.

      So, no, by the UN's own documents, tasers are *not* an acceptable tool for law enforcement, and do, in fact, meet the guidelines for torture, unless your reading of the text is so drastically distorted as to be rendered meaningless.

    115. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      If a person is hit by the bullet, the officer is just about always reassigned to desk duty, if not given some paid time off.

      In these sorts of situations, being on administrative leave just means that you're not doing your primary job, not that you can go skiing. Think of it as more 'You've been reassigned to be internal affair's latest whipping boy'. IE you spend your time writing a very exhaustive report, being questioned by your boss, your boss's boss, being grilled by IA(with your boss defending you if you're lucky), attending counseling, supplimental training, etc...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    116. Re:So remember... by adolf · · Score: 1

      Really? Where? I certainly don't remember lying, much less see where I've admitted to having done so.

      You really are dense. I certainly wasn't lying about that part.

    117. Re:So remember... by nerdsv650 · · Score: 1

      The cops get the full 5 second hit. You are however correct about spotters.

    118. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 1

      Yes. Lawful sanctions. As handed down by a court of law, not a cop on the street. Actually, Police officers (in the US) have a significant amount of legal power. The use of force, even the use of deadly force, to prevent harm to the officer and the public is one of those legal powers. YMMV around the world, but in the US, the Police can legally use force to subdue you.

      Last I checked, most taser victims aren't given a chance to defend themselves before the shock is administered. Once again, this is an issue with policy, not the taser itself. The taser didn't just magically jump up and shock them in the ass. There was an officer holding it, pulling the trigger, and THAT is where the problem is.

      Further, the text explicitly states that such actions must be "consistent with the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners". Interestingly enough, a number of prisons in the US also use tasers. I would be interested in seeing their policy for the use of tasers. I imagine it would be somewhat different as the social climate and implications of fighting an officer in jail is slightly different than fighting an officer in the street. In any case, it doesn't matter because as I stated above, that document EXPLICITLY EXCLUDES incidents related to legal sanctions. And like it or not, a cop attempting to detain you (even if he is in the wrong) is a legal sanction.

      So, no, by the UN's own documents, tasers are *not* an acceptable tool for law enforcement, and do, in fact, meet the guidelines for torture, unless your reading of the text is so drastically distorted as to be rendered meaningless. I still disagree. You are removing responsibility from the true guilty parties (those officers that abuse their power) and placing it on an inanimate object. A taser is no different than a billy club, a boot, a fist, or any other non-leathal tools of domination. The issue isn't the taser, it's the way in which tasers are being used.

      Also, if tasers are torture, by your definition, please explain to me how other traditional non-leathal tools of domination are NOT also torture. And, if you feel that police should be barred from using boots, fists, and clubs as means to apprehend people, please explain how you feel police officers should do so.

      For example, if 4 cops have a violent suspect pinned to the ground, he represents no immediate threat to the officers or the public. If he continues to resist arrest, the officers must over power him and handcuff him. Now, with one guy pinned to the floor and four officers holding him there, it won't be long until they manage to get him in chains even if they just wait for him to tire himself out struggling. But, an over excited police officer may try to speed the process up a bit. If he has a Taser, he may shock him, if he has a billy club, he might crack his head open (Rodney King anyone?), if he has neither, he may just kidney punch the crap out of him. All of these actions are the same thing: WRONG. But they are wrong because of the person doing them, they are NOT the fault of his fist, or his club, or his taser.

      I agree whole heartedly with you that the current state of taser use by police forces in the US is completely out of line, but, I think tasers are a very acceptable tool when they are used correctly. Training, Education, Policy, Oversight, and Reprimands need to be in place to limit the use of tasers to only those situations where it is absolutely necessary.

      -Rick
      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    119. Re:So remember... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Actually, Police officers (in the US) have a significant amount of legal power.

      Good for US police. But I was specifically referring to the excerpt of text that you selected, which stated that the definition of torture contains loopholes regarding "Lawful sanctions". Specifically, I'm contending that, in the context of the document, particularly due to references to "the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners", it seems clear that that loophole exists specifically in the case of individuals who have been charged and convicted by a court of law.

      Once again, this is an issue with policy, not the taser itself.

      Wrong. According to UN guidelines, as I've provided, the use of tasers in any context where the intent is to subdue or coerce constitutes torture.

      Interestingly enough, a number of prisons in the US also use tasers.

      Thus explicitly violating the UN guidelines. Obviously that doesn't mean much, but regardless, the UN position is completely consistent.

      that document EXPLICITLY EXCLUDES incidents related to legal sanctions.

      Did you even read the goddamned text? The full excerpt, as I quoted previously, is as follows:

      It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to, lawful sanctions to the extent consistent with the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners

      And, again, the "Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners" explicitly outlaws the use of corporal punishment. Period. End of story. Read the text yourself if you don't believe me.

      So, again, if what you say is true, the US prison system does not follow the guidelines as set out by the UN. Again, that doesn't mean much, but that doesn't change the fact that the UN position is, again, entirely consistent.

      You are removing responsibility from the true guilty parties (those officers that abuse their power) and placing it on an inanimate object

      No, I'm not. I'm stating, without equivocation, that the use of tasers by police forces to subdue or coerce suspects constitutes torture on the UN human rights charter. Period.

      Honestly, by that logic, waterboarding isn't torture. After all, the waterboard setup, itself, is just a tool. It all depends on how you use it! For example, if you were correct (and you're not), the use of waterboarding in prisons as a form of punishment would be perfectly fine.

      It's not, by the way.

      Also, if tasers are torture, by your definition, please explain to me how other traditional non-leathal tools of domination are NOT also torture.

      The use of techniques that involve "non-leathal tools of domination" *are* torture, whether you like it or not. That includes tasers, waterboarding, and a wide variety of other techniques. I would contend the use of billyclubs for anything more than self-defense *also* qualifies as torture.

      And before you say anything, no, I would contend that tasers are not used for self-defense purposes in the vast majority of cases. Their primary use is in subduing troublesome individuals, that's it.

      But they are wrong because of the person doing them, they are NOT the fault of his fist, or his club, or his taser.

      No, they're wrong, based on UN guidelines, because the actions are performed with the intent to subdue or coerce the individual. *How* it's done doesn't matter (well, the effect has to meet the standards in the guidelines regarding "severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental".

      but, I think tasers are a very acceptable tool when they are used correctly

      Well, we'll have to agree to disagree, then.

    120. Re:So remember... by Krojack · · Score: 1

      Maybe the person being shot is a hemophiliac. Chance is just as great of bleeding to death.

      Soon having pillow fights will be considered torture.

    121. Re:So remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      >>As for Tasers, I think they can be USED for torture, but they are just a tool. And like all tools, they can be used correctly, or incorrectly.

      >That statement is completely absurd.

      His statement is not absurd. It's completely correct.

      So, tell me, how would *you* arrest someone who is drunk, belligerent, and violent and likely to injure you or others around you, without causing the slightest harm or discomfort to said drunk and/or belligerent and/or violent person? You think maybe they will be persuaded by the sad puppy-dog look in your grieving, empathic eyes as he pummels you in the face?

      Tell you what, go join your local police department and let me know how that whole sad-puppy routine works out for ya when you go to arrest your first violent suspect!

    122. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 1

      Wrong. According to UN guidelines, as I've provided, the use of tasers in any context where the intent is to subdue or coerce constitutes torture.

      I still disagree with the way you are reading the UN guidelines. Part of the problem, with both of our arguments, I believe, is that the cited document was written with the intent to be applied to imprisoned people, not necessarily people in the process of arrest. As such, I think parts of it can be re-read to best suit both of our arguments.

      It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to, lawful sanctions to the extent consistent with the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners

      And, again, the "Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners" explicitly outlaws the use of corporal punishment. Period. End of story. Read the text yourself if you don't believe me.

      I agree with you completely. Any time an officer Punishes a suspect/detainee, it is a horrible violation of the law, both US and UN. But that is it, it is the Person who is violating the law, NOT the object. I also believe that the process of subduing a violent person who posses a threat to the officer and public does not fall under the UN's definition of torture. (Clarified below) If an officer has to use X force to subdue a violent person, and they use X+Y force, then, yes it is a violation. With the heat of the moment situations and snap decisions that could mean the difference between life and death, I'm willing to be a tiny bit flexible on that one, but as the article pointed out, tasers are being used way too much and in many of the wrong situations.

      Honestly, by that logic, waterboarding isn't torture. After all, the waterboard setup, itself, is just a tool. It all depends on how you use it! For example, if you were correct (and you're not), the use of waterboarding in prisons as a form of punishment would be perfectly fine.

      That is not the same at all and you know it. First off, Taser is a noun, Water-boarding is a verb. And just so you know, one of the best devices to use for water-boarding is an Incline Weight Bench. Their heavy weight, structural integrity, and ability to be bolted down make them a great choice for something to strap someone too in an inverted position and not have to worry about their attempts at flailing about knocking it over. And many US prisons have some sort of exercise equipment, often including weight benches with adjustable inclines. So if you want to compare "waterboarding" to a Taser, you need to compare a weight bench to a taser. They are both just tools. But if we used your logic, we would have to ban work out equipment from prisons because weight benches = water boarding.

      The UN isn't going to ban water buckets and towels, let alone weight benches, just because they can be used in torture. And the same goes for Tasers. They have already ruled that using tasers, weight benches, water buckets, towels and other objects in a means which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as... is torture.

      It is the ACT that is torture, not the object.

      The use of techniques that involve "non-leathal tools of domination" *are* torture, whether you like it or not.

      Negative. The UN ruled that the use of such techniques ARE torture when used for a general classification of intents. Self incrimination, incrimination of another, punishment, etc... It makes no such indication for the use of such techniques for the purpose of self defense, defense of another, or in defense of the public. If someone is attacking you, and you have a taser, it is not torture if you use the taser to prevent that person from harming you, or another person. And regardless of how you read that document, there is nothing in it that says self defense is torture.

      No, they're wrong, based on UN guidelines, because the actions are performed with th

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    123. Re:So remember... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      The UN isn't going to ban water buckets and towels

      Ah, I see. I was never running under the assumption that the UN was declaring tasers illegal (as far as the UN can declare anything illegal). After all, the guidelines for torture make no mention of mechanism, why would the UN start now?

      No, I had assumed that the UN subcommittee was stating that the *use* of tasers by law-enforcement as a non-lethal method of subduing a suspect constitutes torture. And that would be in keeping with the existing guidelines (at least the way I read them).

      At this point, the UN hasn't said anything about tasers, a subcommittee has said something about the taser related dealths in NA and there may have been some recommendation to Portugal to not buy tasers, but the article was not real clear on the detail of who said what, when, or why.

      Yeah, that I completely agree with. Unfortunately, we can thank the current culture of journalism, which is more focused on getting a "scoop" rather than relaying concrete facts, for that one. Even a complete excerpt, with context, from the subcommittee would've been better than the few select quotes provided in TFA...

    124. Re:So remember... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      If someone is attacking you, and you have a taser, it is not torture if you use the taser to prevent that person from harming you, or another person. And regardless of how you read that document, there is nothing in it that says self defense is torture.

      As an aside, I should point out that I agree with this. I tried to go back and make sure I qualified my statements, and it's evident I missed one. When I said:

      "The use of techniques that involve "non-leathal tools of domination" *are* torture, whether you like it or not."

      I really meant:

      "The use of techniques that involve "non-leathal tools of domination", when used to subdue or coerce, *is* torture, whether you like it or not."

      IOW, I absolutely accept self-defense as an excuse to make use of a taser. But I reject the idea that police, in general, limit their uses to such circumstances, instead using them as a replacement for proper policework and negotiating tactics (the case of the Polish guy in the Vancouver airport comes to mind...). And it's *those* uses that I believe constitute torture.

    125. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 1
      Ain't that the truth!

      The closest thing to a fact in the article is

      "The use of these weapons causes acute pain, constituting a form of torture," the UN's Committee against Torture said. Unfortunately, it does not specify who said it, if it was translated/ESL (as the verbatim might not be exact to the intention), nor any of the context surrounding the statement.

      Portugal "should consider giving up the use of the Taser X26," as its use can have a grave physical and mental impact on those targeted, which violates the UN's Convention against Torture, the experts said. That's a great quote, but, who the heck are "the experts", and what are they experts on? UN Conventions? Torture? Marketing? And what part of that statement did the experts say? The quoted part? If so, who the heck wrote the rest of that line?

      I mean, I can't really blame the author for not putting their name on that turd blossom of an article.

      -Rick
      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    126. Re:So remember... by RingDev · · Score: 1

      IOW, I absolutely accept self-defense as an excuse to make use of a taser. But I reject the idea that police, in general, limit their uses to such circumstances, instead using them as a replacement for proper policework and negotiating tactics (the case of the Polish guy in the Vancouver airport comes to mind...). And it's *those* uses that I believe constitute torture. I am in complete agreement with you, and I likely should have phrased many of the things I said better ;)

      -Rick
      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    127. Re:So remember... by atamido · · Score: 1

      I think your impression of cuffing someone is pretty optimistic. If someone really doesn't want to be cuffed, a second isn't enough time to do much of anything. If someone is really violent, you aren't going to cuff them until they are out of energy or can't think strait. (beware the biter)

      I think office workers should be video-tapeable, though that doesn't mean that anyone could just walk into their office. I think that if you have a meeting with a public official where they are acting as a public official, you should always be allowed to record your meeting. In cases where video would be a security concern, audio should be allowable.

      Tasers offer a special set of circumstances. If you shoot someone running at you, usually it causes them to stop/fall due to a combination of psychology and pain. In most circumstances, if a person didn't think they were supposed to fall, and they are able to ignore the pain, getting shot once or twice will do little until they slowly bleed out. Head shots are a different matter, but the vast majority of people shoot at the body because it is an easier shot. This makes shooting someone an iffy proposition, especially if they have a weapon like a knife. You can shoot a person three times running at you, and they could still reach you and slice your throat open. Tasers on the other hand cause instant freezing of the muscles, so a running person does a face plant. That, is a good thing.

      On the other hand, tasers aren't as scary, and if you miss you're screwed. Chances are organizations have run the numbers to figure out which is safer. I suspect you're right that a gun is better, but I'd like to see some numbers to back it up.

      What is your opinion on confiscating a recording, so that it can be used as evidence? If someone films a crime, or evidence to a crime, should the police have a right to demand the video immediately (so as to prevent tampering)?

    128. Re:So remember... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I think your impression of cuffing someone is pretty optimistic. If someone really doesn't want to be cuffed, a second isn't enough time to do much of anything. If someone is really violent, you aren't going to cuff them until they are out of energy or can't think strait. (beware the biter)

      Thus the reason for the taser - while it prevents all voluntary movement for only a short time, it also usually results in disorientation for a somewhat longer period where the suspect can't fight the arrest in a directed fashion.

      I'm also figuring on multiple officers besides the taser user to perform the jerking. I'm also not planning on them being nice.

      I think office workers should be video-tapeable, though that doesn't mean that anyone could just walk into their office. I think that if you have a meeting with a public official where they are acting as a public official, you should always be allowed to record your meeting. In cases where video would be a security concern, audio should be allowable.

      I'm a little less for this - if nothing else, an office worker isn't out in the public and paper records exist for auditing positions. Office workers also aren't standardly called upon to commit acts of violence in enforcing the law. That's why we want public recordings of them - to be able to audit the violence in a field where lying is frequent and frequently practiced.

      I think that if you have a meeting with a public official where they are acting as a public official, you should always be allowed to record your meeting.

      Sure, recordings of public meetings aren't a bad idea - just remember privacy act concerns. Public officials are public, but occasionally they have to discuss private matters involving private citizens. Think of an interview with a rape victim - sure, record it, but the tape should be handled privately, and only released with the victim's permission.

      In cases where video would be a security concern, audio should be allowable

      In areas where video would be a security concern, audio is often just as bad. I'm thinking of classified stuff here.

      On the other hand, tasers aren't as scary, and if you miss you're screwed. Chances are organizations have run the numbers to figure out which is safer. I suspect you're right that a gun is better, but I'd like to see some numbers to back it up.

      Bingo. If nothing else, that's why the Mozambique drill exists - a third shot to the head, performed last, presumably when the perp would be closest to the officer. CNS hit generally equals instant stop - especially a 9mm or larger to the brain pan. In addition, a service gun will have anywhere between 4 and 12 shots left after the first three. Common calibers being 9mm(15-17), 40(10-12), and 45(7). Offtopic, this reminded me of one of the unintended consequences of the magazine restriction in the AWB - people started trading up in calibers - rather than carrying a 9mm around, they started carrying a .40. A .40 has a higher death rate than a 9mm. The average criminal shooting only involves 3 shots, so fatalities went up, because the average caliber went up.

      What is your opinion on confiscating a recording, so that it can be used as evidence? If someone films a crime, or evidence to a crime, should the police have a right to demand the video immediately (so as to prevent tampering)?

      Same rules as with confiscating other evidence for possible usage in a trial - if the person doesn't want to give it up voluntarily, it should require a warrant. Well, at least as long as they're not arresting the recorder/holder of the recording for a legitimate crime other than 'refusing to hand over recording'. Holding the person while a warrant is obtained(like they do for other stuff), is normally a reasonable compromise - obvious this must be done in an expeditious fashion. IE wake the judge up if necessary.

      Depending upon the technology used to make the recording - making an

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    129. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      I'm a former SAC missileer. I totally agree with your comments.

      My disagreement is with the current agitprop claims that tasers are torture devices. They are a non-contact immobiliation device. As you say, any tool can be used by a person for positive or negative means. A hammer can drive nails or smash a skull. Coffee can be an energy source or a poison (historical note: Polish resistance used it as a slow poison against Nazi occupiers.)

      In general, I find the majority of ex-military people to be more disciplined and principle-based than "pure" civilians. My disagreement is with the all too common statements that characterize all police as being undisciplined. Some are, some aren't. Scenarios like the Rodney King submission video tape are more complex than "the police are thugs." He was a known meth user, very large, and very combative. Violent meth users are not an easy takedown and very , very dangerous given they feel no pain, enrage easily and are, basically, super adrenalized. The recent campus police incient where they used tasers that was in the news sure seems like Keystone Kops incident. I remember when tasers were first on the market. The most publicized use was by air marshalls as a way to take down airplane hijackers. Those were the old style that looked a lot like a large flashlight with 2 projectiles in the front.

      Tasers, themselves, are tools. They are no more sentient than dentist's drills.

    130. Re:So remember... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      You fabricated a "fact", then tried to change the statement, then refused to validate the "fact", then disavowed it. You lied. Period.

      I will no longer respond to you on this matter.

      As I have said, good day.

    131. Re:So remember... by adolf · · Score: 1

      Your vagueness is to be applauded, and you misunderstand.

      I posted a fact, with appropriate qualifications.

      Do you honestly think that people in general (whether police officers or not) understand what a high-voltage electric shock feels like, unless they've been tazed?

      Dense, dense, dense. But, as ex military, I guess I could expect that from you.

    132. Re:So remember... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      It's kinda like how sex can kill somebody with a heart problem.
      Worst. Analogy. Ever.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    133. Re:So remember... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      They do experience tear gas during NBC training. And, get tazered if they are going to carry a tazer- at least when they first were issued.
      I pity the ones who have to carry firearms then...
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  2. gah. by notgm · · Score: 1

    don't torture me, bro!

    1. Re:gah. by UnknowingFool · · Score: 5, Funny

      More like:
      "I say, old chap, don't taser me."
      [Zzzzt]
      "I say, that was rather rude.
      [Zzzzt]
      "Bloody hell, please stop tasering me.
      [Zzzzt]
      "Sod off, you wanker!"

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    2. Re:gah. by DarrenBaker · · Score: 1

      HAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAH!!!!!

      This contest is over! Give that man the ten thousand dollars!

    3. Re:gah. by Lord+of+Hyphens · · Score: 1

      Try following a few simple instructions and you may not get your ass kicked by the police.

      --
      "I've spent my whole life figuring out crazy ways to do things. It'll work." -- Montgomery Scott, "Relics"
    4. Re:gah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha!!! You're hilarious!!!!!

    5. Re:gah. by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      Damnit. I may have found a new webcomic. That thing's like Dinosaurs but without the Suck.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    6. Re:gah. by rts008 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I don't currently have mod points for you, but...CLAP!CLAP!APPLAUSE!APPLESAUCE!

      Very well done sir!!! You have certainly made my day, and you have my profound thanks! (no sarcasm implied nor intended-really!)

      All joking aside, it has been my experience that there can be a spring-steel backbone and a set of cannonballs behind that very proper, polite, and acceptable face that accompanies that stereotypical Brit you 'Monty Python'd' with your reply.

      *offtopic-sort of*
      I used to love to go tavern/pub diving with both the Brit's SAS and the Aussie SpecWar crowd wherever I was stationed-always entertaining, action-packed, and NEVER boring! Hell, if you couldn't find any 'game' locals to brawl with, you could always break into nationalities and have a 'good-natured', drunken, silly toughman contest...it was great fun, loved by all! Our own SEALs were also of the same 'game' mentality, but we did not run into them often, but the above applies to them the same. Most of the rest of the US military crowd takes itself too seriously to even come close to the same mindset. *sigh* Good Times, back when!

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    7. Re:gah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanx for making my day

  3. Fortunately... by WestCoastJTF · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...handguns are not a form of torture. Seriously, that's the choice in many situations - crazy meth'd-up homeless guy charges cop with knife...cop tases or cop shoots. Which do you prefer?

    --
    JTF: In your heart, you know we're right.
    1. Re:Fortunately... by gfxguy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Since when does the U.N. need reason when bashing the U.S.?

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    2. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cop shooting. On the plus side, that's 275 inmates I haven't had to pay to feed.

    3. Re:Fortunately... by DigiShaman · · Score: 0, Troll

      I've always viewed the U.N as a corrupt orginization and an enemy of the US. I'm sure many agree.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    4. Re:Fortunately... by machinelou · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Eh... I don't care how many meth-addicts you come across during a typical day. If you can't learn the difference between them and a kid that's being held on the ground by 6 cops at a John Kerry speech or a guy going 10 over the limit, then you are not fit to protect or serve anything. Period.

    5. Re:Fortunately... by CastrTroy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When the choice is gun or taser, taser is obviously the better answer. However, many cops have the attitude that since a taser won't kill you, it's easier to just taser you, and avoid any kind of confrontation at all. Instead of just taking an unarmed guy down the old fashioned way by tackling him, they just taser him.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    6. Re:Fortunately... by king-manic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've always viewed the U.N as a corrupt orginization and an enemy of the US. I'm sure many agree. Well the fact that Iran nearly passed a motion to censure Canada for human rights abuses seems to support your hypothesis that the structure of the UN is essentially broke. It's difficult to take that organization seriously.
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    7. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apparently you missed the point, making your statement a strawman, no sane person would say the gun.

      The issue is unnecessary use of tasers (OR GUNS!), thats have a more realistic situation, hysteric/angry and seemingly unbalanced man is arguing with police after they question him. They know he is unarmed and while alarming, has no tried to attack anything living. What do they do:

      1) taser him, and possibly kill him.
      2) be polite and ask him to calm down. (then pick another option when that dont work)
      3) ask for backup and have several officers arrest him with conventional means. (stick, pepper spray, and hands/body)
      4) try to restrain him yourself with conventional means.
      5) try to lure him somewhere where he cant hurt anything. (then picking another option)
      6) wait and talk, hoping he calms down. (then picking another option)

      Police are supposed to be trained in restraining people, yet far to many simply jump to the taser, a less-lethal-then-a-gun type of weapon, but still one that is VERY dangerous, and dosent always work (leaving the person VERY angry, and rightly afraid for their life). For that matter, cops seem to have a way of killing people with methods that shouldent be that lethal, suggesting that they do lack the serious training of restraining people without hurting them, and the knowledge of basic medical care to assist after a serious injury they inflicted.

    8. Re:Fortunately... by brsmith4 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Weapon involved? Tasers are good in this case. Unfortunately, tasers are not used in that manner exclusively. They are also used to "calm people down", saving the cop from having to communicate with the individual. This is unacceptable. Pulling your arm away from a cop who is trying to grab you is not immediate justification to tase (see "don't tase me, bro!") since it might very well be considered a natural reaction. And "don't let a few bad apples spoil the whole bunch" has been considered. When 80 year old, wheelchair-bound schizophrenic women are being tased (and subsequently, end up dead) because the cops are too scared to handle the situation as they were trained, then tasers are obviously too much responsibility for them to handle.

    9. Re:Fortunately... by LGagnon · · Score: 1

      Seriously, that's the choice in many situations - crazy meth'd-up homeless guy charges cop with knife...cop tases or cop shoots.
      And I'm sure tons of crazy meth'd-up homeless guy charge cop with knifes. Honestly, you're trying to make a rare scenario look like it happens constantly, when in fact you never even hear of situations like the one you are describing.
    10. Re:Fortunately... by reboot246 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Mod me troll, too, but the two previous posters were correct. The U.N. has always gone out of its way to bash the United States. Tasers torture? According to the U.N. everything is torture. What a feckless, useless, corrupt bunch of weasels.

    11. Re:Fortunately... by heinousjay · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, no one's ever been hurt by being tackled.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    12. Re:Fortunately... by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Seriously, that's the choice in many situations - crazy meth'd-up homeless guy charges cop with knife...cop tases or cop shoots. Which do you prefer?

            OK, how about "guy starts arguing about a speeding ticket". Now is this situation worth risking the person's life using the potentially lethal taser? How about this guy, who was rude and stole a microphone? Yes, let's risk his life too. Or how about these incidents?

            Police need to be aware that every time they use a taser there is a small but REAL chance that they will kill the person they are shooting. Therefore they should be a lot more hesitant before using them than they are today. If as a doctor I perform a procedure on a patient without considering (and informing him of) the risks involved, I am liable for murder if the patient dies. The police should also be accountable, just like when draw their weapons - they need a VERY good reason to do that.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    13. Re:Fortunately... by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      crazy meth'd-up homeless guy charges cop with knife...cop tases or cop shoots. Which do you prefer?

      Err.. I'm confused.. is he a terrorist yes or no?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    14. Re:Fortunately... by pimp0r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As we all know crazy people attacking cops are the only ones being Tasered. The police wouldn't dream of Tasing defiant 6 year olds in elementary schools, Tasing students performing passive resistance in a university library or Tasing people refusing a speeding-ticket.

      (Anyone actually beleiving the above needs a serious reality-check)

    15. Re:Fortunately... by Kingrames · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The gun.

      To be serious it's not a matter of which weapon is more lethal. It's a matter of which weapon is BELIEVED to be more lethal. Cops believe wrongfully that tasers are safe and are willing to use them in the wrong situations.

      If your life is in danger, USE A GUN. There is still a chance that shooting them won't kill them, but there is nothing more horrible than a good person using a taser in the wrong situation and killing someone who was not a threat and becoming a monster.

      Cops aren't supposed to use weapons where nonlethal force is advised. If nonlethal force is advised, that means negotiate. It does not mean shoot.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    16. Re:Fortunately... by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Which do you prefer? Tasers. The problem is that tasers are also used on people that refuse to sign a ticket or otherwise aren't a direct threat to the cop's health. Do you prefer that too? It seems you're dodging the issue here and giving a poor example where tasers are indeed useful. Something still needs to be done about the guidelines for them. If it's just that cops don't follow them, something still needs to be done. Not really about the cops not following them, because then it's already too late and the injuries may already have happened.

      So this is the question at stake here.
      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    17. Re:Fortunately... by AikonMGB · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying its a bad idea to use force when necessary (like your example), however the way I see the issue is this: tasers are viewed as a non-lethal weapon (i.e. non-lethal force), and so many police forces are using them in situations where they wouldn't even consider using a gun. Take a look at the footage from the Vancouver incident; the victim is in no way putting the police officers in danger when they decide to taser him.

      There is a lot more to this issue than "taser vs gun".

      Aikon-

    18. Re:Fortunately... by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Informative

      this guy, who was rude and stole a microphone? He didn't steal a microphone, he insisted on asking his question even though the event was running long.
      In Hollywood they play muzac over your feed, in Florida you get tasered and arrested for inciting a riot.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    19. Re:Fortunately... by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1, Troll

      It's customary when trying to build an argument to cite links from more than one fringe website. It's ridiculous to post link after link after link from that same site.

    20. Re:Fortunately... by m2943 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Since when does the U.N. need reason when bashing the U.S.?

      Since when to right wing nuts need a reason to bash the UN?

    21. Re:Fortunately... by Klaus_1250 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree that the UN is a politically corrupt organization, but I do agree that Tasers are a form of Torture. Supplying 50kV to someone causes serious (unnecessary) pain. Just because some does not do what you want them to do does not mean you can just Taser him or her. Seen the footage in which Canadian Security Officers tasered a polish immigrant (to death)? Completely unnecessary in the given circumstances. And what about those students being tasered (which made in on /.)? Completely unneccessary. Perhaps the US has a different definition of torture than most other countries, e.g. I (and most people in the Netherlands and large parts of Europe) think things like sensory deprivation, sensory overload, sleep deprivation, waterboarding, prolonged forced stress, forced trauma, etc. are all forms of (psychological) torture. As for the UN bashing the US. I don't think bashing is the good word, highly critical would be a better one. And the UN is not just an organization, it is an organization of 192 countries. If the UN is highly critical towards the US, it means many of its member states are highly critical.

      --
      It only takes one man to change the Wisdom of the Crowd to Tyranny of the Masses.
    22. Re:Fortunately... by Zaphod2016 · · Score: 1

      Another vote for: hate the U.N., hate tasers more.

      Together we can stop this madness.

    23. Re:Fortunately... by Squalish · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I've heard the "crazy meth'd up homeless guy" argument several times in every taser discussion.

      Yet I've known several cops, and none of them have had to take down any crazy meth'd up homeless guys who were impossible to restrain using normal force, in their entire careers. I've never seen one outside of sensationalist websites or TV shows.

      It's gotten to the point that Canadian police are trained that certain subjects suffer from a health condition called "excited delirium," where they do not feel pain, cannot communicate, and are in imminent danger of hyperthermia and death. It is in their interest, therefore, to be tased as many times as necessary to get them to a doctor and save their life. This is the belief that killed the Polish immigrant who couldn't speak English and was frustrated enough at Customs' ineptitude to try to break through the glass wall separating him from his mother. "Excited delirium" is then blamed for deaths that result from multiple taserings.

      The coroner and medical community have another word for it - custody death.

      --------

      I'm in favor of simply completely removing "drive stun" mode, making tasers projectile only, and having cops fill out all the same paperwork and undergo the same investigation as firearm discharge entails. In order to safely use one as a stun gun, you have to have the prisoner basically within the scope of your physical control. THIS is torture - using pain compliance to subdue a subject who has been rendered harmless by the situation, or who was always harmless, but resisting arrest as best they are able (if that). It's the same as having cops hold down someone to pepper-spray their eyes.

      I think it might also be wise to reform the doctrine to make further tasering after the first successful application, a substitute ONLY for lethal force.

      This is what's required, in my eyes, to bring the taser back to the level of humanitarian weapon.

      --
      People in Soviet Russia, however, appear to be afflicted with amusing juxtapositions of the aforementioned situation
    24. Re:Fortunately... by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Exactly. I think in some jurisdictions, officers are required to file use-of-force reports whenever they use their taser (much like they have to when they point their gun at someone---regardless of whether it's fired). I suspect there's less abuse of tasers in such jurisdictions.

    25. Re:Fortunately... by reboot246 · · Score: 0
      Okay, so tell me what isn't a form of torture. Raising your voice? Not being polite? You people even said that what happened at Abu Ghraib was torture. Humiliation, maybe, but a far cry from torture.

      Frankly, I'm to the point with the U.N. that if they said it was daylight, I'd check to see for myself. If they want me to like them or respect them, then they have to make the first move.

    26. Re:Fortunately... by wizardforce · · Score: 1

      you're assuming that there is always a case where tackling is possible.

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    27. Re:Fortunately... by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 1

      Tasing is a hell of a lot safer than tackling and wrestling with a suspect. For both the officer and the suspect. Good god.

    28. Re:Fortunately... by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      That's a false dichotomy. The police (and you or I for that matter) have every right to use deadly force against someone who is charging with a knife. It'll be a lot harder to explain why a cop shot an unarmed white guy while he was heckling John Kerry.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    29. Re:Fortunately... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Disagree. Give me a choice of a standard 9mm handgun or a taser when being charged by someone with a knife and I would choose the taser. The issue is that the jolt of electricity is far more likely to stop the charge than a bullet is. Remember that the Moros used to charge US marines in the Phillipines and even after taking mortal wounds from the guns of the day, would still often kill US soldiers with their spiked clubs. If you are choosing the gun, you have to be prepared to use it as a hand-to-hand weapon, not just shoot someone with it.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    30. Re:Fortunately... by EonBlueApocalypse · · Score: 1

      Well how many have died?

    31. Re:Fortunately... by Net_Op · · Score: 1

      I love it. Everytime a topic like this presents itself you get people who have no concept of how hard the job is and refuse to follow their own logic to it's conclusion. If not a taser, then what? Brute force? Choke holds? Let everyone do whatever it is the Hell they feel like doing? No? You're going to handle it because you know better? Good to know.

      Have you ever worked security? Ever taken down a 200lb. man that wants nothing more than to choke the life out of you? No? Then don't offer someone else's body up for brutal abuse if you aren't willing to do it yourself. This idea that tasers should only be used in the place of firearms is disingenuous. If someone is resisting then their should be a middle ground between a police officer opening up with a service revolver or getting their teeth kicked in by someone who isn't going to come quietly regardless of how much force is applied.

      Hell, this discussion is moot anyway because no matter how much money municipalities spend implementation or R&D of "less than lethal" options the jackasses of the World will always try to find something wrong with them simply because they want to. Why? Because it's not about better ways to keep the peace. It's about turning yourself into a media whore and getting your 15-minutes of fame while screaming "Don't taze me bro!"

    32. Re:Fortunately... by caller9 · · Score: 1

      Obviously you are not a cop, nor are you related to one. You oversimplified the choice: Get in a physical altercation with a dumbass druggie, possibly lose, have them grab your sidearm, get shot by a douche bag and leave a widow and a kid with emotional problems. OR Tase the dumbass and see your kid graduate college, retire on a modest income, see grandkids at thanksgiving, etc.

      The choice is clear when you're placed in the situation yourself. If its being used on a whim, ok, I see your point. Most likely its being used when it needs to be and there's a .0001 chance it can kill people with some oddball heart defect and no regard for law enforcement.

      Also, if this is torture, what is pepper spray? Having solved all of the worlds problems, the UN is now tackling effective, essentially non-lethal tools for law enforcement?

    33. Re:Fortunately... by TeraCo · · Score: 1

      Could be lethal? I think it's pretty clear by now that tasers can kill people.

      --
      Not Meta-modding due to apathy.
    34. Re:Fortunately... by jamesswift · · Score: 1

      When hearing the "would you rather the person was shot?" argument I just ask if they thought the person would or should have been shot had a taser not been available. The answer is almost always "well I suppose not but..."

      --
      i wish i could stop
    35. Re:Fortunately... by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Obviously you are not a cop,

      Maybe his parents were married.

      Get in a physical altercation with a dumbass druggie, possibly lose, have them grab your sidearm, get shot by a douche bag and leave a widow and a kid with emotional problems. OR Tase the dumbass and see your kid graduate college, retire on a modest income, see grandkids at thanksgiving, etc.

      It cops are involved in one on one confrontations how often? How often are four or five of them beating the shit out of a suspect?

      Law enforcement is supposed to be a hard job. The less idle time cops have, the less likely they'll be to push for more powers to violate our civil rights.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    36. Re:Fortunately... by larry+bagina · · Score: 0

      anybody that willingly goes to a john kerry speech has a high tolerance for pain.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    37. Re:Fortunately... by machinelou · · Score: 1

      Being a cop is hard. No one is denying that. But, it's clear that the additional use of force provided by tasers has intruded onto the rights of people the police exist to serve. Is it a good thing cops get exposed to danger on the job? No. Should tasers be allowed if they can increase the safety of everyone involves without being abused? Yes. Is such a goal actually attainable? History (recent or extended) suggests otherwise.

    38. Re:Fortunately... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Yeah, 'cause there's no chance the "unarmed" guy has a shiv or an infectious disease and proclivity for biting. Keep in mind, also, that cops deal with these people all of the time, so even if 95% aren't biters, that's still a lot of risk.

      Just because someone doesn't have any weapons doesn't mean a taser isn't an appropriate action.

      I'll grant that the "Don't tase me, Bra" guy didn't appear to be a candidate for tasing, but notably the woman who did it wasn't law enforcement officer. Perhaps what needs to happen is a review of the university "campus safety" system.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    39. Re:Fortunately... by UncleTogie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      cops are people with families at home, are you going to be the one to tell a police officers wife her husband has hepititis contracted from a bite while restraining a suspect, when a simple taser would have doen the job and kept everyone safe. Because that's the kind of shit that happens.

      That, and worse. However, you're missing a very big point:

      The police are not a conscripted force.

      They deal with murderers, rapists, and worse.... by choice. I can appreciate that choice and their efforts... but it doesn't change the fact that they chose to apply for that job. As with ANY person in uniform, on the public dole, the police are supposed to work under our terms, not whichever ethical mindset they wake up with that day. At the end of the day, the police chief reports to a civilian. That civvie {usually the mayor, or sometimes a council} calls the shots.

      Yes, Virginia, the police are accountable for unprofessional behavior just as the rest of us are...

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    40. Re:Fortunately... by Sentry21 · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is the belief that killed the Polish immigrant who couldn't speak English and was frustrated enough at Customs' ineptitude to try to break through the glass wall separating him from his mother.

      To clarify: the glass wall that did not directly separate him from his mother at any time, and which, at the time of his frustrated outburst, did not separate him from her at all, since she had gone home several hours earlier after being told repeatedly by airport staff that her son was not in the airport.

      Also, the man had already passed through customs; in fact, he was waiting on the far side of the door between the arrival area (where his mother had told him to wait) and the main part of the airport (where his mother waited for him).

      I'm not trying to say that his tasering was a good (or even reasonable) course of action, but people seem to be screaming bloody murder because the police just waltzed on into the airport, looked for the first foreigner they could find, and tased him at the first excuse; in reality, he had been waiting there for eight hours because his mother told him to wait in the wrong place and airport staff were too lazy/incompetent to find him. By the time the police arrived and enacted their screwup, everyone else had done theirs already; if they hadn't, he'd still be alive.

    41. Re:Fortunately... by DBCubix · · Score: 1

      I've always viewed the U.N as a corrupt orginization and an enemy of the US. I'm sure many agree. The UN should know all about torture, turning a blind eye to it and having the countries of Cuba, China and Russia as Human Rights Council members makes that organization even more of a joke. There is believable and then there is UN-believable.
      --
      I called it a mighty Sperm Whale, she called it Finding Nemo.
    42. Re:Fortunately... by delvsional · · Score: 1

      This shouldn't be looked at from the point of view of limiting choices. The Taser can cause death. Therefore, it should be viewed as more harmful than say, Mace.

      These cops shouldn't be asking "is it okay if we tase him" They should be asking themselves if they would consider beating them with batons or shooting them.

      IMO the taser should be considered deadly force and used as such, and only when necessary. Cops are using it _way_ too much. For a guy who can't speak english? For a guy who won't sign a speeding ticket? I don't think so.

      I've watched the video of the polish guy being tasered to death and I didn't see him do anything threatening toward those rcmps. Was throwing a chair worth his life? I don't think so.

      If someone pulls out a gun and points it at a criminal that's usually enough to stop, but a taser doesn't have that same effect, thus it gets used more.

      When people say guns are the only choice if you take the taser away, they are forgetting pepper spray and batons. I haven't heard of anyone dying from pepper spray. I'm not saying that it hasn't happened, just not nearly as much.

      --
      Oh Crap, I'm an optimist.....
    43. Re:Fortunately... by Klaus_1250 · · Score: 1

      In accordance with article 1, the international concept of torture comprises five elements: a) severe pain and suffering, whether physical or mental; b) intentional infliction; c) for such purposes as obtaining information or a confession, punishing, intimidating or coercing, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind; d) inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent of a public official and other person acting in an official capacity; e) exclusion of torture related to pain arising from lawful sanctions.
      So yes, what happened/happens in Abu Grahib is/was torture.
      --
      It only takes one man to change the Wisdom of the Crowd to Tyranny of the Masses.
    44. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hurt? Yes. Killed? Probably not. Your chances of being killed by being tackled (only the tackle, not the beating that may ensue afterwards) are far less than being tased.

    45. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you fail to understand is that it is the police officer's job to put his life on the line in the place of the civilians. Yes, this includes the suspects. An officer may bring only as much harm to a suspect as is necessary to prevent him from harming the public, and in cases where there is a clear danger to the officer then he may use force, and lethal force against a lethal threat. But the idea that an officer should use painful and potentially deadly weapons as a matter of course because, oh dear, he might get bitten or something is just insane. If you don't like the possibility of injury or death in the line of duty, don't become a cop, pure and simple. Certainly an officer should and must use reasonable force given the situation at hand, but giving the police powers just because it reduces their own personal risk is simply wrong.

      History shows that, in a civilized country, the greatest threat of murder is not from criminals, it is from police forces. This is not true in the US today, but the best way to keep it that way is to ensure that police power is properly limited.

    46. Re:Fortunately... by heinousjay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You sure? You have anything aside from gut feeling backing that up?

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    47. Re:Fortunately... by DigitAl56K · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Part of the problem is people see only two options, bullets or a taser. There are many more options. What on earth must police have done before guns, tasers, and even pepper spray?

      If you have to use a gun, why not a net gun? If you can hit someone with a taser, you can hit them with a net gun, too.

      As much as Taser International might like you to believe it, tasers are not the only non-lethal alternative. Unfortunately, my (perhaps biased) perception seems to be that because law-enforcement buys into the "non-lethal" part of the story, they feel they are justified to use it in all kinds of circumstances where a real gun would never have been employed. We've all seen the numerous videos of people being tasered after three officers have already taken them to the ground, or being tasered simply for yelling or shouting and waving their arms around. Strap on a pair of balls and tackle the guy why don't you? It's not like cops aren't armed with a long reach baton.

    48. Re:Fortunately... by DigitAl56K · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between being hurt and being tortured. I think you're missing the point of the argument.

    49. Re:Fortunately... by rustalot42684 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a good example of an ad hominem argument. The fact that it was Iran doesn't change the fact that Canada probably has committed such abuses, especially in our treatment of our native people.

    50. Re:Fortunately... by number11 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Okay, so tell me what isn't a form of torture.

      Any form of questioning that a Congressional committee is allowed to use when questioning an administration lackey.

      Personally, I'm real interested in hearing what Alberto Gonzales has to say when they follow up with waterboarding on the "I don't remember" answers.

    51. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      question for you, what does that have to do with people who use the tool for it's real use under undeniably hostile response? or are you one of the numerous asshats around here who think that there is no such as a legitimate use of force in the face of being threatened or assaulted? stop trying to put every incident of tasing into a little bin because it's been used in cases where it's use runs from questionable to down right criminal.
       
      i guess you feel insightful but the pigeonholing of a technology because it can be used for nefarious means doesn't make sense. or do you agee with people who want to ban bittorrent and p2p?

    52. Re:Fortunately... by Jessta · · Score: 1

      The U.N is corrupted by it's continued need to allow the US to be involved in it.
      The US invaded Iraq against the wishes of the UN and without proper evidence to back up their claims of immenient danger from the iraq government. But the UN has done nothing to delcare sanctions against the US for this action.

      --
      ...and that is all I have to say about that.
      http://jessta.id.au
    53. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care how unnecessarily tasers are being used. The fact that seeing people "tased" is extremely hilarious far outweighs any argument against them.

    54. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even bother to RTFA? People really are dieing here. Nothing potential or hypothetical about it. I don't give a flying rats ass what they do for a living.

      I love the police, honest but it seems aparrant taser use is prescribed as a routine shortcut for getting people under control even when there is overwhealming force already present that could have done the job by exerting a few extra pounds of force. We've seen this with the brother who was tazed, the vancouver airport incident...etc.. In none of those cases was there any serious threat to the crap load of police officers on the scene. The potential of permanent harm/death is real and there needs to be pressure exerted on LEAs to use tasers (esp repeated applications) as sparringly as possible with some sort of review process in the event of taser use to enforce accountability.

      "Three men, all in their early 20s, were reported to have died in the United States this week, days after a Polish man died at Vancouver airport after being Tasered by Canadian police"

      "There have been three deaths in Canada after the use of Tasers over the past five weeks"

      On the potential for bites I'm no rocket scientist I'll be the first to admit it...This seems easily solved by wearing gloves and other protective clothing.. Most biting incidents against police officers are to their hands.

    55. Re:Fortunately... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Not so much an enemy of the U.S. specifically as a corrupt forum that dictators from ignorant, poor, diseased countries use to censure and mock anyone with riches or power (America, Western Europe, Canada, and especially Israel), especially if they can get another rich country/region (read: Western Europe) on their side to do it.

      Oh, and a few fools in Norway -- which, thanks to its oil wealth, hasn't had to have a reality check for quite some time -- believe the U.N. will help bring world peace.

      The U.N. is the ultimate example of democracy going so far that it gives way to demogaugery (spelling?), and while it serves its purpose of preventing large-scale wars rather well, it serves no other purpose even adequately.

    56. Re:Fortunately... by king-manic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's a good example of an ad hominem argument. The fact that it was Iran doesn't change the fact that Canada probably has committed such abuses, especially in our treatment of our native people. I was replying to his assertion the UN has issues. Our modern treatment of the native population is better then we treat anyone else in similar situations. The problem is how we treated them 30 years ago and before. However being censured for 30 year old transgressions would in fact indict the UN further. The native populations have affirmative action, no taxes, free education, and depending on treaty/reserve additional benefits. What their suffering from is poverty. There are many programs that try to help this as well.

      Iran on the other hand has ongoing issues with religious and racial minorities.
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    57. Re:Fortunately... by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that while tasers would be a good replacement for shooting someone, that is not how they are being used. Instead, they are being used when someone doesn't follow directions. The Kerry speech that we all saw the video of was a good example. I doubt that anyone could have argued that the police would have been justified for shooting the guy that was tasered. The very fact that he was tasered in a situation that clearly was not dangerous enough to warrant shooting him, shows that the devices are being used to torture.

    58. Re:Fortunately... by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      I've always viewed the U.N as a corrupt orginization and an enemy of the US. I'm sure many agree. You do know that the US was a founding member of the UN don't you. It is not by accident that the United Nations headquarters is actually in America.

      The problem is that nowadays we invite lots of other countries into the UN and seeing as most of the rest of the civilized world has at least one or two issues with the US it is not hard to find countries who will vote against them in issues like this.

      I remember seeing footage of a police officer repeatedly tasering a guy who was already lieing on the ground. The problem stemmed from the fact that the officer was on patrol on his own, in the middle of nowhere with no backup. He was trying to arrest a drunk cretin who was a lot bigger than the officer in question. The cretin kept begging the officer to stop but he was trying to get up as he did so. The officer kept telling him to lie still but since the guy was drunk and in pain he kept moving. You try sticking your fingers in the mains and then staying still.

      This went on for several minutes. If the officer was on patrol with a partner this could have been avoided in this case.
      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    59. Re:Fortunately... by mofag · · Score: 0

      If the parent is a troll then so are several other "insightful" posts on this topic. I mean I'm not saying the parent was saying anything particularly constructive. I just chose it pretty much at random to reply to and say this that either Slashdot is currently being bombarded by a particularly well choreographed PR attack from right-wing anti-UN, isolationist, jingoist, xenophobic, extremists or the posts I am reading accurately reflect the majority of readers on slashdot and I should get the fuck out and leave the flag-wavers to it. Just because the Taser can sometimes be useful (say in the case of a very dangerous, drug soaked psycho threatening the physical wellbeing of police officers and/or the public as cited above) does not mean that it is automatically a good idea to always use the Taser whenever making any sort of arrest or as a default mode of interaction with the public (e.g. upset sane people in libraries, confused people in airports etc). Just as an to attempt (futile I'm sure) to reassure those slashdot readers who are paranoid enough to think that absolutely everything is an attack on your blessed country and beloved values, my own current disgust at the Taser is due to the behaviour of the Canadian RCMP in Vancouver recently where, even before they saw their victim, one was heard to ask in the manner of an eager child "can I tase him?". Now, on the other hand, if you think that taking issue with an American corporation is the same as taking issue with you and your country, then well yes I guess it probably is.

    60. Re:Fortunately... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      did you even watch the "speeding ticket" dash-cam video?

            This is shooting someone in the back with a taser for the "crime" of "walking away from a police officer".

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    61. Re:Fortunately... by tjstork · · Score: 1

      The U.N is corrupted by it's continued need to allow the US to be involved in it.

      I'd be happy to kick them out, shut it down, and have a world body consisting only of democracies.

      --
      This is my sig.
    62. Re:Fortunately... by Squalish · · Score: 3, Informative

      Some of them got along just fine before tasers were popularized, without any lethal force capability, to satisfy unfounded British fears that cops would be too aggressive if they were given lethal firearms.

      Tasers are a less lethal weapon, and there is no doubt in my mind that they have saved more lives than they have ended. They have had a net positive effect.

      But if they're used to torture people into compliance, or if they're used in gun mode so often that even mere vocal resistance to arrest or refusal to move, is answered with tasering, the fact that they've saved lives doesn't matter - they have caused the police in jurisdictions where tasers are used liberally to become an overtly oppressive force. And when this is allowed, it feeds on itself (power corrupts) until it produces scandal and we enact countermeasures. We've had several scandals, but countermeasures havn't even kept up with the spread of this weapon. Thus, we need more measures to keep taser use in check, without simply removing such a useful tool from the force. Tasers HAVE been proven deadly according to multiple coroner reports, been suspected COD in many others, and in others illnesses have been invented to pretend that they weren't the COD.

      Drive Stun mode involves causing extreme, but not instantaneously disabling pain, in order to make a person submit to the officer's authority. In order to use it (as a melee weapon), the officer has to have passed within fist/knife/(possibly teeth) striking distance and be able to get an angle on uncovered or thinly covered skin. This typically happens after officers have the risk that the subject poses (barring hepatitic vampires) completely mitigated, but before the subject is acting as an obedient prisoner. I am saying that we NEED to restrict taser use to incidences where the subject still poses a risk, because anything else can be construed as torture - which our ethics system has traditionally claimed to be vehemently opposed to.

      You do not stun a man with a knife or a gun, you either shoot him or you tase him until he drops his weapon or he dies. This is a fully defensible practice. But the chance that a man in a wifebeater who's being arrested for public drunkenness has hepatitis or AIDS is not reason enough to tase him or stun him half a dozen times if he isn't being the perfect prisoner, but doesn't threaten injury. Neither is it reason enough to hold him down and beat him with clubs until he submits to being cuffed. We train our (volunteer) police corps in physical combat because the application of force to limbs and body may be needed to get an unruly prisoner in shackles. A 'safe pain mace' (stungun) should not replace that, and a 'loss of muscle control gun'(taser) should only be used in extreme circumstances.

      --
      People in Soviet Russia, however, appear to be afflicted with amusing juxtapositions of the aforementioned situation
    63. Re:Fortunately... by mevets · · Score: 1

      I don't advocate the censure of Canada; but the issue seemed to have been Canada's treatment of natives and immigrants. Given that the poor fellow that was administered an improvised electro shock therapy by Canadian officials was a Polish immigrant; the motion to censure mightn't be so much of a stretch.

      That such a motion 'nearly passed' says more about the decline of the status of Canada than about the UN.

    64. Re:Fortunately... by rustalot42684 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wrong. Even today, the Fraser Institute (which is by no means a left-wing thinktank) calls the situation "Canada's Aparteid". I suppose your rosy outlook on our native reserves conveniently ignores the fact that the poverty comes out of the poor treatment of 30 years ago. Even today we can't be bothered to make sure that they have sanitary drinking water.

    65. Re:Fortunately... by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      Instead of just taking an unarmed guy down the old fashioned way by tackling him, they just taser him.

      Is an unarmed guy is kinda like an unloaded gun?

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    66. Re:Fortunately... by domatic · · Score: 1

      I've personally watched a cop torture a suspect by holding his head in a mud puddle with his foot. I didn't see this shit on TV; it was 20 feet away. So you'll just have to excuse the hell of out those of us who are skeptical about handing cops yet another easy way to torture someone.

    67. Re:Fortunately... by king-manic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wrong. Even today, the Fraser Institute (which is by no means a left-wing thinktank) calls the situation "Canada's Aparteid". I suppose your rosy outlook on our native reserves conveniently ignores the fact that the poverty comes out of the poor treatment of 30 years ago. Even today we can't be bothered to make sure that they have sanitary drinking water. You are referring to the situations on some reservations. Most are self administered and are funded just as well or better as a municipality of the same size. It isn't for lack of money or good intentions from the government side that induces these situations. It's lack of demand for fiscal responsibility and a lack of interest in reform from the government that causes this to continues. The difference from apartheid in Africa so many years ago and the situation in Canada is Canada is not actively trying to exclude the native population from opportunities. Perhaps you'd have a case 30 years ago but right now it's just the inertia from being down for so long keeping them down. In general there have been a lot done to help them pull out of that but it will take time.
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    68. Re:Fortunately... by G+Fab · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wrong? What part? He agreed with you that there are problems in Canada. You said wrong, but pretty much restated what he said. His point was that Iran is so much worse on human rights, that a just UN would focus on the really awful things int he world instead of the far more minor problems in Canada.

      In international law, one of the more important factors for determining what "torture" is is relativity among nations. If we accept Iran's behavior, and the UN largely does accept it, then the Taser is certainly not legally torture. What consistent method would you use to define torture that gives Iran the ability to censure anyone before censoring themselves?

      Of course Canada and the USA have problems that are publicly acknowledged and discussed (that usually boil down to very tough problems like poverty that the government has a hard time actually fixing). It's so stupidly obvious that no one is arguing that these problems don't exist. These problems are used in the UN to provide cover to Iran, Russia, China, and other truly awful nations. It's a red herring meant to get the "sensitive" assholes who are actually populist power mongers or their pawns in rich nations like Canada bitching about Canada's domestic problems instead of focusing on the best place for a human rights activist to fight: the UN itself, Russia, China, etc etc.

      The UN is the enemy, more or less, of the human rights activist. Billions of people lack basic human rights, and very few of them are in Canada.

    69. Re:Fortunately... by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      err, so because they choose to do a certain job, it should be more dangerous then it needs to be? what kind of fucked logic is that?

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    70. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are called "balls" and American police need to grow some.

      If I can take down a "crazy meth'd-up homeless guy with a knife" without any weaponry (which most assuredly I could), then a protector of the people should be able to as well.

    71. Re:Fortunately... by king-manic · · Score: 1

      I don't advocate the censure of Canada; but the issue seemed to have been Canada's treatment of natives and immigrants. Given that the poor fellow that was administered an improvised electro shock therapy by Canadian officials was a Polish immigrant; the motion to censure mightn't be so much of a stretch.

      That such a motion 'nearly passed' says more about the decline of the status of Canada than about the UN. So a belligerent polish guy gets tasered and dies and it's an indictment on how we treat immigrants? As an immigrant myself I can attest I wasn't tasered at the airport when I came. He ought not have been tasered but it's really about overzealous policing and not some latent policy against polish people and immigrants.

      The supporters of the censure Pakistan, Venezuela, Sudan, Syria, Afghanistan and Belarus were all bastions of human rights? Canada is as good on human rights as it's ever been. It was distinctly worse 30 years ago. even 20 years ago. The whole affair is an attempt by Iran and a bunch of nations that are usually on the receiving end of such censures successfully making a mockery of the UN system.
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    72. Re:Fortunately... by Mistshadow2k4 · · Score: 1

      You people even said that what happened at Abu Ghraib was torture. Humiliation, maybe, but a far cry from torture.

      I've mod points right now, but I can't seem to find the "bullshit" modifier. Why doesn't /. have that?

      --
      I dream of a better world... one in which chickens can cross roads without their motives being questioned.
    73. Re:Fortunately... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's a good example of an ad hominem argument. The fact that it was Iran doesn't change the fact that Canada probably has committed such abuses, especially in our treatment of our native people. Nor does it change that fact that the UN is a joke. For god's sake, they chose Libya to chair the UN Commission on Human Rights!
      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    74. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In regards to the John Kerry speech "Don't Tase Me Bro!" incident..

      1. they weren't cops, they were security.
      2. the kid did resist arrest, I saw it, he crossed the line.
      3. when they started tasing him he was still resisting arrest and refusing to go peacefully.

      I don't know what is so hard to understand.. if rivate security, tell you to leave the premises, you go quietly. If you don't, expect them to use force.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    75. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      blah, the guy in "don't tase me, bro!" did a hell of a lot more than pull his arm away as a natural reaction. He refused to leave the premises when instructed. He resisted the attempts to use force to eject him. He continued to resist after 3 cops tackled him to the ground.

      The use of the taser was warranted. And yes, he's lucky that someone didn't break his arm or his nose.

      In general, if you don't have the skills to beat down private security (which is what they were, not police) then do what they say. They have the right to use force.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    76. Re:Fortunately... by timeOday · · Score: 1

      Okay, so tell me what isn't a form of torture. Raising your voice? Not being polite?
      How do you feel about zapping somebody strapped to a mattress spring or jumpstarting somebody's nuts with a car battery? These things used to be the very definition of torture (in a Rambo movie IIRC - by the bad guys, of course). How different are tasers? They actually incapacitate the subject, which is more than what you'd do to "encourage participation."
    77. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > - crazy meth'd-up homeless guy

      But what are the chances of encountering one? One in a million? I know a lot of cops, and not a one has ever even seen meth. It's a drug that basically exists only in the media. You're showing how naive you are by buying into the mainstream media's hype. Logically speaking, how would a homeless person afford something expensive like that?

      Even my brother, who is a doctor that studies overuse of antihistamines, has never encountered one of the mythical meth users, but of course he, like most doctors, still push the meth mythology because it helps them outlaw effective drugs so more people have to pay money to doctors to get their permission to use antihistamine and asthma medicine. The meth hype is really making a lot of money for doctors and for a few ineffective patented-protected drugs that are now sold over the counter. It's also giving the police a lot of power because they can accuse innocent people of making meth when they find common household items like a gas grill. Even in the small community where I live, the cops have gotten more than a dozen search warrants for people that bought Draino from a small local store that kept records of that sort of thing to give to the police.

    78. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Makes me think of the movie Idiocracy, where they blast pepperspray in the guy's face everytime he says anything... Even when they are transporting him to the White house at the request of the President...

      Slippery slope, and very close to the bottom already...

    79. Re:Fortunately... by Seumas · · Score: 1

      The problem is that a lot of cops are too fucking lazy to be bothered exerting any actual physical energy, so they resort to the taser in cases where a few cops could easily subdue someone and restrain them or where having the patience to talk with someone would solve the situation.

      Cops use the tasers for more than just "crazy homeless meth guy charging at them with a knife". They've used them on 80 year old blind women. They've used them on annoying unarmed, non-violent students. They've used them on frustrated air travelers. They've used them on guys who were legally filming police arrests on public property from their driveway. They've used them on grade school students. People are dying, because the police can't be bothered to exert themselves. While it's probably better than using a gun, at least the use of a gun requires justification and significant pre-meditated thought. The readiness of tasers and the mistaken belief that they are non-lethal and not dangerous causes it to be used all to swiftly.

      Also, for a guy charging a cop with a knife? They're probably going to use a gun ANYWAY. It's fucking difficult and almost impossible to hit a quickly moving target with a taser. And unless someone is armed and clearly a dangerous threat, there is NO EXCUSE for tasering them.

    80. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, I disagree with this. I think tasers should be used in place of guns/shooting, not in place of tackling. It should be a last resort, not something to use because they're lazy.

    81. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "More dangerous than it needs to be" is a dangerous criterion to use for the police.

      The police's job is to protect the public. There is a fine balance between the safety of the public and the safety of the police, but in all such considerations the safety of the public must carry significantly more weight, since that is the entire reason they exist.

    82. Re:Fortunately... by syousef · · Score: 1

      Well the fact that Iran nearly passed a motion to censure Canada for human rights abuses seems to support your hypothesis that the structure of the UN is essentially broke. It's difficult to take that organization seriously.

      On the contrary. I think this is one way in which the UN shows that it isn't broken. If you can bring enough evidence against a country to motion to censure, that country should be held accountable regardless of overall record. What this is actually saying is "Hey the Canadians and other western countries repeatedly point out our human rights abuses. They have some of their own. Pot. Kettle. Black".

      You wouldn't argue that a police officer who goes around doing good things and one day snaps and murders someone should be let off just because he was caught on video by a convicted mass murderer. (Sure the video evidence would need to come under greater scrutiny). Why then should a country be let off if there are in fact human rights abuses? Even if the accuser has another agenda and has their own abuses that require dealing with. That's a separate matter.

      There are many many reasons and ways in which the UN is broken and ineffective. This isn't one of them. This is one you simply don't like.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    83. Re:Fortunately... by m50d · · Score: 1

      "nearly" is another word for "didn't".

      --
      I am trolling
    84. Re:Fortunately... by MightyMartian · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well there are still the issues stemming from the long-term abuse on many reserves by churches, who were given the keys by a lazy, disinterested government, and being good churches, somehow managed to put pedophiles and psychopaths in charge of children.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    85. Re:Fortunately... by a+whoabot · · Score: 1

      How they treat "natives and immigrants"?

      Um...wouldn't that be...everyone?

    86. Re:Fortunately... by mevets · · Score: 1

      Canada isn't a stranger to UN censure for its treatment of natives. If the Lubicon has to rely on Pakistan, Venezuela, Sudan, Syria, Afghanistan, Belarus to champion its issues, how much sadder it is for Canadians.

      But this has drifted way off topic.....

      ps "Belligerent polish guy"- very nice, you must be proud.

    87. Re:Fortunately... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      what you fail to take into account at every turn is the number of lives and injuries that DIDN'T happen because a taser was used.


      And you're going to be providing those statistics, right?

      Because I keep hearing this, but there appears to be no emperical justification for the claim, and in the absense of that, I think you and the cops are just simply lying.
      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    88. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it's a shame that the US essentially created the organization.

      dom

    89. Re:Fortunately... by MacDork · · Score: 1

      I've got one better than that... Police tase sleeping man in his own home. Yeah, the guy was black, showed his ID, only to be tased a third time. Then he was carted off in handcuffs in front of his child. Police were cleared of any criminal wrongdoing without a trial in less than 6 weeks.

      I wonder what happens when you wear one of these to a protest rally... I'm guessing they'll throw you under a jail for the rest of your life for the attempted murder of a police officer.

    90. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, there is a difference between being hurt and being tortured and it seems to be completely lost on people today. Being "hurt" is now almost always confused with being "tortured" when it comes to popular sentiment.

      If you were offered a choice between being tortured and being treated like some inmates at Abu Ghraib were -- you'd choose the naked man pile, panties on your head and being threatened by dogs over real torture as performed in days of old.

      There's a world of difference between being bruised, humiliated and psychologically shaken as opposed to being broken, bloody, crippled, disfigured and maimed for life.

      Just a little something to keep in mind before calling something torture when it clearly isn't anything of the sort.

    91. Re:Fortunately... by ToasterMonkey · · Score: 1

      Whoa whoa whoa, charging a 9mm handgun, and charging Marines with RIFLES are just a TAD different.

      You're not referring to this incident with the Moros in 1899 I hope. I mean, bolt-action rifles with bayonets are an odd thing to compare with modern day handgun/taser vs. knife scenarios.

      It's not clear what options you're presenting, but I'd take any rifle with a bayonet or any modern day service rifle over a taser to any knife fight, even with only a good running distance between us.
      Besides, wouldn't the presence of any firearm do more to dissuade an attacker than a taser would? Judging by the reactions of people threatened with tasers, and there are many youtube links floating around Slashdot with examples, it would seem that those on both ends of tasers underestimate their effect. Hard to blame just the cops when they tell you at least three times their going to use it, and you don't listen.

    92. Re:Fortunately... by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Well there are still the issues stemming from the long-term abuse on many reserves by churches, who were given the keys by a lazy, disinterested government, and being good churches, somehow managed to put pedophiles and psychopaths in charge of children. You mean the ones they put under heavy scrutiny in 1990's and closed down completely by 1998, and attempted to pay restitution for?
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    93. Re:Fortunately... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      You've never been on a native reservation, have you?

    94. Re:Fortunately... by MrYotsuya · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're overstating the "benefits" of being native, being a Status Indian myself, I should know.

      Natives certainly do pay taxes. You can avoid paying income tax provided your job is on a reserve. Unfortunately, most reserves have been placed in far-flung areas where the land had low productivity, any windfalls were mere oversight. On my own reservation, there's two gas stations and the Band Office for work, almost all the people work in the nearest town and pay taxes just like everyone else.

      I hear about us not paying taxes all too often, so it's not common knowledge, but should be. I'd probably deal with a little less racism if it were so.

    95. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Every one of these videos the person was tased not for "arguing about a speeding ticket" or any of the other stupid claims. They were tased for refusing to follow the lawful directions of a police officer. That's the law. When the police tell you to put your hands behind your back, you do it. They have the right to use force to make you do it. I can't believe people are surprised by this. That's what the police are for, to use force in society.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    96. Re:Fortunately... by loraksus · · Score: 2, Informative

      While it isn't quite a 80 year old, wheelchair-bound schizophrenic woman Portland cops tazered a seventy-one-year-old blind woman 5 times
      Crappy source for the taser apologist crowd, but google her name and you should still find a few news articles around.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    97. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      He refused the lawful direction of the police officer to put his hands behind his back. That's a crime.

      I think the officer handled it very professionally.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    98. Re:Fortunately... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      so you don't find summary execution to be a bit harsh?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    99. Re:Fortunately... by whorfin · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the taser has become the response of first resort many times in police actions. Annoy a cop? That's a tasing! Practice a little civil disobedience? That's a tasing!

      When tasers came into use, the conceit was that they were for use when the only other option was to shoot to kill, thus making them a less lethal option. However, they have been used, in practice, as a mechanism for controlling a situation completely. This change in protocol is, in my opinion, nothing short of criminal. Think about it....The only time a taser should be used is IF THE POLICE WOULD HAVE SHOT WITH A FUCKING PISTOL rather than use the taser were they without it!

      How many routine non-confrontational traffic stops end with a police shooting? A tasering? Different answer, eh? Annoying student asking impertinent questions? Time for a shooting? No, but we can taser him!

      Fortunately, I haven't seen this happening in my native SF, but after all this crap, I really want to go for an explicit change to the laws to treat tasers the same as lethal weapons...they're more serious than a baton, and should only be used when, literally, the officers would othewise shoot.

      aaarrrgh!

      --
      Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    100. Re:Fortunately... by Anzya · · Score: 1

      So you think it is reasonably to shoot someone with a tazer for not turning around fast enough and puttings ones hands behind ones back?
      I'm not from the US but shouldn't you say something like "You're under arrest, turn around and put your hans behind your back" and at least say it once before pulling your gun?
      And "handled it very professionally"? He refused to the read the guy his rights despite that he begged him to do it multiple times.
      I think the big problem here was that the guy "thought he was in control". He wasn't meak and just accepted what the police said so the police man needed to put him down a peg or two.
      I love the fact the police was more upset and aggitated than guy being shot.

      --
      "This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (or STFU, for you un-hip people)."
    101. Re:Fortunately... by Fizzl · · Score: 1

      And how does security jocks have any kind of right to do an arrest? In case of civilian arrest, how do they have right to enforce and arrest with potentially lethal force? They dont. Security guards should, and cannot do shit. These ass clowns should be fired. Leave the law enforcement to proper officials.

    102. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go to a store and buy something. Flash your Native Canadian status card (or whatever it is called) while paying. Bingo, you don't pay tax on that purchase.

    103. Re:Fortunately... by bwen · · Score: 1

      Maybe having the police officers (not "cops" as this is considered a derogatory slang term) fill out more paperwork to make you feel more secure would make you happy after they discharge their tasers. If you want to qualify it as torture, it is something every police officer in training goes through nowadays in the US. "Excited delirium" sounds like an interesting term; qualifying a persons intent and threat can be a pretty hairy situation and I, who have also "known several cops," think its great that they don't have to use a conventional firearm to subdue them. If you really think that to safely use a stun gun someone basically needs to be within the scope of your physical control, you are incorrect. You seem to be paranoid or delusional and have a strange fear of the police. Who do you root for when the Joe Schmow hits the police officer? Your level of understanding of what they do for a living is atrocious and despicable. I am saddened that you have been rated as insightful.

    104. Re:Fortunately... by anagama · · Score: 1

      There will be no statistics (except perhaps those made up by the manufacturer and/or others bent on extracting the last portions of liberty from this nation).

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    105. Re:Fortunately... by anagama · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I saw the same video. I completely and whole heartedly disagree with you. It was completely unnecessary instance of "because I got the gun" going to small minded idiots' heads.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    106. Re:Fortunately... by Eternal+Annoyance · · Score: 1

      Well, all cops are trained in hand to hand combat and don't need to tazer or shoot that poor chap, they know very well how to get that person under control without using any weapons other then their hands.

    107. Re:Fortunately... by EsabaCZ · · Score: 1

      When a cop says "turn around" or "lay down on the ground" and you don't and get tasered you can't bitch. Your a dumb fuck and deserved to have gotten tasered. I have been pulled over and stopped by police offers a number of occasions, I never argued with the cops and always did what they said to do. Guess what, I never got tasered. Don't argue with the cops, argue with the judge.

      P.S. I'll admit the 80 year old women in a wheelchair incident is a bit fucking ridiculous, and the cops involved should have corrected action against them.

    108. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumFTL · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have a good friend who happens to be a police officer and we've had many talks about this. I think he would agree with most of your analysis (indeed, that many police officers do use tasers when they are not the 100% optimal solution). However, one important thing that you left out is that people can easily get injured if they are taken down by conventional means. Indeed, if there is a physical confrontation, the police, the target, and (likely) innocent bystanders are all in very real danger of taking damage, either intentionally inflicted or accidental, which can lead to severe injury, permanent disability, or even death. Yes tasers are dangerous weapons, but so are batons and fists and handcuffs! Heck, many of the options you described, while perfectly legitimate in some situations, give the suspect/target the initiative, which, depending on their mental state, can be very dangerous for those nearby.

      The statistical analysis that needs to be done here is what the cost/benefits of tasering in various situations, in comparison to the other (mostly preferable) techniques you describe. I have seen now so many articles on Slashdot, Digg, Reddit, etc about specific cases where tasering caused a significant problem, but that is only one side of the story.

      My drunk cousin told off a police officer, who was stupid enough (and angry enough) to try and tackle him. This was bad because not only was the police officer not big enough to do this successfully, but my cousin used to engage in organized fighting (local "UFC" type matches), and has fairly impressive combat reflexes. That's someone you don't jump from behind while they're intoxicated, late at night, with no warning, unless you wanna go home in a body bag. Luckily for the other officers nearby, they had someone of a reasonable size, and they tasered him five times and handcuffed him, and he was no longer a danger. Sure the real problem here was the idiot policeman tried to tackle the wrong person, but *given* that they had a strong, trained fighter who was now engaged in potentially deadly combat, tasering was pretty much their best option, and you better believe my cousin would rather be tasered than beaten (though they did do that at some point).

      I guess my point is that I'm really tired of all these one-sided discussions. There's absolutely no reason to think that tasers should *only* be used instead of a real weapon - by that logic you should only punch someone in the face if you're willing to kill them. Tasers should be used when they are the best tool for the job.

    109. Re:Fortunately... by anagama · · Score: 1

      Write back when the cops are gunning you down for utterly stupid reasons. "Annoying" is not a tasing offense, but with your complacency and logic, it soon will be. How many people do you annoy?

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    110. Re:Fortunately... by wish · · Score: 1

      You are forgetting people born in Newfoundland before 1949 and that americans get the words native and aboriginal mixed up.

    111. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Despite what the television has tried to tell you, they don't have to read you your rights until they are about to question you at the precinct.

    112. Re:Fortunately... by anagama · · Score: 1

      The officer in that video deserves to be sued into bankruptcy, fired from the force, jailed for six months, and forced to live the rest of his life as a line cook for $7/hr. Really -- why was it a "lawful order"? Is there some law in UT that says you have to sign the ticket? And what was to preclude the officer from 5 minutes' worth of conversation, perhaps explaining that signing is not an admission of guilt. Rather than deal with another human on a person to person level, he took the "I'm the State, do as I say or die" attitude. That cop has a personality better suited for Nicaragua or Pakistan. He is definitely a traitor to everything that defines what America is supposed to be, but sure to be front and center in our march toward a police state.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    113. Re:Fortunately... by anagama · · Score: 1

      Oh not at all. At least the terrorists are being kept at bay. On a side note, I was surprised to hear from someone today that the PATRIOT act has resulted in 13,000 arrests of terrorists.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    114. Re:Fortunately... by louisadkins · · Score: 1

      A rebuttal that makes the point of calling someone names and making personal attacks looses most, if not all, of it's strength.

    115. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      I'm not from the US

      I love the fact the police was more upset and aggitated than guy being shot. Perhaps you're not aware that the kind of people who refuse to turn around and put their hands behind their back are the kind of people who pull guns and shoot cops in the US.

      Police tell you to do something, do what you are told. Period.

      It's the law.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    116. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Well, duh. Yes, you are required to sign the ticket. If you listen to the tape he even says that. As well as he says "ok, get out of the vehicle Sir, I'm going to arrest you." Are you retarded?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    117. Re:Fortunately... by Squalish · · Score: 1

      I qualify the intentional infliction of serious pain on a captive but non-cooperative individual in order to engineer compliance, as torture. Every other week we see citizen journalists exposing the practice, showing multiple officers standing above someone while they cry out in pain. Officers chime in on the comment sections that this is Drive Stun mode, which isn't anywhere near as serious as a normal taser - no skin penetration, much less current, and little chance of injury. But it is serious pain, and falls under my IMO reasonable definition of torture. I believe that the capability should be removed. Tasers shot at a distance in place of a gun can save large numbers of lives, on both ends of the trigger. But they're not a substitute for physically forcing the person into cuffs - they're too deadly for that, and too painful. Whether it makes the officer's job easier is irrelevant. The preservation of human rights, primarily the right to be safe from violence, is the goal of police forces in the Western world.

      On torture - The fact that an officer can clip electrodes to his testicles and shock himself wouldn't prevent the involuntary application of that practice from being called torture either.

      As for being scared at policemen, rooting for idiots, or listening to N.W.A. - what the hell do these things matter to my points? Address the points I have proffered and we'll have a discussion, and in all likelihood you might convince someone to change their opinion. Address my person and you'll have the satisfaction of having insulted someone on the internet you'll never meet or communicate with again.

      --
      People in Soviet Russia, however, appear to be afflicted with amusing juxtapositions of the aforementioned situation
    118. Re:Fortunately... by Anzya · · Score: 1

      Live and learn. Thanks for the info.

      --
      "This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (or STFU, for you un-hip people)."
    119. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They've got the right to use force to eject you from the premises if you refuse to leave. As does everyone who owns property. Some asks you to leave, you leave.. it's not your property. It's not public property. It's private property and you're a guest.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    120. Re:Fortunately... by louisadkins · · Score: 1

      What do Trolls eat, again? I'm not sure if we have the right food for you, but I guess we can check and see what's available.

    121. Re:Fortunately... by Anzya · · Score: 1

      Ok I can accept that even if thats realy messed up but when I was talking about being aggitated I meant after he had been shot with the tazer and was already handcuffed. Why was a police with probably a couple of years of experience so much more pumped up than someone who at least to his own mind had been wrongfully arrested and tazed? Suerly he couldn't put up more than token resistance at that point?
      You also say that you should always do what the police tell you but aren't there any limits as to what you need to comply with?

      --
      "This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (or STFU, for you un-hip people)."
    122. Re:Fortunately... by edwardsdl · · Score: 1

      Tasers, clubs, microwave guns, and so on are NOT forms of torture! Torture is all about how something is used. I could torture a man with a spork - does that make sporks torture? Does that mean we should ban sporks? If a taser is a torture device then so too are guns, knives, and sticks. This just seems to be a childish attempt by the U.N. to show how terrible the U.S. is.

    123. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I've seen, to be tasered and not die, you have to prepare, be calm and not be physically restrained immediately after being tasered. Hmmm. Cops are usually ready to jump all over someone (cutting off their airway, essentially trying to kill them) immediately after tasering them! Apparently real life never happens when they 'test taser'. Real life people die due to tasers (at this point, moreso than guns). I've even heard of people being tasered for jaywalking (in my city!). As for the cops that killed the guy in Vancouver. Because of their actions the man is dead (a direct link). I don't believe there should be any amnesty for their killing this man. They should all be convicted of murder. Every last one. Set the good example. Go to jail, and don't get out for 25 years. Perhaps other cops will see the example, and think up better solutions to killing people who are unruly after 10 hours of aimless waiting.

    124. Re:Fortunately... by edwardsdl · · Score: 1

      At least we "right wing nuts" are giving (perhaps flawed) reasons for our disdain of the organization. The parent however, has simply resorted to name calling, and so have you. The "other 'insightful' posts" were probably moderated that way because they provided an "insightful" point of view. Very much unlike your post.

    125. Re:Fortunately... by MrYotsuya · · Score: 1

      Well, "Anonymous Coward", that is something else that only works at stores on reservations. From the previous post, there's two gas stations on our rez. It means I can buy (very marked up) junk food without taxes, even though it would be cheaper to buy it at the nearest town's Wal-Mart. Go back to race-baiting in real life, or whatever it is you do for fun.

    126. Re:Fortunately... by TriggerFin · · Score: 1

      ...seems to support your hypothesis.... It's difficult to take that organization seriously.

      Ain't /. great? You're insightful because you agree with someone who's a troll for backing up another troll. Is this where my +1 karma (based on exactly one karma-improving mod point) goes away?
      --
      Here's your sig.
    127. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It always amazes me how someone who despises the UN is a right wing nut on /. You would think that given the huge liberal bias of Slashdot that the UN would be the most hated organization on the planet. The UN is an extreme example of an totalitarian quasi-government.

      How many members of the UN general assembly are elected by the people they are supposed to represent?

      How do liberals live with that fact that 5 non-elected members representing their countries pretty much have total veto over the other 191 countries in the UN including the other 4 members of the security council?

      As far as I'm concerned anyone who is either a supporter of a true democratic or republican (the system not the party) government should oppose the UN on general principle.

      According to slashdot I'm a right wing nut because I trust nothing that comes out of the UN. As far as I'm concerned trusting anything from the UN is like trusting a fox in the hen house. On the rare occasion the UN does the right thing, it is almost always for the wrong reason.

    128. Re:Fortunately... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      The exact wording is probably something like applying electric shocks is torture and that definition includes the most common use of a taser.

      Beating someone is torture too, doesn't mean police can't beat people to stop them but it allows torture claims if the action is used unnecessarily. Tasering someone for longer than necessary is torture, wouldn't you agree?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    129. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Yes, if they tell you to do something that would result in you breaking the law you are required to refuse. Otherwise, no, you do what the cop says. If you think the cop has done something illegal or improper you bring it up with a judge.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    130. Re:Fortunately... by Anzya · · Score: 1

      What was the paper the officer wanted him sign? What I am thinking of is that I wouldn't want to sign anything that nullified my chances of not getting convicted. Surley you're not forced to sign something like that? Of course if that was only to confirm that he had understod what he got the ticket for he should have of course just signed it and drive on.
      Thank you, it's always good to learn more about how it works over there :)

      --
      "This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (or STFU, for you un-hip people)."
    131. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least we "right wing nuts" are giving (perhaps flawed) reasons for our disdain of the organization.

      Which part of the post I was responding to, "Since when does the U.N. need reason when bashing the U.S.?", gave such reasons?

      The "other 'insightful' posts" were probably moderated that way because they provided an "insightful" point of view. Very much unlike your post.

      Well, in addition to being a right wing nut, you're also kind of stupid: the point of my post was to illustrate, by analogy, that the GP post didn't actually even bother to give reasons.

    132. Re:Fortunately... by Cederic · · Score: 1


      It's quite possible to use force without electrocuting someone.

      If you attempt to manhandle me from the premises, I may resist, but I can't complain about a few bruises.
      If you taser me then expect a severe and violent reaction at the time, and expect legal action afterwards.

      There's force, and there's appropriate force. Tasers are seldom appropriate force, for policemen or for private security guards.

    133. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happened to just shooting the suspect in the kneecaps or the feet ... attention grabing, yes, life-threatening, no. Or have I just been watching too many movies?

    134. Re:Fortunately... by Danathar · · Score: 1

      Mod this guy up somebody!

      Although I think it's legitimate issue about tasers, where is all the grief and "resolutions" about torture and mayhem going on in SO many different dictatorships around the world using methods truly medieval?

    135. Re:Fortunately... by couchslug · · Score: 1

      I use an interesting personal option that ensures I never require Tasering, tackling, clubbing, shooting, etc.

      I obey police directions in a peaceful manner, every time. Why should I care if people who choose not to control themselves are controlled by force?

      People without self-control don't deserve my respect or care, and I don't expect police to get in a wrestling match with them.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    136. Re:Fortunately... by moonbender · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow. You are deluded. Yeep, the UN is the enemy of the human rights activist! Boggles the mind. I wrote up three different versions of a reply but there's no point, you are too far gone to talk to via the internet.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    137. Re:Fortunately... by Subtler · · Score: 1

      many officers have been killed by their own weapons after they lose them in a scuffle. so many police officers use a taser now to avoid physical confrontations. what you see as a need to "strap on a pair of balls" is just them lowering their chances of getting killed over a stupid traffic ticket.

    138. Re:Fortunately... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      On a side note, I was surprised to hear from someone today that the PATRIOT act has resulted in 13,000 arrests of terrorists.

            Wow, I feel "safer" already, now that these "terrorists" are behind bars.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    139. Re:Fortunately... by empaler · · Score: 1

      I've always viewed the U.N as a corrupt orginization and an enemy of the US. I'm sure many agree. Well the fact that Iran nearly passed a motion to censure Canada for human rights abuses seems to support your hypothesis that the structure of the UN is essentially broke. It's difficult to take that organization seriously. So it's a bad thing that Iran has the view that humans have rights?
      Remember, noone is inherently evil or inherently good. Everybody seeks to avoid suffering and seeks happiness. Just because some people do it differently than you does not make them evil.
    140. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Explain to me how any mistake on the mother's or the airports side could possibly justify tasering him? Clearly the guy didn't speak English (the bystanders around him mistakenly told the police he spoke Russian - but even still, they knew he didn't speak English). He was agitated and in a very unpredictable state. What you're telling me is that 4 police officers in body armour couldn't find a way to calm or restrain the guy without tasering him? I'm sure the airport has translators for a lot of different countries that they could've had help calm him down.

      Again - 4 police officers chose tasering as a first resort to bring 1 man into custody. I don't know how anyone can justify that.

      The police should've been there to mediate and calm him down. Unless he started attacking the police (which he didn't) there was no reason to arrest him right away (eventually, yes for causing all that damage).

    141. Re:Fortunately... by empaler · · Score: 1

      The U.N is corrupted by it's continued need to allow the US to be involved in it.

      I'd be happy to kick them out, shut it down, and have a world body consisting only of democracies.
      The the U.S. would still be unwelcome.
    142. Re:Fortunately... by dbIII · · Score: 1

      they weren't cops, they were security

      Oh that makes it OK then. They can do time for impersonating police officers and carrying restriced weapons. Either that or you have a society that is breaking down into mercenaries or other private armies IMHO.

      I really cannot understand this obsession with having untrained military running around the place with little control. Law enforcent should be professional, the military should be professional and there shouldn't be untrained barely accountable people blurring the lines between the two.

    143. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a few friends who are police officers. And yes, they have tasers.

      They are trained to use increasing force in situations such as this. The smallest amount of force is just being there (your presence is good enough to deter crime). The highest amount of force is using your firearm. Your description of the other means of force to use instead of tasing is completely backwards. You don't tase first and ask questions later, you attempt to talk first and then move up from there. Using a taser is considered the same force level as pepper spray or mace. Can things go wrong? Of course, we're human, we make mistakes.

      My cop friends also jokingly admit that cops are the fattest, laziest, most out of shape guys around. And thousands of cops have been tased and none of them have died. The reality is that those who have died from being tased probably had a condition that was exacerbated from the tasing.

      And for the record, I was willingly tased by my friend. It lasts 5 seconds and there's nothing you can do but wait it out. I screamed until all the air from my lungs was gone. You don't understand how effective something like a taser is until you've had it done to you.

    144. Re:Fortunately... by reboot246 · · Score: 1

      It fails on the "severe pain and suffering" part. And you include "happens" as if it were still going on. Do you have proof of that?

    145. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's cowardice. The only people who become police officers are people who were a) bullies, b) bullying victims out for revenge or c) people too afraid to join the military and be a real soldier. All 3 are cowards.

      Take the gun away from the cop and he becomes nothing but a helpless bitch. I've seen videos of police immediately fleeing when disarmed and confronted hand to hand.

      Personally, I am sure that I could beat most police officers to within an inch of their life if you take away their gun. Tase me? I'll rip the fucking wires out of their little toys.

    146. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Even today, the Fraser Institute (which is by no means a left-wing thinktank) calls the situation "Canada's Aparteid".

      Of course the Fraser Institute isn't a left-wing thinktank, it's a libertarian thinktank. In Canada, this actually most closely aligns with the conservatives, which is right-wing.

      Left-wing != right-wing. Duh.
    147. Re:Fortunately... by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Even today, the Fraser Institute (which is by no means a left-wing thinktank) calls the situation "Canada's Aparteid". I suppose your rosy outlook on our native reserves conveniently ignores the fact that the poverty comes out of the poor treatment of 30 years ago. Even today we can't be bothered to make sure that they have sanitary drinking water.

      This is where I get confused. Are we supposed to maintain their standard of life (ie; interfere with their lives), or give them money and leave them alone?

      The politics and nonsense surrounding reserves is exactly why every status indian I know (and their children) live in cities and towns abroad and work regular, non-reserve jobs, pay regular taxes and fund their own education. Yes, they do have status cards and gas cards and when they drive through a reserve they fill their tanks for a lower cost (and the smokers among them pick up a carton or two) but hey - wouldn't you?

      Face it; Indians (aboriginals, native Canadians) are a conquered race. They do not roam the land freely any more, nor would it be possible for them to return to their old ways (nor would most of them actually like to for that matter) so their choice is to integrate with society, carve out their own corner of it and live in harmony with everybody else just as the immigrants from all nations have done. Canada is a collage of races and religions of which natives are only one.

      In the past we have had indiscretions. We did stomp all over native lands during our discovery and exploration of this land, we had black slavery, internment of Japanese during WWII and for that we are actually rather proud - because we've learned from it and value human rights higher than, I'd say, most nations as a result. I'll qualify that; it was our forefathers who instituted all of these policies, not us; we're the ones who've learned from their grave indiscretions.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    148. Re:Fortunately... by G+Fab · · Score: 1

      When UN activists commit rape repeatedly, when Syria is put on the antiproliferation committee int he same week that they are found to be sharing nuclear weapons tech with north korea, when billions of dollars in aid to the Iraqi people are stolen to fund palaces for Saddam and oil for france (killing 200,000 people by starvation), when UN facilities are used to store missiles fired at civilians, and when Iran is on the human rights committee, yeah, I think the UN is systematically opposed to human rights.

      Why? Because it recognizes the legitimacy of nations that are illegitimate dictatorships, racist, or sexist to the point where huge segments are enslaved. Only legitimately elected governments should have a voice in international law. The whims of some African tin-pot dictator might be foisted over his own nation out of necessity, but there is no possible justice in allowing his vote to affect the citizens of the entire world. The UN constantly reflects the villians' interests. How many times have terrorists been condemned? How many times has Israel been condemned? While Israel has done bad things, they certainly aren't bad enough to justify the imbalance (it's over 200-1 when you look at UN resolutions). Jews have been hated for a very long time, and all the idiots running bad nations reflect this reality. They hate Jews, and so the UN itself hates Jews. Same applies to many other awful practices.

      I think people like you realize that some nations are worse than others in a fundamental way, but believe that the UN is the only way to govern the world. "Give the democratic government of Poland the same voice as dominating and abusive theocratically chosen government of Iran, not because its fair, but because it's necessary to have diplomacy." But look at how bad this is working! No diplomacy is occurring. The UN is exploited by the evil to delay justice through endless procedure. Look at the IAEA... supposedly the enemy of nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists... but they are the best friend of Iran, long the world's foremost terrorism supporter. Can you point to some accomplishment to justify all the raping and killing and stealing?

      The fact is, some nations are totally illegitimate, but there isn't enough incentive for human rights and democracy because the UN rewards dictators the same (or more) than legit nations. The civilized world should exclude such nations from deliberations that affect us. There can be a forum for the terrorists and despots and rapists to come and tell us their grievances, but they ought have no vote at all. We gain so much if these nations are seen for what they are. What do we give up? IF the UN accomplished good things, then perhaps you would have an argument that the injustice is worth it...

      Do you really think I am deluded? I state my arguments. I'm not being jingoistic, I'm using facts and ideas and values that I prefer. You just announce that my ideas are hopeless and not worth discussion. I think that's pathetic, but it's interesting that this is precisely the philosophy I'm asking you to accept as a world policy: if a nation is deluded, exclude them from real discussions. So, are you going to contradict yourself and disagree with me?

    149. Re:Fortunately... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      If you attempt to manhandle me from the premises, I may resist, but I can't complain about a few bruises. If you taser me then expect a severe and violent reaction at the time, and expect legal action afterwards.

      IMHO the right to expel trespassers should not be limited to those who are personally capable of overpowering them in a hand-to-hand fight; that would reduce us to "might makes right". If you refuse to leave when asked, and thus make the owner expel you from their property by force, you should be thankful they chose to employ a taser instead of something more lethal. Once you've refused to leave peaceably, any necessary threat or use of force would be justified.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    150. Re:Fortunately... by moonbender · · Score: 1

      So, are you going to contradict yourself and disagree with me?

      Nope!

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    151. Re:Fortunately... by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Once you've refused to leave peaceably, any necessary threat or use of force would be justified. You think it's appropriate to kill peaceful protesters? Personally I'd call the police and let them escalate the level of force in use.

      Killing people because you don't like where they're standing strikes me as entirely unnecessary.
    152. Re:Fortunately... by tjstork · · Score: 1

      The the U.S. would still be

      Well then the hell with our so called allies then. The whole lot of them are worthless. You know, really, the whole US position in the middle east is designed to protect the southern flank of NATO, and really has no geopolitical value to the USA. The USA has enough coal and enough land and enough existing oil reserves to put together a completely energy independent strategy. Europe cannot. After 50 years of hearing that the EU does not want the USA as an ally, I'm inclined to say go right the hell ahead, let's have the USA quit NATO, go energy independent, and let the EU go to hell.

      At this point, Iraqi Sunnis are a better ally to the United States than any European Nation, as at least they fight. Perhaps instead of the USA being opposed to Islamic states, the USA should be allied to them, and just dump Europe once and for all.

      --
      This is my sig.
    153. Re:Fortunately... by empaler · · Score: 1

      You need to lay off of the kool-aid and reconsider: where does the money go? The invasions under Dubya have been bleeding holes in the Federal reserve, and obviously, he does not want to be held accountable for where the money disappears to.

    154. Re:Fortunately... by tjstork · · Score: 1

      You need to lay off of the kool-aid and reconsider: where does the money go? The invasions under Dubya have been bleeding holes in the Federal reserve

      What kool=aid? I'd ask the question, what good is NATO?

      I swear, one Sunni village in Iraq has probably done more to fight America's enemies than all of Europe combined. Instead of all of this antagonism with Iran, why not ally with them? It's not like the United States doesn't have a conservative religious group of its own, and, while they are obviously anti-muslim, they are probably even more anti-european, and, the idea of allying with the mideast, doing some sort of a free trade pact, backing out of NATO in favor of the M.E., makes a good deal of sense.

      If you invoked Article 5 with an Islamic country, and had some cleric bless it, you'd get guys that would fight. On the other hand, Europe will never fight, so what's the point of being in a military alliance with a continent that will never even step into the ring. Plus, there's a billion muslims and rising, and Europe's population is declining.

      --
      This is my sig.
    155. Re:Fortunately... by Calyth · · Score: 1

      "THIS is torture - using pain compliance to subdue a subject who has been rendered harmless by the situation, or who was always harmless, but resisting arrest as best they are able (if that)."
      Uh... Tasers are meant to override your skeletal muscles so that you won't be able to fight back. Pain is more or less a side-effect from the use of applying electroshock.

    156. Re:Fortunately... by AngelofDeath-02 · · Score: 1

      You might think me insane for thinking this but..
      I really do think that punching someone should be a last resort as well.

      Where does a verbal situation turn into a physical one? And why do the cops get to decide this, despite having a clear advantage?

      --
      No, I am not an English major. My posts are subject to typos and incorrect grammar. Do not expect perfection.
    157. Re:Fortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shh, in this age of feminization, having bruised feelings is also considered torture. Welcome to the age of women ruling the planet.

    158. Re:Fortunately... by fredklein · · Score: 1
      Police tell you to do something, do what you are told. Periodhttp://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4155/is_20060302/ai_n16204956

      ...a state trooper forced her and her U.S. Navy boyfriend to do naked snow angels after catching them in the back seat of a car ...
      (not the best link, just the first I found)

      If a cops stops your mother/sister/wife/daughter and says "Blow me", do you honestly think they should??
    159. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      I think the tendency of people (especially on Slashdot) to jump to the absurd to defend their position is disturbing. The exception does not disprove the rule. Let me give you a better example. Imagine you were at the food court of a mall and you ordered something with "no sauce". The idiot behind the counter plonks it down in front of you with sauce and then asks you to pay.

      You: I said "no sauce".
      Clerk: It comes with sauce.
      You: Yeah, but I said "no sauce".
      Clerk: It comes with sauce, $8.95.
      You: I don't want it.
      Clerk: You ordered it, you have to pay for it.
      You: I ordered it with "no sauce", I'm not paying.

      At this point, you notice there is a police officer standing on either side of you. Not security guards, mind you, real bonified cops in uniform.

      Cop: What's the problem here.
      Clerk: He won't pay.
      Cop: What's the problem pal?
      You: It's got sauce on it, I asked for no sauce.
      Clerk: It comes with sauce.
      Cop: Pay him.
      You: I don't want it.
      Cop: You ordered it, pay.
      You: I ordered it with no sauce.
      Clerk: It comes with sauce.
      Cop: Are you refusing to pay?
      You: I don't want it.
      Cop: I'm ordering you to pay.
      You: No.
      Other Cop: Put your hands behind your back please.

      At this point, hopefully, you know you're in trouble and you're not the kind of idiot who resists arrest. They 'cuff you and take you away for refusing to follow the lawful direction of a police officer. Maybe they even take the money out of your pocket and pay the clerk before they take you away. You're booked. Your fingerprints and a mugshot are taken. Your personal belongings are put into an envelope and you are put in a holding cell. Eventually, you get to see a judge and you might reasonably ask if the judge would have paid and the judge would say yes, if the police told her to, because it is no longer your call. You might think you are completely within your rights to not pay for a meal you didn't order (and I would agree with you) but if the cops tell you to pay, you pay, they've evaluated the situation and they've decided against you. Maybe they think ordering such a meal without sauce is stupid. Maybe they think they heard you order and didn't hear you say no sauce. It doesn't matter.

      That's what authority is.. and that's what our society values. If you want your $8.95 back take it to small claims court. Otherwise, obey the rule of the law.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    160. Re:Fortunately... by atamido · · Score: 1

      I watched all of the videos on YouTube I could find, including after he was escorted out into the hall. A lot of people took videos and uploaded them, so you got a lot of different perspectives. I can see from some of the videos how people get certain ideas about what went down, but I think after viewing them all, you get a reasonably clear idea of what happened.

      After viewing them all, I have to agree with QuantumG on points 2 and 3. For officers, the appropriate steps were taken once they were removing him*. I have no idea about point 1 because the videos aren't clear enough to clearly make out all badges and labels. At some universities, the "security" are essentially police officers with a jurisdiction the size of the university.

      *I still have questions as to if the security should have touched the questioner in the first place. Once they touched him, the protocol was followed pretty clearly. If the questioner sued, it would be for trying to escort him in the first place, not for steps taken to subdue him.

    161. Re:Fortunately... by fredklein · · Score: 1

      'cuff you and take you away for refusing to follow the lawful direction of a police officer.

      1) Before it was "Police tell you to do something, do what you are told. Period.", but now it's "the lawful direction of a police officer". Moved the goalposts, have we?

      2) Telling me to pay for something I do not wish to buy is NOT a lawful order. At WORST, it is a breach of contract (assuming a contract had been agreed to, which is not the case at a fast food joint), which is a CIVIL matter, not a CRIMINAL matter.

      Maybe they even take the money out of your pocket and pay the clerk before they take you away

      That would be theft. Theft is not lawful.
      Would they also charge me with 'littering' because I didn't dispose of the food (that I didn't want and they stole money from me to pay for) in the proper waste recepticle??

      if the cops tell you to pay, you pay

      You might think you are completely within your rights to [not have your wife forced to fellate a cop] (and I would agree with you) but if the cops tell [her to suck, she sucks,] they've evaluated the situation and they've decided against you.

      Right? After all, "That's what authority is.."

    162. Re:Fortunately... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Look, I've told you the situation, if you care to refute me, go ask a lawyer.

      Jesus, there's no helping some people.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    163. Re:Fortunately... by Brickwall · · Score: 1
      . And the UN is not just an organization, it is an organization of 192 countries. If the UN is highly critical towards the US, it means many of its member states are highly critical.

      Er, how many of those 192 countries have democratically elected governments in countries with open media networks? China, Cuba, Russia, Iran, Syria, Malaysia, Indonesia, probably 3/4 of Africa? Yep, absolutely no reason to question the opinions of these governments of high integrity.

      --
      What was once true, is no longer so
    164. Re:Fortunately... by Brickwall · · Score: 1
      The U.N is corrupted by it's continued need to allow the US to be involved in it. The US invaded Iraq against the wishes of the UN and without proper evidence to back up their claims of immenient danger from the iraq government. But the UN has done nothing to delcare sanctions against the US for this action.

      Thank you for dispelling the notion that only Americans are illiterate.

      --
      What was once true, is no longer so
    165. Re:Fortunately... by edwardsdl · · Score: 1

      Yup, that's what I was trying to point out. It's all about the method with with the tool was used.

    166. Re:Fortunately... by edwardsdl · · Score: 1

      You make a good point! The GP post is just as worthless as your own! I was making a generalization about the topic as a whole. I see quite a bit of name calling from people like yourself, and reasoned, thought-out responses by the "nuts". Also, what is the deal with the insults? If you actually care about these issues and want change (as opposed to simply being an internet tough-guy), then you might try not insulting every person who don't share your beliefs. By doing so you're simply helping to widen the partisan divide, which is not helping anything. Whether you want to believe it or not, you need the other half of the country to get things done.

  4. "Excited Delirium" by sageres · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wtf is Excited Delirium? The Taser company and police department seem to be always quick to blame any deaths associated with tasers on this supposed condition, while APA nor any other medical body recognizes this as any type of medical condition.

    1. Re:"Excited Delirium" by MutantEnemy · · Score: 1

      Wtf is Excited Delirium?

      I have absolutely no idea, but this is possibly the nicest-sounding phrase for "being fatally electrocuted" that they could have come up with. If you're careful with your language, painful and agonizing death doesn't have to sound entirely unpleasant...

      --
      Grr! Arg!
    2. Re:"Excited Delirium" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The taser companies have to pretend that a taser always represents "non lethal force". Legally, if they admit that tasers can be lethal, then taser use cannot be legally justified except under the same very limited conditions where you are justified using a gun. So this would really hurt their sales and market share.

      Of course, knowingly concealing this sort of information from the public is itself a pretty darn serious crime. Oh boy...

    3. Re:"Excited Delirium" by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      possibly it's the mental state of a sadist cop? Hell it sounds like the opposite of "bad acid trip" to me.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    4. Re:"Excited Delirium" by chinodelosmuertos · · Score: 5, Informative
      Excitation delerium is a very commonly used term that refers to anyone in such a state of excitement, usually due to stimulatns like cocaine or methamphetamine. I'm too lazy to find you a wikipedia link or anything but if you go to pubmed and search for it, you'll see results such as this one: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=ShowDetailView&TermToSearch=15900873&ordinalpos=6&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum

      What usually happens is that these people are in such an agitated state that when approached by law enforcement (or a security guard, or some shopkeeper who is trying to get them out of the store, or some passerby trying to get them out of running down the middle of the road in heavy traffic) tend to get even more aggressive and attack, and don't respond to the usual methods of being subdued like pepper spray or threat of arrest or being shot or anything. It can and and often does take 4 or 5 heavily trained policemen to get these guys out of danger. What has happened in the past is that these people continue to fight even when restrained in handcuffs, and then die of a sudden cardiac event most likely due to all the excitement and inability to calm down due to whatever drugs they are on. Over the years this has been well recognized and most sensible jurisdictions have rules such as "once handcuffed do not place in prone position" due to higher chances of these people dying from positional asphyxia.

      Anyways, back to the Taser thing. Taser for years and years have been saying that since these deaths can happen WITHOUT the use of a Taser, then it's reasonable to assume that their use had no bearing on whether or not the guy lived or died and he probably woulda died anyways because documented causes of people with excited delirium have and will continue to die under these circumstances. And what they are saying is true to a certain extent: If people die without it, then why would you expect its use specifically to be the sole cause of their death? This guy in this most recent case most certainly was in a crazed state and very well could have died without the use of the Taser: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2007/11/24/custody-death.html. But that doesn't mean that the use of the Taser even in these cases wasn't contributory in some way. That recent Vancouver airport case had negative toxicology as far as I know, so we can't blame drugs on that guy's death, though he was clearly agitated. But it's just very difficult to prove, even with this video evidence, that the death was caused directly by the taser. It's electrical current. It doesn't leave any pathology.

      Two jurisdictions in the States (Ohio and Chicago) have both attempted to certify deaths with "due to Taser" in the death certificate and both have been sued into submission. Taser has a huge lobby and has hired a number of physicists (not doctors) including this guy http://www.andcor.com/page/1/news_032206.jsp to go around the country giving lectures on how Tasers won't cause death and certifying them otherwise will land you a big fat lawsuit.

      Anyways, it's a complicated issue, but in reference to your original question, excitation delirium is a state of agitation and occasionally extreme violence and paranoia usually brought on by stimulants and can commonly cause death in a mechanism not yet completely understood. Taser has been using it as an explanation for why people who have been Tasered go on to die for years. Hope that helps. The issue is extremely contentious and and very political at the moment.

    5. Re:"Excited Delirium" by syousef · · Score: 1

      Excited Delirium is a condition felt by the CEO and other high ranking officials at being able to get away with selling a weapon as it if were just "non-lethal" crowd control in such large numbers and for such large contracts that said executives can each afford their own luxury jet this Christmas.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    6. Re:"Excited Delirium" by Brad+Eleven · · Score: 1

      Don't get in the way of an entity which is making money hand over fist. First of all, they are very, very likely to be strongly interested in their revenue stream and will stop at nothing to protect it. It follows that the larger the revenue stream is, the greater their means to convince you to cease and desist.

      Isn't that a wonderful legal term? Cease and desist. It's like a really nice way of saying, Shut the fuck up before we have to send someone over there to rough you up.

      It's a bit like trying to stop a runaway train. You certainly can't do it by yourself if you're not on board. One might think that a large group of people would help, but what it really takes is the proper technology, applied with expertise--with careful consideration as to who is on board, and who owns the train.

      Comparisons to the RIAA and the US Justice Department are left as an exercise to the reader.

      --
      "Press to test."
      (click)
      "Release to detonate."
    7. Re:"Excited Delirium" by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      How about getting tazered and your adrenal glands open up? Does adrenal rush mean excited delirium too? Apparently it does because in most cases "we don't know the cause of death" but "it wasn't tazer" bullshit.

      Human body is a very balanced thing and sometimes it goes out of whack by the circumstances. That is why people can die of "fright" and shock. When you tazer them, you put their body into shock (unless they know *exactly* what to expect, like the morons that let themselves be tazered for fun - but at least they know what to expect). Some bodies can cope with it, some can't. Other systems break.

      Any it is NOT possible to predict the path of the zaping in the human body! It goes between the two electrodes but you CANNOT predict the branching just like you CANNOT predict the branching of a lightning bolt. It goes the wrong direction, zaps a nerve tissue that sends impulses to your heart or adrenals or some other vital system. Or you fry a nerve or nerve bundle. Opps! Sorry, guy/gal dies! And then they say bullshit that the cause of death cannot be determined and probably underlying illness was an issue! Bullshit!

      The only people that are reasonably safe from tazaring are muscled fit people that get hit in a large muscle away from major nerves so basically a Russian rullete, yey!. You get hit in upper back and the tazer zaps your spinal cord? Opps, game over. But no, tazers are not lethal. Fuck. These bastards are worse than the tobacco companies!

      Tazer the morons firing these things on unarmed people right in the head. Can't hurt them - nothing there.

      /rant

      or should I say

      /exited delirium

      99% of people tazered should NEVER have been tazered. Police should ONLY use it IF AND ONLY IF the person is brandishing a non-gun weapon that can kill or severely injure the arresting officer (ie. if a gun would be used to kill the suspect). No other situation.

    8. Re:"Excited Delirium" by chinodelosmuertos · · Score: 1

      Well, that is and isn't true. "Adrenal rush" as you put it is pretty much the mechanism of action of cocaine and methamphetamine. What that "adrenal rush" makes people do varies. Some people take it very well and some people go nuts. It is independant of the volume ingested and any tolerance that you might have. It's poorly understood. And as I said before, people die because of it. Now in addition to whatever problems are being caused by the drugs, add on 4 guys tackling you, being sat on, running a marathon, and (probably though good luck proving it with a Taser lobby) Tasers, and it's a recipe for potential sudden death. In a classic sense and in answer to your question, no, being tasered doesn't qualify as excitation delirium. It gives you an electric shock. Again. Excitation delerium is the man running down the street screaming without his shirt on breaking glass and screaming with no idea who he is or how he got there.

      But with specific regards to being tased: You can't predict the path the electricity takes but it's safe to say that it probably zaps the whole body. So yeah, it'll follow the path of least resistance through the body just like lightning would, and on the way yeah, it will probably come into contact with muscle, and nerve (that includes spinal cord) and everything else. I don't know where the current goes after it hits you, does it return to the unit or does it go into the ground? I have no idea but it's largely irrelevant.

      The argument that the Taser company makes, and again, is true, is that the mechanism of death in any electrocution is ventricular fibrillation. Something anaesthetists and executioners have known for a long time is that a frequency of about 50-60 Hz can cause the heart to go into VF, which is bad. It's also incidentally the frequency of household electricity as well which is why throwing a hairdryer in the bathtub will kill you if the ground fault interrupters don't get triggered.

      But the argument Taser makes is that the frequency they use, which I can't remember off the top of my head, causes skeletal muscle contraction but doesn't cause VF. And that is probably true. But what we don't know is if all that skeletal muscle contraction does other things, like increases blood return to the heart which can cause increased stress on an already stressed (due to drugs or underlying cardiac disease or the situation, etc etc) and throw the heart into VF anyways, or releases all sorts of enzymes into the blood or what. But there's no way to know.

      I'm trying to avoid an argument on whether it's right or wrong to use Tasers and in what situations. I'm just answering the OP's question on what Taser was referring to by excitation delirium and why they think their devices aren't causing death.

    9. Re:"Excited Delirium" by DancesWithBlowTorch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The issue is extremely contentious and and very political at the moment.
      You are right, but in this case it is not a bad thing for the discussion to be political. The question at hand is that, given we have seen several deadly uses of Tasers (i.e. uses where the subject died subsequently, without any other obvious causes, such as a drug overdose), and given the numerous leaked videos showing Tasers being used on already restrained victims, many people (including me) start to think that it was and is a bad idea to give Police the right to use Tasers.

      I think it's a psychological thing. There's no strong negative feedback to the person using the taser, there are no obvious marks being left on the victim, it is difficult for the victim to communicate just how painful the taser drive was to him, and the policemen consider the taser to be non-lethal. All that makes them highly likely to use tasers in situations where their use is entirely unnecessary.

      Working as an EMT several years ago, I have personally had to restrain people suffering from hypoglycaemia -- a state very similar to what might be called "excited delirium". In one case, it took five men to hold down a homeless woman so that we could give her the live-saving glucose injection. Nevertheless, we managed to do so without hurting or even bruising her. For us her behaviour was easily explained by her blood-sugar levels, but I imagine a policeman without medical training would have taken her to be aggressive and might have thought it a good idea to taser her -- which certainly wouldn't have helped, given that she was already horribly agitated. The situations where I think Tasers are justified get fewer every day. I think it's about time we take this things out of our police officers' hands.
    10. Re:"Excited Delirium" by martin-boundary · · Score: 1
      The obvious question, to me at least, is why hasn't anybody done taser experiments on mice? Get a bunch of mice in an excited delirium state, and try tasering them to death. Then publish the results in a reputable journal, and the question ought to be settled.

      The other thing I find crazy is this notion that tasers should be only considered "contributory" to death when used in cases of excited delirium. If you swallow arsenic and hang yourself, both things will cause death in 99% of cases, and in 99.99% the combination of them is lethal.

      Lawyers, eh?

    11. Re:"Excited Delirium" by chinodelosmuertos · · Score: 1
      You laugh, but they've actually done experiments like this on pigs:

      Taser dart-to-heart distance that causes ventricular fibrillation in pigs.
      IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2007 Mar;54(3):503-8.

      With "These results suggest[ing] that the probability of a dart on the body landing in 1 cm2 over the ventricle and causing VF is 0.000172."

      Completely sponsored by Taser, in all likelihood...

      And yeah, it is absurd, but Tasers being contributory to death rarely makes it on the certificate. It usually gets left off becaue of all that legal pressure. This was the only case where it really happened and shit really hit the fan: Scott Denton is probably one of the more reknowned Pathologists in the USA too... http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0730taser30.html?&wired

    12. Re:"Excited Delirium" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyways, back to the Taser thing. Taser for years and years have been saying that since these deaths can happen WITHOUT the use of a Taser, then it's reasonable to assume that their use had no bearing on whether or not the guy lived or died and he probably woulda died anyways because documented causes of people with excited delirium have and will continue to die under these circumstances. And what they are saying is true to a certain extent: If people die without it, then why would you expect its use specifically to be the sole cause of their death?


      So by this rule if I see a cop tasing an old lady to death I can pull a gun and put a hole in his stupid head with no worry since with that temperament and high blood pressure he would have ended up dead or worse from a stroke anyway.
    13. Re:"Excited Delirium" by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Cheers for the references!

    14. Re:"Excited Delirium" by Sinanju · · Score: 1

      "Excited Delirium" is the technical term for what a corrections officer friend of mine refers to informally as "naked sweaty guy." Sufferers from ED often experience a temperature spike (hence the sweating) and frequently strip off their clothes as a result (hence the naked part). It's usually the result of mental illness or drugs or both, and it can radically alter their responses to stimuli including pain. You can't reason with them, and they often fail to respond to commands, or to pain compliance holds, and can be extremely difficult to subdue because they ignore injuries that would normally be disabling--or even lethal--at least for a while.

  5. Why tasers are bad. by Silverlancer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Originally, tasers as used in law enforcement were conceived as an alternative to lethal force--why shoot someone when you can use nonlethal weaponry?

    Yet it has been proven over and over throughout history that whenever you give someone a nonlethal weapon, they're more likely to use them than a lethal weapon, even though its supposed to be a replacement for the lethal weapon.

    And not surprisingly, this has happened with tasers, too; police are using them in absurd circumstances, even in some cases when the subject did nothing beyond verbal defiance, and worse, in cases where someone was "acting suspicious", such as in a recent case where an Egyptian man was tasered on a bus without any provocation--yet these were supposed to be used as replacements for guns, not as general-purpose weapons to put down anyone who looks suspicious!

    1. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well said.

    2. Re:Why tasers are bad. by steelfood · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This will continue until tasers are given the same respect firearms have.

      Power is power, no matter the instrument. If you gave the same people nightsticks, they'd be just as likely to bludgeon someone to death. Give these people training, and they'll only bludgeon their victims to near-death or to whatever limits they're given within the law.

      What makes tasers particularly bad is that its range of effects are politicized; the desirable effects are emphasized, and the undesirable ones get swept under the rug. We know what a gun can do, and will likely do. We know what a club or knife or sword of flail can and will likely do. But not everyone knows that tasers can kill. This results in lax regulation of its use and the circumstances under which it can be used, which results in overuse, to sometimes very bad results.

      Regardless, even if tasers are acknowledged to be potentially fatal (though less so than a firearm), the human element of recklessly using power remains.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    3. Re:Why tasers are bad. by owlstead · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just today, I saw someone attack a few police officers on TV. He was pretty strong, but he was hold to the ground by three police officers and was already starting to be out of breath. The fourth officer did not hold him back but got a taser. After tasering the guy everybody stood back, while the mad man was clearly reacting to the taser in a rather awfull way. Okay, so maybe at that time the police would have gotten away with it.

      Then before getting him in the vehicle, while he was still on the ground, the police tasered him *again*. Now that's just right of the scale. Completely unnecessary, just a knee-jerk rejection from somebody who is supposed to be a professional. Guys (and girls), don't get suckered into believing things like these do not constitute torture. Leaving somebody in the sun of 35C or more for longer periods of time is torture. Sleep derivation is torture. Loud music for long periods of time is torture.

      In the Netherlands, the guy who killed Pim Fortuin was kept into a cell with very bright lights and continuous camera surveillance. It was pretty clear what he had done, and he was in custody already. Of course he needed to get punished. But, as there was no intent by himself to commit suicide, and since he was not convicted yet, this simply amounts to torture. Unfortunately the current government likes to copy the US, so we are already waiting for the introduction of the taser. This in a country that has a rather low crime ratio compared to other western countries.

    4. Re:Why tasers are bad. by DarrenBaker · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There is some truth to this sentiment, which is why police officers in most districts are required to be both tasered and pepper-sprayed during training - so that they realise just how effective a tool they are.

      What is interesting is just how much the media is showing their bias by giving such one-sided statistics. How many people have been tasered in total? I wonder if the application-of-non-lethal-force to deaths ratio is better for rubber bullets, bean bags, billy clubs, or tasers. Not to mention the (unmeasurable) statistic of how many lives were saved because they were tasered, and not shot to death.

      It's an imperfect solution, but it's much, much better than the alternatives.

    5. Re:Why tasers are bad. by AlHunt · · Score: 1

      >Originally, tasers as used in law enforcement were conceived as an alternative to lethal force

      Great comment. Personally, I've seen enough video of these guardians of the peace tasing the crap out of people. "We the people" should probably intervene when we see tasers being abused.

      Just the view from here ...

      --
      1 in 4 Maine children in struggle with hunger.
    6. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and how about you take a ride on any us highway and see the cops^H tax collectors hard at work.

    7. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Silverlancer · · Score: 1

      So you think its right to taser someone because they're acting suspicious? Would you like it if when you got pulled over for speeding, the cop went over and tasered you, first thing?

    8. Re:Why tasers are bad. by hedwards · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yet it has been proven over and over throughout history that whenever you give someone a nonlethal weapon, they're more likely to use them than a lethal weapon, even though its supposed to be a replacement for the lethal weapon.

      And not surprisingly, this has happened with tasers, too; police are using them in absurd circumstances, even in some cases when the subject did nothing beyond verbal defiance, and worse, in cases where someone was "acting suspicious", such as in a recent case where an Egyptian man was tasered on a bus without any provocation--yet these were supposed to be used as replacements for guns, not as general-purpose weapons to put down anyone who looks suspicious! I think this is largely FUD. Of course if you give an officer a non-lethal means of dealing with a potential threat the number of uses is going to be much higher than with only lethal force. It would be incredibly troubling if that weren't the case.

      I won't bother denying that it doesn't get abused, but I do think that it is important to recognize that somebody that is tazered is far less likely to come to permanent harm than one that has been shot.

      Abuse would likely also happen if officers just had firearms as well. I don't personally think that that would be a better situation. At least with tazers, mace and pepper spray the likelihood of having somebody to apologize to is far higher than with a firearm.

      The other bit is that officers don't have all the relevant information in most cases, and have to contend with the very real possibility of being killed on the job. It's really easy for individuals of low character like Jackson and Sharpton for example to bash police departments after having heard just the victims side of the story. It is quite another to actually have to deal with both sides of the story and try to reconcile them in a way that suits the public interest rather than inflaming tensions between different groups of people. Justice takes time, and those two in particular seem to care very little about the damage they do to police-black community relations.
    9. Re:Why tasers are bad. by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      I'd mod this up if I could, but it looks as if that's already happened in the time I've been previewing my response.

      I'm in mixed minds because although a taser is a torture device, I still think it's better to be able to use a Taser rather than shoot someone dead, if a police officer doesn't have an option.

      What confuses me a bit though is why there don't even seem to be basic steps by many of the various police forces to design the system to make it hard for Tasers to be used outside of those boundaries. There are plenty of systematic changes that could be made which would help to prevent stupid use of Tasers by police, but as far as I can tell this isn't happening in a lot of places.

      A good start would be to make sure that no officer is licensed to use a Taser until they've been on a comprehensive training course that includes technical training and ethical training, probably giving them an example of the pain. (Making sure they're informed about some of the well known experients in the subject would be a good start.) Realistically, a Taser should never be used without the expectation that the targeted person might die as a consequence.

      It'd also be very beneficial to make it an automatic requirement that paperwork be filed (and published) to justify every time a taser is discharged, and to have an automatic requirement for an independent legal body to investigate each use of a taser, and prosecute the police and/or officers involved if it's appropriate to do so.

      I'm not completely against the idea of letting police use Tasers, but I do find the way that some police are getting away with some ridiculous abuses of it to be quite abhorrent. If they can't design a system to make sure it's used properly, then I fully agree that they shouldn't have them at all.

    10. Re:Why tasers are bad. by AlHunt · · Score: 4, Informative

      >There is some truth to this sentiment, which is why police officers in most districts are required to be both
      >tasered and pepper-sprayed during training - so that they realise just how effective a tool they are.

      The trouble is - the officer gets a single jolt from the taser. When they actually *use* the damn thing the administer continuous or repeated shocks. I've been watching this situation develop for quite some time and wondered when it was going to come to a head. Maybe the time is now.

      --
      1 in 4 Maine children in struggle with hunger.
    11. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
      Tasers are not a replacement for guns. They are an alternative to guns. There is a difference.

      Question: How many people didn't die because police had a "non-lethal" alternative when they otherwise would have had to use deadly force?

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    12. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Nutty_Irishman · · Score: 1

      I remember back in fifth grade when a police officer was giving a demonstration, she mentioned that in order for officers to carry pepper spray, every officer had to be sprayed in the face themselves before getting their own. The idea being that anytime you make the choice of using pepper spray you know what it feels like to get sprayed yourself and can make a better judgment call on whether it's necessary or not.

      Likewise, I think that every officer that is equipped with a taser be required to experience what it's like to be tasered themselves before they can carry one. I'm guessing that not only will the number of taserings be reduced (due to knowing how painful it is), but also the number of officers carrying tasers will be reduced (due to their reluctance in allowing themselves to be tasered).

    13. Re:Why tasers are bad. by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      They ought to make Tasers that can only issue one shock every 5 minutes -- hence make multiple shocks less likely.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    14. Re:Why tasers are bad. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Informative

      I won't bother denying that it doesn't get abused, but I do think that it is important to recognize that somebody that is tazered is far less likely to come to permanent harm than one that has been shot.

      Yes but a person who is tasered is often a lot more likely to come to harm than a person who would never have been shot. The cops who tasered Mr. Gaubert while he was incapacitated by a diabetic coma, would be in jail if they had just shot him. Ditto for the officer who tasered the 87 year old woman in a wheelchair who yelled at her.

      Abuse would likely also happen if officers just had firearms as well. I don't personally think that that would be a better situation. At least with tazers, mace and pepper spray the likelihood of having somebody to apologize to is far higher than with a firearm.

      Sometimes that is true and sometimes it isn't. You assume the alternative to tasering someone is to pull a gun on them. In truth, the alternative is often just to stand back and talk to them, or simply walk away from them.

      It is quite another to actually have to deal with both sides of the story and try to reconcile them in a way that suits the public interest rather than inflaming tensions between different groups of people.

      I know quite a few cops. My brother used to be one and a friend of mine sells tasers as part of his law enforcement equipment business. I have heard the stories of punishing some "punk kid" or "nigger" or "hippy" and shutting their smart mouth up with a taser. Those same cops would never have fired their weapon in the same situation because they'd be held accountable, probably for murder.

      I'm not arguing tasers don't have their uses and should not be used, but hopefully this classification by the UN will get police departments to look seriously at their rules for using them and start to help curb their overuse and use in inappropriate situations, as well as provide support for private lawsuits that will help do the same thing.

    15. Re:Why tasers are bad. by jc42 · · Score: 1

      I'm in mixed minds because although a taser is a torture device, I still think it's better to be able to use a Taser rather than shoot someone dead, ...

      Yes, it's probably better to torture someone that to kill them.

      But what does it say about you, that you would make such an argument?

      (And what does it say about me, that I'd agree with you? ;-)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    16. Re:Why tasers are bad. by topham · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Tasers are being used, repeatedly, in circumstances where they are not appropriate. Tasers have their use; they are a much better and safer alternative when the only other option is shooting someone. They are safer for the target, bystanders, and the police. What they are not is a toy and a method to 'manage' a handcuffed suspect.

      The other problem is the precise circumstances in which a taser are used may be leading to the fatalities. Some reports indicate that people acting violently on drugs, particularly cocaine are at a higher risk because of the drugs effect on the heart, combined with an electric jolt. It is entirely possible that other forms of stress also increase the risk of fatality and that could explain why zapping a few people in tests doesn't show a high risk; while the real world results aren't so nice and clean.

    17. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other alternative is a gun, or a nightstick. Care to compare fatalities arising from being choked out with a nightstick? 30 isn't a lot of fatalities in the long run. But I'm with the UN, killing people, especially "others" is preferable. Baring a zombie apocolypse, the dead are known for their easy going compliant nature.

    18. Re:Why tasers are bad. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1
      Did you read your own post? First you say that "tasers are not 'a replacement for guns'", then you give an example of tasers being used as a replacement for guns.

      Given that deaths from tasers occur in only an extremely small fraction of all applications, 275 deaths in the U.S. alone, where taser use is not universal, is ample evidence of widespread and systematic abuse.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    19. Re:Why tasers are bad. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Wow, he attacked police and they didn't just shoot him to death? Man, your country has nice cops.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    20. Re:Why tasers are bad. by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      Sometimes that is true and sometimes it isn't. You assume the alternative to tasering someone is to pull a gun on them. In truth, the alternative is often just to stand back and talk to them, or simply walk away from them.


      I guess everyone has already forgotten what the baton is for?
      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    21. Re:Why tasers are bad. by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      don't you comprehend the difference between replacing guns and using tasers instead of guns in some situations? because that's what i posted above, learn to fucking read.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    22. Re:Why tasers are bad. by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      show me an example of this happening, INCLUDING full details.

      because i've watched 100's of cop hater video posted on youtube and i'm yet to see one where the person got tased for no reason.

      the most common reason is failing to compile with a lawful order. it must be something about the current generation where they think the police have no authority, which forces the police to FORCE them to compile in order to control the situation and maintain authority. this ultimate protects us as a community wether you like it or not.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    23. Re:Why tasers are bad. by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I think you are getting at my immediate reaction, which is that use of a taser may or may not constitute torture based upon the general context of the situation.

      Are there cases where it is torture? I would bet good money that there are. After all, electric shock is a common instrument of torture around the world.

      Are there cases where it is not? Yes, absolutely. I would be hard pressed to call the use of tasers when faced with deadly force (an assailant charging with a knife, for example) torture (and in these cases, it may be safer for the police than a gun (most guns are not guaranteed to stop the charge, but the electrical jolt of a taser will).

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    24. Re:Why tasers are bad. by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      It's disingenuous to cite Sharpton and Jackson's views when *white* people like Caroline Kennedy Schossberg have written large and long about the indiscriminate violence and hazing by, let's take her example: the Chicago Police Department. Citation after citation after citation find that there are REAL victims of police brutality and violence.

      And there are no doubt officers that this evening will also take a lot of abuse. You distract the argument by specious and anecdotal citation.

      The issue is that the UN says that tasers are torture. They didn't pull this out of their butts. They have good cause, just as Jackson, and Sharpton, and others have been willing to do-- cite the obvious, based on facts.

      The reasons for difficult relations between blacks and police officers is far more complex, and it doesn't get any better by "shooting the messengers" of Sharpton and Jackson.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    25. Re:Why tasers are bad. by StringBlade · · Score: 1

      I won't bother denying that it doesn't get abused, but I do think that it is important to recognize that somebody that is tazered is far less likely to come to permanent harm than one that has been shot.

      So you are denying that it gets abused? (won't ... deny [admit] that it doesn't get abused) Watch out for those double (or is that quadruple?) negatives.

      --
      ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
    26. Re:Why tasers are bad. by bersl2 · · Score: 1

      Using a taser should be regulated to the same degree as using a gun. IIRC, police generally don't receive guns until they are thoroughly drilled and evaluated on not only technique but also situational propriety. (Then again, this is the police. Maybe this is only what I expect from them, not what they actually do.) Surely the same standards should be applied to the taser and other such weaponry.

    27. Re:Why tasers are bad. by LibertineR · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You are preaching to the wrong crowd.

      There is no consideration here for the cop who gets shot in the face by someone pulled over for speeding or without tags on their car. No consideration at all for the cop who repeatedly orders someone to stop and drop, or move back, only to have that person kill the cop with their own weapon. These things rarely are reported with the emphasis placed on the stories of the supposed innocent victim.

      Sure their will be a few instances of someone otherwise incapacitated who cant follow a cops orders, but that is so rare it isnt even worth mentioning.

      The fact remains that anyone who does not follow a lawful order who CAN follow that order, and chooses not to, is NOT innocent, and is partially responsible for whatever happens next.

      You see, this is the new "question authority" crowd looking for their 21st century street cred. The villains are the victims, and no one is responsible for their own behavior. Kimberly Tunahill, a San Diego cop and high-school friend of mine was shot through the neck and killed walking up to a vehicle. No, she would not have been saved by a taser, but I dare say that if it were between a young law inforement officer and a street thug afraid of being sent BACK to prison, I say tase the bastard till he smokes. Shit happens.

      At the rate things are going, someday, someone will say that law enforcement of any kind is a form of torture. I'm an old geek who often wishes we could just go back a few years to when we didnt always blame those sworn to protect us for doing their goddamn jobs.

    28. Re:Why tasers are bad. by tech10171968 · · Score: 1

      Kimberly Tunahill? That name sound familiar. Which division did she work from (I was in Western division 1993-1995, and in the Southeast division from '95 to '97)?

      --
      This space for rent!
    29. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      I get the impression that officers in the US have no hand to hand training at all, and will use a taser as their first option.

    30. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why use tasers? It has been shown that tasers are in some cases lethal force. The supreme court made it quite clear when law enfrocement can use lethal force (In defence or when someone who has committed a violent crime is resisting arrest). Shouldn't the same law apply to tasers since they are lethal force? If so, why use them?

    31. Re:Why tasers are bad. by LibertineR · · Score: 1

      She was in the Southeast division. She was the first female officer in San Diego to be killed in the line of duty.

    32. Re:Why tasers are bad. by timeOday · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry, you can't lower the bar that easily. Nope, I don't think outright punching a cop in the face for no reason should be punishable by death. In fact, I can't even think of why it would be.

    33. Re:Why tasers are bad. by X-rated+Ouroboros · · Score: 1

      I don't think anyone objects to the use of a Taser instead of a gun. The problem is the use of a Taser in situations where lethal force (even "less lethal" force) is inappropriate.

      It may be true that tasering someone is easier for police than justifiable force escalation, but police do not receive the respect and trust they do because their job is easy. If police become known for pulling a weapon on people without adequate provocation or warning, everyone they interact with will view them as a threat... which does not make the job easy or safe.

      --
      Simple Machines in Higher Dimensions
    34. Re:Why tasers are bad. by steveha · · Score: 1

      The cops who tasered Mr. Gaubert while he was incapacitated by a diabetic coma, would be in jail if they had just shot him. Ditto for the officer who tasered the 87 year old woman in a wheelchair who yelled at her.

      I don't know about these incidents, but if they were as you describe I agree these are completely unacceptable.

      You assume the alternative to tasering someone is to pull a gun on them. In truth, the alternative is often just to stand back and talk to them, or simply walk away from them.

      WTF? Police have a duty to apprehend people who are committing serious offenses; they don't have the option to simply walk away from them... and the taser should only be used when they have to take someone in and that someone is dangerous. Police should never ever be tasering someone who can be dealt with simply by talking to them. So, I disagree that talking to someone or walking away would ever be an alternative to tasering them.

      There is a whole scale of police response. The ultimate extreme of force is to shoot someone; this is reserved for stopping an immediate, otherwise unavoidable danger of death or grave bodily harm to the innocent. Below that you have spraying with pepper spray, beating with batons, overbearing by force (several strong officers piling on), and come-along holds. Somewhere in there is tasering.

      (By the way, I saw a chart of the levels of force for law enforcement. The lowest level was "officer presence". In other words, simply showing up wearing a uniform is a very low level application of force. It makes sense to me; people become much more self-conscious around a police officer, and certain conversations will die down to silence, cars start driving more slowly, etc.)

      I have heard the stories of punishing some "punk kid" or "nigger" or "hippy" and shutting their smart mouth up with a taser.

      I agree this is wrong. I don't think the answer would be to take away the taser; it sounds like you don't think so either.

      And I think I'd rather be tasered than beaten up with clubs. But I'd prefer neither, thank you.

      Police departments have "the book", and officers are supposed to "go by the book" (follow the rules). I agree that the guidelines in the book should forbid tasering punks to shut their smart mouths. However, I suspect that "the book" already forbids this.

      Perhaps the best policy would be to issue tasers that have tamper-proof counters that increment each time they are used, and require officers to file a report each time they use the taser. Sure, more paperwork, as if they don't have enough... but at least it might make them think twice before tasering a punk, because they will be asked to justify doing so.

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    35. Re:Why tasers are bad. by OakDragon · · Score: 1

      Likewise, I think that every officer that is equipped with a taser be required to experience what it's like to be tasered themselves before they can carry one.

      Actually, that is commonly a part of their training. You can videos of trainee after trainee being dropped by the taser. Judging by the laughter of their fellow trainees, I'm not sure the experience will discourage the use of the taser.

      I agree that the taser may be seen, too much, as a first option rather than a 4th or 5th, and that's bad. But any tool of law enforcement can have fatal results, be it a gun or billy club, or a headlock or bean bag cannon. That doesn't make their use "torture." That's just ridiculous.

    36. Re:Why tasers are bad. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Not saying it should be.. just saying that in the majority of countries on the planet that's what you would get.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    37. Re:Why tasers are bad. by timeOday · · Score: 1

      Then I guess I don't see your point. I agree unnecessary tasering isn't the worst atrocity known to mankind, but the point is, we pay the cops' salaries and what rules should we set for their on-the-job conduct?

    38. Re:Why tasers are bad. by syousef · · Score: 1

      don't get suckered into believing things like these do not constitute torture. Leaving somebody in the sun of 35C or more for longer periods of time is torture. Sleep derivation is torture. Loud music for long periods of time is torture.

      I knew it! Day time outdoors Britney Spears concerts that you have to queue overnight for tickets for are torture!!!!

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    39. Re:Why tasers are bad. by EEBaum · · Score: 1

      The other alternative is a gun, or a nightstick.

      There are also the alternatives of "Hey you, stop that" and even "Hey you, stop that or I'll shoot." Tasers are apparently being used instead of those as well, though, opting for "shoot first, ask questions later."

      --
      -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
    40. Re:Why tasers are bad. by wish+bot · · Score: 1

      No. This is simply not the case. In your country maybe. Not to say nothing would happen, but you would not be shot. I think you need to get out a bit. By the way, you've been pissing me right off over the past few days QG, with your self righteous bullshit.

      --
      lemonade was a popular drink and it still is
    41. Re:Why tasers are bad. by IronChef · · Score: 1

      Sleep derivation is torture. Loud music for long periods of time is torture.

      Or college.

    42. Re:Why tasers are bad. by misanthrope101 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      or simply walk away from them.
      I doubt many cops see that as an option. Any disagreement, defiance, or attitide is something that has to be dealt with (i.e. the person has to submit to the cop's authority and position) even if the original reason for the interaction was trivial. It's not that all cops are like that, but that enough are like that to make it a predictable phenomenon.
    43. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      That's true - but why would you compare the US against dictatorships like in Burma, or struggling third-world countries? To me the relevant comparison would be against wealthy stable democracies: are those doing better in some areas than the US? If so why? What kind of actions might be possible to improve the situation in the US in these areas? Is there something which has been proven to work in other countries which could also be used in the US?

      These seem like interesting questions to me - the answers could potentially be very useful for the US.

      On the other hand - the comparison with a violent dictatorship - what benefits could that yield? It seems rather boring to find out that things are not as bad as in a failed state. It does help to give people a warm and fuzzy feeling and make them complacent, though.

    44. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The Tazer was not a replacement for the gun, but for a replacement for the night club/mag flash light, which usually resulted in severe injury and often death for the suspect. A Tazer while mean and yes probably being overused by police, is exponentially less lethal for the suspect and a lot safer for the police officer.



      As far as punk kids (black or white they're all the same) and hippies, they should be tazered just on principle. If you make enough trouble to get the police to be called out, and I'm not talking about peaceful protest but screaming and throwing beer bottles at cars at 2am, you should not be expecting a stern talking to and a lolly pop from the officer that has to deal with your dumb ass, but an ass kicking that will make you afraid to do it twice.

    45. Re:Why tasers are bad. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      My email address is right there in every one of my posts if you want to tell me your personal opinion of me. Using a public forum to vent your personal feelings is just not on. I'd love to hear what it is you think is "self righteous bullshit" but this is not the place..

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    46. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never known anyone who didn't stop doing something when asked politely. Also, rainbows lead you to a mountain of candy treasure if you follow them.

    47. Re:Why tasers are bad. by mpe · · Score: 1

      Yet it has been proven over and over throughout history that whenever you give someone a nonlethal weapon, they're more likely to use them than a lethal weapon, even though its supposed to be a replacement for the lethal weapon.

      Assuming there is such a thing as a "non lethal weapon", as opposed to a "less lethal weapon". The more often a weapon get used the more likely there are to be serious and fatal injuries resulting from its use.

      And not surprisingly, this has happened with tasers, too; police are using them in absurd circumstances, even in some cases when the subject did nothing beyond verbal defiance, and worse, in cases where someone was "acting suspicious", such as in a recent case where an Egyptian man was tasered on a bus without any provocation--yet these were supposed to be used as replacements for guns, not as general-purpose weapons to put down anyone who looks suspicious!

      It dosn't help either when you have police held to a lower standard than members of the public when it comes to violence. Able to literally "get away with murder" in some cases.

    48. Re:Why tasers are bad. by localman · · Score: 1

      Also, do not underestimate the situational difference. If I tell a friend "punch me in the gut" and I brace for it, and there's no authority or adrenaline involved, and he punches me in the gut -- it's no biggie.

      If someone who I don't know punches me in the gut when I'm not ready, in a heated situation, when I'm terrified, and if they have authority over me and I have no real recourse, it is not the same thing even though it was still just a punch in the gut.

      Cheers.

    49. Re:Why tasers are bad. by localman · · Score: 1

      I think you touch on an important point here: even if tasers weren't potentially fatal, they are still a tool for abusing power. That is a much more fundamental problem. The ability to instantly incapacitate people is very serious and can be used (and already is being used) to quiet civil unrest even when it should be heard. And in fact the less painful and dangerous it is, the worse, because the populous at large will be less likely to care.

      Cheers.

    50. Re:Why tasers are bad. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Better a taser, "being used, repeatedly, in circumstances where they are not appropriate" than guns.

    51. Re:Why tasers are bad. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I don't know about these incidents, but if they were as you describe I agree these are completely unacceptable.

      They did indeed happen as well as many other examples of abuse, because tasering someone is not considered a serious thing by police, after all it is non-lethal. Amnesty international wrote a report in 2004 detailing many such incidents including the use of tasers on people already handcuffed or in a cell, the elderly, pregnant women, handicapped, autistic people, and children (in some cases people who are in more than one of these categories). In one case a 12 year old boy who was handcuffed and on the ground was tasered twice for yelling at the officer. In another 4 different 14 year old girls were tasered by a school official and use in schools on children has risen dramatically in the last 10 years.

      Amnesty international has since said despite the many documented deaths and abuses almost every police department contacted has ignored their recommendations and refused to create rules for responsible use of tasers.

      WTF? Police have a duty to apprehend people who are committing serious offenses;

      If a person is committing a crime, or is being arrested, sure the cops won't just walk away, but that does not mean they have to act with violence either. In many cases they can simply talk to a person until they realize the problem is not going away and surrender. In other cases, such as the elderly woman I described, there was no crime and they certainly could have just walked away instead of shocking her.

      Police should never ever be tasering someone who can be dealt with simply by talking to them. So, I disagree that talking to someone or walking away would ever be an alternative to tasering them.

      But they are, like on children hiding under the deck at their parent's house who refuse to come out and be taken to a foster home.

      The ultimate extreme of force is to shoot someone; this is reserved for stopping an immediate, otherwise unavoidable danger of death or grave bodily harm to the innocent.

      The point is, for the most part use of tasers when no one is in immediate danger of physical injury is unwarranted. The police, however, seem to think that because it does not kill, it is okay to use it to torture people into compliance... and make no mistake that is what it is, using repeated application of pain to punish people until they do what you want.

      Police departments have "the book", and officers are supposed to "go by the book" (follow the rules). I agree that the guidelines in the book should forbid tasering punks to shut their smart mouths. However, I suspect that "the book" already forbids this.

      The problem is most departments have little or no guidelines for when use of tasers is appropriate and have resisted efforts to create such regulations. Also, there is no accountability. Whenever an officer fires their gun, they have to justify that action and explain why it was necessary. In most cases when they taser someone, they just have to go pick up more ammo for it and no one takes it seriously.

      Perhaps the best policy would be to issue tasers that have tamper-proof counters that increment each time they are used, and require officers to file a report each time they use the taser. Sure, more paperwork, as if they don't have enough... but at least it might make them think twice before tasering a punk, because they will be asked to justify doing so.

      I basically agree, although most actual tasers load only a single set of probes then need to be reloaded. They should count the number of discharges that go through them and officers should be held accountable, which maybe this UN report will help make a reality.

    52. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever hear of a billy club, punk?

      same shit, different day.

      p.s: captcha: penalize

    53. Re:Why tasers are bad. by toddestan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you make enough trouble to get the police to be called out, and I'm not talking about peaceful protest but screaming and throwing beer bottles at cars at 2am, you should not be expecting a stern talking to and a lolly pop from the officer that has to deal with your dumb ass, but an ass kicking that will make you afraid to do it twice.

      That's against the whole seperation of powers thing. The police are supposed to enforce the laws, not dish out punishment. If the punk kid is being enough of a problem to deserve it, then arrest them.

    54. Re:Why tasers are bad. by topham · · Score: 1


      Someone posted a PDF from www.taser.com; you should read it through. If you read it carefully you will discover that a side effect of being hit with a taser is disorientation, and agitation followed by eratice behavior. Pretty much a recipe for being hit with the taser again.

      Oh yeah, repeated use of a taser, as well as prolonged discharge causes anesthetized pigs to stop breathing, the human volunteers were fine. Volunteers are likely to have been significantly less stressed that the average person getting hit by a taser.

      After reading that document I suspect the manufacturer has a lot to answer for.

    55. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that a lot of excessive use of force type tasering incidents are where the police are too lazy to de-escalate the situation at hand through non-violent means or that the police in question are not effectively trained to properly use submission holds. There's probably two problems - but incidental to tasers themselves, police not recieving adequate training or qualification in the weapons they are issued (taser should be issued in similar manner to a sidearm) and something not quite right with the psychology of the officer in question. (The type that jumps the gun to put someone down and gets a power-trip, rather than handling things in a much more cool and professional manner.)

    56. Re:Why tasers are bad. by SmoothTom · · Score: 1

      The problem with an officer having to be Tasered so that they can "experience what it's like" is that they are (1) ready for it, (2) have aid standing by, (3) only get one application of it, from a fellow officer, (4) know that it won't be repeated randomly by some sadistic brute who just "thinks you deserve it." In other words the utter terror of the unknown isn't there.

      Tell ya what - let me follow some officers around, and every time they do something I don't think they should have done (anything from verbal harassment to handling a citizen too roughly) let me zap 'em - and if they object, let me zap 'em again.

      Then, and ONLY then would they understand the problem...

      Officers are too ready on the Taser trigger. Bad mouth a cop; get zapped, not lay on the ground fast enough; get zapped, not obey instructions - even if unlawful and even if you don't understand the language; get zapped, object to having the 240 pound monster pinning you to the ground with his knee in your back; get zapped.

      Sadly, while the Taser is a great idea, it is being used for many things where there is absolutely no danger to the officer or others.

      I'm handicapped, and have great difficulty managing "lay face down on the ground" or "walk backward toward my voice" or "hands up and spread your legs." I'm also not a criminal, and should have NO fear of ever having to do any of those - except I have been stopped for zero reason as I was driving my mother home to her place at 1 AM.

      Why? Because 12 miles away, in another town, two armed black kids in the same color sedan (red) had hit a stop-and-rob. (My mum's car was a '90 Ford Tempo, theirs was a 2000 something stolen Honda Civic, I'm 60, she's 81, both white.)

      You want us out of the car, officer? Wait a sec while I get my cane, OK?

      ====

      All I'm saying is that Tasers are being used too often and with too little provocation by officers, and that shit has to stop before I'm on their "to-do" list...

      --
      Tomas

    57. Re:Why tasers are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most actual tasers load only a single set of probes then need to be reloaded. They should count the number of discharges that go through them and officers should be held accountable, which maybe this UN report will help make a reality.

      But I thought most tasers have two modes: ranged mode and contact mode. In ranged mode, the taser fires the probes on wires, and then the officer will need to get a reload; but in contact mode, the probes don't leave the taser, and the taser just delivers a shock. I thought that an officer could deliver shocks with a taser in contact mode, not tell anyone, and get away with it.

    58. Re:Why tasers are bad. by eth1 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter what kind of force is used; any force can kill. Guns, tasers, nightsticks/batons, fists, pepper spray, or even just leaving a handcuffed subject lying face down (positional asphyxiation).

      Heck, I'd much rather be tasered than pepper sprayed or beat up. Pepper spray can hurt like hell for hours. Batons & fists will leave sore bruises or broken bones. The taser hurts like hell and locks your muscles up for 5 seconds then stops (although you could be injured when you fall).

    59. Re:Why tasers are bad. by eth1 · · Score: 1

      I'm not arguing tasers don't have their uses and should not be used, but hopefully this classification by the UN will get police departments to look seriously at their rules for using them and start to help curb their overuse and use in inappropriate situations, as well as provide support for private lawsuits that will help do the same thing.

      Exactly... it's the same as the whole gun control thing:

      Guns don't kill people; people do...

      Tasers don't torture people; people do...

    60. Re:Why tasers are bad. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      But I thought most tasers have two modes: ranged mode and contact mode.

      I suppose it is possible such a device exists, but all the ones I've seen have the cartridge on the end with no exposed contacts. I don't see such a model listed on Taser's Website You have to fire it (ranged mode as you describe it) and then you can deliver multiple shocks down the deployed wires. Nothing counts the number of times it sends a shock once fired so you could have cases where people are shocked a dozen times or more (like the guy who died last year).

      Traditional stun guns, which do not deploy probes and require contact are often carried as well, and they do not count the number of times they are fired either, you just get new, standard batteries.

    61. Re:Why tasers are bad. by DarrenBaker · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly certain it's not the same thing, at all... Being tased is being tased - all muscle function is lost, and you have absolutely no say about what you do next, whether or not you were prepared for it. Warning or no, your sphincter knows not the difference.

    62. Re:Why tasers are bad. by localman · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure you understood my comment (or maybe I misunderstand yours). My point is that being tased in a controlled, consensual situation is a very different experience from being tased in a passionate forced situation. It's not about how it feels or how it effects your body, it's about how it effects your mind. Having someone exercise absolute authority over you as an adult is a traumatic experience. Have you ever been involved in such an event?

      Cheers.

  6. 275 by iminplaya · · Score: 0, Troll

    That's pretty impressive. Well.. at least the Americans are number one at something.

    --
    What?
  7. Hmm. Alright. by rnddev · · Score: 1

    Acute pain? We can't have that! After all, I guess an impact from a nightstick never hurt or injured on the scale that tasers do.

  8. Much like beating people with batons by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's a form of torture too and the kind of "non-lethal force" the police used to turn to. The only difference between beating someone with a baton and tasering them is that the officer using a taser doesn't have to be physically stronger than the victim (err, suspect), and suspects don't think they can fight back like they do against police using batons.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Much like beating people with batons by NMerriam · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's a form of torture too and the kind of "non-lethal force" the police used to turn to. The only difference between beating someone with a baton and tasering them is that the officer using a taser doesn't have to be physically stronger than the victim (err, suspect), and suspects don't think they can fight back like they do against police using batons.

      The critical difference is that when you beat someone with a baton, you leave bruises and other evidence of abuse. The reason police and militaries love tasers (and microwave radiation, electrical shocks, waterboarding, etc) is that they can go to town on anyone and it is the suspects' word against the cops' about how harshly they were treated. Perfectly healthy looking people are a lot less interesting to show on the news than folks with black eyes and broken arms.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    2. Re:Much like beating people with batons by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Interesting

      For a start, don't call me kid. If you did a tiny (itsy bitsy) bit of research you would see how old I am.

      I've actually been beaten by police in a "peaceful protest". Our sit down was broken up by police and someone I didn't know hit one of them. That was all they needed to beat down all of us. I tell you, the only thing I was thinking was that if I could get one of the batons off them I could have an even shot at taking a few of them out.

      They don't call it "fight or flight" for nothing. Some people run, some people fight.

      In retrospect the whole thing (included the reasons why we were protesting) seems kind of stupid.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      the officer using a taser doesn't have to be physically stronger than the victim (err, suspect), and suspects don't think they can fight back like they do against police using batons. They can't: the electric shocks cause involuntary muscle contractions that make it impossible to fight back.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    4. Re:Much like beating people with batons by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      And you know, you don't necessarily have to BEAT someone to obtain compliance. A little poke in the side, to get them moving along, etc...

      The GOOD thing about a baton, is if you need to escalate, you're not already at the envelope of possible responses.

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    5. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Maskull · · Score: 1

      The reason police and militaries love tasers (and microwave radiation, electrical shocks, waterboarding, etc) is that they can go to town on anyone and it is the suspects' word against the cops' about how harshly they were treated.

      That's not entirely true. All the newer Taser models record the date/time of each firing, along with duration, and some other data, downloadable via USB. They also spray paper chads all over the place when fired, each with a serial number printed on it, that can be matched to a particular cartridge. But yes, there aren't any physical marks on the victim (unless, of course, they die).

    6. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Black-Man · · Score: 1

      You crack somebody w/ a nightstick that usually gets their attention. The problem being the cop has to run after the perp to use it - and how many cops are in good enough shape to chase anyone down?

    7. Re:Much like beating people with batons by voidy · · Score: 1

      I was at Stonehenge once for the summer solstice 8 years or so ago. The police were not letting anyone in to the stones, and there was a huge furore about it. A couple of crustys threw some tins of food at the police, and that was all it took for them to attack us with riot shields and batons. I was in the frontlines, and I was hit with a baton and shield, as well as being kicked in the face by a police horse! I Jumped over the fence and flanked them after a while, got to the stones and was allowed to sit peacefully with my friends whilst the police tried to stop anyone else getting to them :) ... but anyway.. the point, my friend managed to get one of the police officers batons, and we walked away. We then decided that it was probably a bad idea to keep the baton, and promptly gave it to some crazy looking bloke. I also barged through a formation of police officers that were facing away from me. funny that the reaction from the police was really rather mild considering. I can't racall any other opportunity in my life where i could push 8 police officers out of the way whilst they stood neatly in formation without fear of repurcussions. they decided to stop pissing on the party at Stonehenge the year afterwards anyway, and it's been peaceful ever since. I have to agree with the QuantumG about the retrospect thing too, why I posted really :)

      --
      I do not fear computers. I fear the lack of them. Isaac Asimov
    8. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      All the newer Taser models record the date/time of each firing, along with duration, and some other data, downloadable via USB. 1) Downloadable - and presumably deletable - via USB.
      2) Even if the records are not easily deletable, there's nothing but procedure to stop someone from switching units to one that was not fired.
      3) Ain't no way some corrupt LE group is going to volunteer up such records if they don't have - so they won't be available to the local news investigators, nor anyone else seeking to publicize the situation.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    9. Re:Much like beating people with batons by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      parent isn't quite a troll, my god brother will consistently require four or five cops to take him down when he's been drinking too much, it's a miserable thing to watch. He's good at boxing his way through streams of mace, and will rip the tasers out if he gets a chance (they quit tasing him after that). He's been struck with a baton once, took him straight down, no more arguments, somehow I get the feeling that being struck at a peace rally is a tad bit different than what happens when a cop is truly fucking scared of you. Not that people don't get unnecessarily beaten at peace rallies, but I swear the only reason my god brother is alive is because he grew up in a small town where it's been the same cops beating his ass his whole life (they care about him, even though he's a BIG pain in the ass).

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    10. Re:Much like beating people with batons by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      Oh, and for the record he was struck in the meaty part of the calf, nowhere near the head, a strike like that would likely kill a cow if struck on the head, and is not easy to deliver behind a shield and in riot gear (no mobility).

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    11. Re:Much like beating people with batons by iq+in+binary · · Score: 1

      There are far more differences than that.

      A baton is going to do damage every time you hit someone with it. A taser can be ignored, or even worse, just inflame the temper of the suspect.

      You stand a good chance of knocking me out if you're properly trained with a baton. That taser is only gonna piss me off.

      That being said, I'm also trained and practiced. I'm no threat to a police officer, have no intention of being one either. But if one hauls off and tazes me for no good reason, he stands a good chance of waking up in the back of his own car in handcuffs. He resorts to the baton and he stands better chance (albeit still small) of winning. I stand virtuous and righteous in any action I'd take for that cop to end up unconscious in his own car, for they have absolutely no reason to resort to violence with me in the first place.

      That being said, I support the use of tazers by police. However, I also believe police should have a hell of alot more training in their use, and that of their other weapons, whether non-lethal or not. First and foremost, they have to know that they carry weapons so that they DO NOT HAVE TO USE THEM. The threat of violence is much more useful a tool than the actual use of it. Start with that rule in mind, focus on avoiding conflict at all costs, then teach them to win almost any conflict they get themselves into. Speak softly, but carry a big stick. That should be the motto of any police officer.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    12. Re:Much like beating people with batons by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      LOL - A six-digit UID calling a five-digit UID "kid".

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    13. Re:Much like beating people with batons by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      there's also a happy ending here, he's totally cleaned up his act and is a pretty good father now, but yeah I know one of those guys that used to throw down with cops like his life depended on it. Personally, I don't really think it's a bad idea at all to tase someone like that, we fought once or twice, he's only hit me once but if I was charged with keeping him in line I'd probably prefer to just shotgun him with a been bag, from my car. Course you can't let cops drive around shooting people with beanbags either, a mistake would have left my god brother without finding a good path in life, he has a lot of respect for many of the cops that have arrested him too. Me I'd probably shit myself if I had to sit at a peace rally where the cops went into riot control mode.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    14. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Gnavpot · · Score: 1

      LOL - A six-digit UID calling a five-digit UID "kid".

      Since you believe that age can be calculated from UID, I will assume that you were given your UID at birth and think that everyone else was too.

      How old is your 5 digit UID?
    15. Re:Much like beating people with batons by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      Dude, it's a joke.

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    16. Re:Much like beating people with batons by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      So you're trying to tell me that you are some freak of nature who can just fight through a good taze? I'm not buying it. My 5'8" , 150 lb frame would take you down with a taze. You'd be cuffed before you regained muscle control to do anything about it.

    17. Re:Much like beating people with batons by iq+in+binary · · Score: 1

      You won't be singing the same song when you taze someone who has been trained and practiced, who then kills you for being such an arrogant prick.

      Tazers have one fatal flaw: they CAN be ignored. Unless you score a perfect hit with the projectile dart type tazers, you're only incapacitating your opponent for a half second, one second tops. That's not too long and you best be betting I'm going to be pissed. Unless you have martial arts training and self defense training geared specifically towards the use of tazers, I have the upper hand, you can't keep your tazer on me indefinately, and if you didn't hit me square in the chest with the darts (if that's the type of tazer you're using), only one muscle group is going to be affected (ONE leg or ONE arm). You're screwed.

      Like I said, unless you're thoroughly trained, you're fucked.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    18. Re:Much like beating people with batons by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Like to take me up on a challenge? I get to taze you in any way I like, and you get to be the manly man you claim to be and come kick my ass once you just shrug off the tasing like you claim you can. Funny, nobody else on the planet seems to be able to. Maybe you should market your skill to criminals or something.

    19. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the newer Taser models

      'cuz all cops have the newest model.

      record the date/time of each firing, along with duration, and some other data, downloadable via USB.

      So, it was fired. Who cares. DID IT HIT ANYONE? What was that person doing at the time? Maybe tasers need to take a photo of whoever they are fired at.

    20. Re:Much like beating people with batons by iq+in+binary · · Score: 1

      Yeah, ok gangsta.

      News flash: COPS GET KILLED EVERY YEAR BY PISSED OFF CRIMINALS THAT WERE JUST TAZED.

      It's not an unobserved phenomenon. Ask any of your local cops why getting tazed is part of their training and they'll tell you two reasons. One, to know what it feels like, and two, to be prepared to overcome it in the instance that they get tazed with their own weapon.

      There's a reason prison guards still have 2 to 3 riot equipped guards ahead of them when they go in to taze an inmate: alot of them can still take down the prison guard tazing them. Apparently grabbing the lines trailing the barbs and squeezing them together will limit the effect to just the hand you're squeezing with, leaving the rest of your body free to wail on the poor guard who though he could drop anybody with a tazer.

      Like I said, unless you're thoroughly trained (most cops aren't, but the ones that are will win unless they make a mistake) I have the upper hand. Martial Arts and high-priced self-defense training, coupled with force on force and simulation training make for being someone you have to hit right the first time. I've been tazered, several times in practice, and have been able to win almost everytime. A direct hit to the center of mass with the barb types will drop someone every time. You wanna know how hard it is to score a COM hit in the middle of an encounter? I go through several hundred rounds a week to be able to do it with my pistol, a weapon with a full clip of chances to get it right. You only get one chance with a tazer.

      They're effective for what they're supposed to be, submission weapons to get the upper hand, a split second of dropped defenses which you can slip a haymaker past, and drop your opponent without killing him. They are NOT supposed to be, nor are they fully capable, of being a one hit drop like a pistol.

      And just to save yourself face, try tazering yourself once or twice. Once to the center of mass or the back of the neck (unless you're jet li, you're not scoring those hits in a physical encounter), and once to an extremity or your ribs or somewhere where you're likely to get tazed in a physical encounter. Hurts like a sonofabitch, but you CAN get used to it, and you can quickly reorient yourself to defend yourself. Military operatives and police officers train to do that all the time.

      In the end, tazers are submission weapons, and only moderately effective. Without thorough (weeks of training and at least 10 hours a month of practice) competency with them, it's a slim shot to work against a trained opponent. Even with that training, a trained opponent knows how to counter, and how to disarm, at that point it's still 50/50. That's not just personal training speaking, that's the numbers you can read in the latest FBI report detailing officer and federal agent involved shootings, including the events where cops and field agents used Tazers.

      You don't have to be a superhuman to get tazed and then promptly kill the person that zapped you. You just have to be either trained, or lucky and pissed. With the poor amount of training cops have with tazers, it's a hell of alot easier to be lucky than you think.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    21. Re:Much like beating people with batons by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Gangsta? You're the one going on about ignoring the tasing and then promptly killing the bastard who tased you. In any case, I'll let you do the research and post it here, but I doubt you can cite one case where a cop was killed after the suspect recovered from a tasing.

    22. Re:Much like beating people with batons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've actually been beaten by police in a "peaceful protest". ...

      the only thing I was thinking was that if I could get one of the batons off them I could have an even shot at taking a few of them out. peace warrior?
  9. Death by Taser by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's just what you get for wearing your nitrate heavy padded under-jackets.

    Boom! ha ha ha

  10. Tin foil by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 4, Funny

    A hat is not enough; I'm going for full body coverage.

    1. Re:Tin foil by mazarin5 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thank you! We've been hoping you would decide on a pair of pants eventually.

      Sincerely,
      The Neighbors

      --
      Fnord.
    2. Re:Tin foil by MrCopilot · · Score: 1
      A hat is not enough; I'm going for full body coverage.

      Or You could use this. http://www.thorshield.com/prod01.htm

      According to them works on all non-lethal weaponry.

      Cnet Wtiteuphttp://www.news.com/Polyester-fabric-neutralizes-stun-gun-jolt/2100-1008_3-6057801.html?tag=nefd.lede

      --
      OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
    3. Re:Tin foil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Y'know, given that we're discussing whether electrical shocks count as torture, proposing to cover your entire body in conductive metal might not be the brightest move....

    4. Re:Tin foil by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      A hat is not enough; I'm going for full body coverage.

      I never understood that meme: tin foil (or aluminium foil) would be a far worse conductor than gold or silver or copper. And isn't the point to approximate a faraday cage?

      But, actually, with the advent of microwave weapons, are troops in the future going to wear nifty metallic mesh armor? Heck, I know a ton of people who would inroll if they were sci-fi enough.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    5. Re:Tin foil by Faylone · · Score: 1

      From the product's page: G Squared only sells to Law Enforcement, Military personnel and Apparel Manufacturers for Law Enforcement and Military clothing.

    6. Re:Tin foil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make sure to ground the foil..

    7. Re:Tin foil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You go study more physics. Covering yourself in conductive metal is exactly what you want to do. The metal represents a path of least resistance, which means less electricity actually flows through you, and because the metal has so much lower resistance, the taser has to provide far more current---much more than what it actually can---to keep up the same voltage.

      If you aren't smart enough to study physics, well, at least stop commenting on Slashdot like some stupid jerk.

    8. Re:Tin foil by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Has some real fun and electrify the thing, so when the cop grabs you, ZZZZT!

      --
      What?
    9. Re:Tin foil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, those will be especially fun when the police result to the backup riot control weapon that uses microwaves.

    10. Re:Tin foil by ppanon · · Score: 1

      I can't see metallic armor being a good idea if you're going to be targeted by microwave weapons. Try microwaving a CD if you don't understand what I'm getting at. It's called induction heating. A metallic layer on your clothing is going to be even better at capturing that electromagnetic energy and turning it into heat than your skin is.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    11. Re:Tin foil by moosesocks · · Score: 1

      If you're British, that comment is at least twice as disturbing.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    12. Re:Tin foil by KudyardRipling · · Score: 1

      I hate to spoil the party, but if the LEO discovers that the taser does not work, it's only a split second before he uses pepper spray, truncheon, or worse. Justification for escalating force is so easy to manufacture.

      --
      Submission as evidence constitutes plaintiff and/or prosecutorial misconduct.
  11. Good by nexeruza · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good now maybe it will affect police department policy reguarding them. Remember back when tasers were first issued they were praised as being a non lethal way to stop a dangerous person. Instead of having to shoot a rake wielding drunk you could tase them instead. Now look at it's use today, if you even look at a cop wrong his hand travels towards it. So far removed from its initial purpose I hope this helps bring it back toward it's proper applications.

    1. Re:Good by Jesus_666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only way to introduce something as an alternative to a lethal weapon is to make the rules for lethal weapons apply to the thing. When a cop fires a gun at someone he should be in for some unpleasant paperwork even if the shot didn't hit (it does work like that in Germany). Likewise with a taser: When you tase someone you better be able to give a good reason for it or risk trouble over using unwarranted violence.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    2. Re:Good by popejeremy · · Score: 1

      Yeah. This will probably chance police policy. Cops really care what the U.N. thinks.

    3. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you even look at a cop wrong his hand travels towards it.

      This happened to you? I don't know anyone who's experienced this.

      I don't think this really happened to you, and if it did then you probably did more than "look at" the cop wrong.

    4. Re:Good by nexeruza · · Score: 1

      Nah of course that didn't happen to me, it was an exageration to amplify the point that it is sometimes used excessively and needlessly. It has been used as a general purpose control tool that has found to be deadly and often unjustified. Their argument is... "well the guy had a heart condition we didn't kill him we just finished him off". And sadly I'm not exagerating there just stating the truth.

    5. Re:Good by nexeruza · · Score: 1

      You responded with something I was thinking myself. That to curb erroneous use it would be handy if every time a cop used a taser he had to put it on paper, file a report, go through the same steps as if you fired a gun. I think it would help a lot before a cop used his taser if he knew every action he took would be scrutinized to see if it met qualifying conditions. Did you fear for your safety or that of others? Was there no other option available to neutralize the threat? If you look at those 2 questions and apply it to some of these big hitting taser videos it almost seems rediculous. If 5 guys aren't able to subdue a 120 pound college student with an attitude...

  12. That settles it! by supabeast! · · Score: 1, Funny

    Tasers are torture--time for cops to go back to the old methods of non-lethal deterrence: bludgeoning, beating, and chemical mace.

    1. Re:That settles it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has Trout-Slapping been ruled out yet?

    2. Re:That settles it! by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      Tasers are torture--time for cops to go back to the old methods of non-lethal deterrence: bludgeoning, beating, and chemical mace.

      At least those leave clear-cut evidence of abuse, and if they are used wrongly, the victim has more of an ability to sue the bad cops right into the gutter where they belong!

      -b.

    3. Re:That settles it! by NoPantsJim · · Score: 1

      I wish I knew where this originally came from, I only heard it as a sound byte in the beginning of a song:

      "The confrontation was not created by the police, the confrontation was created by the people who charged the police. Gentlemen, get the thing straight once and for all. The policeman isn't there to create disorder, the policemen is there to preserve disorder."

  13. Who Cares What the UN Says Anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Un wants to emphasize guns so as to kill as many people as possible, to reduce the overall carbon footprint of the populace.

    Seriously....I have stopped caring what the UN says about anything. They are a bunch of unelected corrupt bureaucrats.

  14. Corpral Punishment by king-manic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems that police use it as a extra form or untraceable corporal punishment. It's meant to be used as a next to lethal last resort but increasingly it's just replaced "couple punches to the face with a phone book in between". Stories vary but often after a person has put up a fight the police subdue him and then taser them. or use the taser to subdue him but then give a couple of extra shock to show whose boss etc... I find the people to gravitate to or are allowed to be policemen in my city aren't much different then the thugs that watch the exit at bars nor the bullies on the play ground. Anecdotally, a athletic friend of mine who had a black belt was turned down for enrollment into the police academy because he "lack life experience" while an acquaintance who spent a year as a bouncer at a strip club got accepted.

    --
    "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    1. Re:Corpral Punishment by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      Having been a bouncer and rent-a-cop I can tell you that I would rather have another bouncer at my back then Bruce Lee, and for just the reason that you were given, life experience. It's great that Bruce can kick the ass of any drunk you run into, but the Bouncer knows when to do it and Bruce will only know to do it after you have taken a few punches first. Worse, Bruce may decide that 'The Time Is Now' to start handing out whoop ass, when the Bouncer knows it is a 'tough guy' drunk about to wind down to a slobbering crying drunk in a minute or two. Give me life experience every time.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    2. Re:Corpral Punishment by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but why are we supposed to have any feelings for a person who attacks a police officer? Frankly, I'd consider it wrong if the police didn't give him a kick in the ribs after they got him under control. Don't attack the police.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:Corpral Punishment by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry, but why are we supposed to have any feelings for a person who attacks a police officer?

      Cops are human, too, and some may well do things that make them deserving of being attacked. In fact, cops who abuse their power (and thereby betray the public trust) deserve a good stomping followed by throwing in the gutter to calm down.

      -b.

    4. Re:Corpral Punishment by sapphire+wyvern · · Score: 1

      The untraceable police abuse thing is a real problem, but it shouldn't be impossible to solve. Why not make Tasers have a built-in recording of their usage?

      Put in a a bit of write-once memory that records a timestamp every time the Taser is activated, and records the frequency and duration of applied shocks. Maybe even record when it's used in drive stun mode and when it's used in projectile mode. The things certainly already have unique serial numbers, and would presumably be registered to a specific officer.

      That way, if you get roughed up in custody, it should be possible for you (or the coroner!) to subpoena the weapon's usage records in any resulting legal action.

      Goodbye, untraceability! It's certainly not a complete solution and is far from unhackable, and doesn't stop the cops from finding other sources of leverage, but it might tone down any rampant abuse...

      I also back the suggestions that Taser usage should involve as much paperwork & internal investigation as a firearms discharge. That's certainly an important disincentive.

    5. Re:Corpral Punishment by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      The untraceable police abuse thing is a real problem, but it shouldn't be impossible to solve. Why not make Tasers have a built-in recording of their usage?

      They do. I don't know what the GP is talking about.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    6. Re:Corpral Punishment by fredklein · · Score: 1

      Anecdotally, a athletic friend of mine who had a black belt was turned down for enrollment into the police academy because he "lack life experience" while an acquaintance who spent a year as a bouncer at a strip club got accepted.


      Oh, please. They (the police) turn down people who are too SMART. http://www.1215.org/lawnotes/lawnotes/cop104.htm

  15. Not the device but the use. by jellomizer · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I would say any device could be used to a form of Torture.

    A Taser Shot used where before a Gun was used is not torture or used in replace of getting close and beating the guy down.

    Using a Taser for Torture would be zapping the guy to get information from him, or for micromanaging what he needs to do. Tasers and other forms of punishment are needed for the Extreme STOP IT NOW because you are threatening myself or others. vs. You are not an immediate threat to my or other health and safety. But the UN makes it Illegal I guess it is back to the good old Night Stick where you just beat the guy to near death and at risk of hurting yourself.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:Not the device but the use. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      A Taser Shot used where before a Gun was used is not torture or used in replace of getting close and beating the guy down.

      If you shoot or beat the shit out of a guy without a Damn Good Reason(tm), you're likely as not to be brought up on charges, be sued, and probably be out of a job as well. If you taser someone, it's much more difficult for them to prove unless serious injury results. Thus, a cop may be more likely to use a Taser as a form of torture or abuse than previous methods.

      -b.

    2. Re:Not the device but the use. by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      I would say any device could be used to a form of Torture.

      And when it comes to the law enforcement you'll always have cops torturing people. Always. And often they won't get in trouble for doing that. Power corrupts people, and the only solution is to watch these people.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    3. Re:Not the device but the use. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I would say any device could be used to a form of Torture.
      A Taser Shot used where before a Gun was used is not torture or used in replace of getting close and beating the guy down.
      Using a Taser for Torture would be zapping the guy to get information from him, or for micromanaging what he needs to do. Tasers and other forms of punishment are needed for the Extreme STOP IT NOW because you are threatening myself or others. vs. You are not an immediate threat to my or other health and safety. But the UN makes it Illegal I guess it is back to the good old Night Stick where you just beat the guy to near death and at risk of hurting yourself. It is labeled torture because even though it was marketed to you as a non-lethal alternative to guns, it is in fact being use to force you to RESPECT MAH AUTHORITAY! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMaMYL_shxc
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    4. Re:Not the device but the use. by qbzzt · · Score: 1

      But the UN makes it Illegal I guess it is back to the good old Night Stick where you just beat the guy to near death and at risk of hurting yourself.

      The UN is not really a government, and cannot make things legal or illegal. It has all the legal authority of a debating society.

      --
      -- Support a free market in the field of government
  16. Re:It's called "less lethal force" for a reason by nexeruza · · Score: 1

    Uhhh I don't think anyone is defending taser use against seriously dangerous people. What we're tired of is seeing someone argue with a cop and get tased 5 times. Do you really think if a person is being uncooperative they deserve to be shot? The use and misuse of this weapon is the real issue. If it kills 1 out 100 people that would have been shot instead I'd say thats pretty awesome considering the alternative.

  17. Back to the basics: Bullets by mschuyler · · Score: 0, Troll

    That's right: tasering is painful and should be outlawed. That way police can go back to bullets. There's absolutely nothing a taser can do that an assault rifle can't. After all, if they shoot you correctly (head, heart, done), you won't feel a thing. No pain: You're dead, ergo no torture. There will be no more accidental taser deaths; the deaths will be on purpose.

    --
    How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    1. Re:Back to the basics: Bullets by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      That's right: tasering is painful and should be outlawed. That way police can go back to bullets.

      If tasers were only used in situations where the only alternative was to shoot, I'd be fine with that. But they seem to be used in situations where the previous method would have been to talk to the suspect/victim and attempt to calm him down.

      -b.

  18. In Soviet Russia? by porneL · · Score: 1

    You get death penalty for being a suspect. It makes killing people as simple as pointing and screaming "It was that guy!"

  19. The US will ignore by bogaboga · · Score: 0, Troll

    No matter what the UN does in relation to this taser file, I am pretty sure the US will ignore it, just like it ignored the UN and the world when it went to war in Iraq...a war the has cost more lives than 9/11. Just like what a bigot would do.

  20. Slightly offtopic - "The funky chicken" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My friend's dad, who is a prison guard, demonstrated a handheld shocker(a furiously-arcing, two-prong affair that dosen't fire probes) to me and explained "the funky chicken" - basically, when inmates are shocked with this gadget, they do a "funny dance" and they soil themselves. I'd hate to be on the receiving end of one of those puppies.

  21. Wimping Out by pipingguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's not "a form of torture", Tasers are a way for law enforcement to avoid physical contact with an unruly subject without having to use deadly force. The use of this technology also encourages non-contact to subdue a subject whereas in the past up-front physical violence was needed.

    Personally, I'd prefer talk/reasoning, then muscle, then the gun. No Tasers.

    The takedown (and resulting death) in Vancouver is a good example of overuse of technology. 4 fit RCMP officers couldn't handle one guy?

    1. Re:Wimping Out by ms1234 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've seen three huge security guards pepperspraying a small drunk person (they actually missed and sprayed an innocent bystander instead). From what I saw, they didn't really try to catch the guy but went instead directly for the spray.

    2. Re:Wimping Out by mpcooke3 · · Score: 1

      I think when the UN says it's a form of torture they are probably meaning it falls within the UN accepted definition of torture.

      A lot of this comes down to definitions, like the old "freedom fighter" V "terrorist" argument.

      If I was a cop who wanted to have a taser I'd probably say it wasn't torture, if I was this guy who got tasered after a speeding offense I might be inclined to call it torture. If someone I knew was tasered repeatedly and then died, then I would definitely call it torture.

      Aside from whether you call it torture or not, police are much more likely to use a taser than they are to use a deadly weapon so a considerable number of people who would never have been shot at are now being tasered.

  22. Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The UN and the Geneva Convention however have no qualms with claymore mines, even homebrew ones made in the field, with any sharp substance you can put in them. Those aren't torture, but tasers are.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    1. Re:Claymore Mine by Constantine+XVI · · Score: 1

      Torture: a method of causing excruciating pain to subdue/coerce a person with non-lethal intent
      Weapon: a device used to knowingly kill or severely injure another person

      Tell me, which would you classify a claymore mine as?

      --
      "I think an etch-a-sketch with an ethernet port would beat IE7 in web standards compliance."
    2. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hrm. Your two definitions overlap.

      You say an item is a weapon if it can severely injure a person. Yet, it wouldn't be a weapon, but rather torture if it had non-lethal intent.

      A claymore can injure a person, but it has non-lethal intent. The purpose of a claymore is to take out people's legs, so they can't fight in battle. Furthermore, even more troops must now carry out the wounded troops, even further removing troops from battle. Many praise how many lives the claymore saves, by causing rather nasty, often permanent wounds. That isn't torture, but something that causes pain as a means to avoid shooting someone is?

      Again, tasers are an alternative to shooting someone, and beating them with a baton. People die from gun shot wounds as well, not to mention from beatings. I think tasers are obviously too strong if people are dying from them with any real frequency, and surely there are other non-lethal ways to take someone down. But I certainly wouldn't call a taser torture.

      At the root of this debate, is whether or not is wrong to cause a person pain, when you are trying to take them down. I'm sure the bleeding-heart crowd would rather that we not cause any pain what-so-ever, when a meth-addict charges a cop with a knife. In a very calm tone (as to not torture them with stress) we should politely ask them to put down the knife, and if they stab the cop, well, what can you do?

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    3. Re:Claymore Mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear fucking god are you stupid. Go look up "torture". In a nutshell, it's defined as inflicting severe pain or suffering on a person for the purpose of interrogation or punishment. Claymore mines are weapons of war, and pretty fucking seldom used as interrogation tools. If claymores are instruments of torture, then so are AK-47s and F-16s.

      But never mind all that, I'm still gasping at what an unbearable fucking liberal mouthpiece you must be to live with. Jesus H Christ. Yes, mines are fucking evil. No, that doesn't mean we have to call it "torture" just for the sake of "the children".

    4. Re:Claymore Mine by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      You don't really get to ask questions to body parts, so claymore mines aren't a form of torture.

      You might as well have stated "Nukes/boms/missiles aren't considered torture."

      At which point your fallacy would have been more obvious.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    5. Re:Claymore Mine by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Those aren't torture, but tasers are.

      And guns send a projectile at high speeds hurtling through someone's body...

      Death != Torture

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    6. Re:Claymore Mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1 : nice troll.

    7. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      Nukes/bombs/missles (bombs have a second "b" by the way) aren't non-lethal means to stop people.

      Tasers and claymore mines are both non-lethal means to stop people.

      I'm sorry that the analogy was like the joke about the ceiling. It was over your head.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    8. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      I rarely respond to AC's, but what the hell, I'm feeling masochistic tonight.

      Your definition (which defers the poster above you, despite both of you assuming the definition is commonly accepted) is based on motive, not method. Fine. In your world, it is torture if the motive is to interrogate or punish.

      How are tasers meant to interrogate? And in causing pain as punishment is torture on the whole, then remove all weapons from police officers. Hell, all weapons punish someone with pain. Remove all weapons.

      This just in! All weapons are torture! Who knew?

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    9. Re:Claymore Mine by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      The UN and the Geneva Convention however have no qualms with claymore mines, even homebrew ones made in the field, with any sharp substance you can put in them. Those aren't torture, but tasers are. WTF are you on about???
      And you damn well make sure your country signed the Ottawa convention before you start bitching about the UN and land mines.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    10. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      Your point?

      Death != torture

      I'm talking claymores and tasers. Neither are designed to kill. Where did death enter the analogy?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claymore_mine

      Please know what you are talking about before you respond next time.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    11. Re:Claymore Mine by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      I wasn't aware that a claymore mine was considered nonlethal. I'll have to read up on that.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    12. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claymore_mine

      "...the US forces may legally use the claymore in victim initiated detonation as long as provisions of the protocol are met."

      I did study this stuff in the Marine Corps.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    13. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      Odd, the Claymore entry on Wikipedia doesn't directly mention that, but the anti-personnel entry does state that.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-personnel_mine

      "This type of land mine is normally designed to injure--as opposed to killing--as many enemies as possible in order to increase the logistical (mostly medical) support required by such an enemy force. Some types of anti-personnel mines can also damage the tracks on armoured vehicles or the tires of wheeled vehicles."

      The claymore is often "aimed" low intentionally to only take out legs. It isn't a traditional explosive, which will kill people, but rather it is designed to send shrapnel to injure you. If you can't walk, you can't fight in combat.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-personnel_mine

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    14. Re:Claymore Mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a bit of a categorization error. Claymore Mines are designed as an anti-personnel mine, that is, to kill someone quickly and efficiently. Torture is causing pain but keeping the person alive. Hence, by definition, a Claymore Mine can't be considered a torture device.

    15. Re:Claymore Mine by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      Which is funny because the wikipedia article on the Claymore mine itself states that the explosive charge on the device was measured specifically to maximize the range at which the explosive charge contains lethal force.

      I'd call that a lethal weapon myself. I would also not list a chainsaw, broadsword, or katana as a nonlethal weapon if it were intended to be used to hack off limbs so that the target would bleed to death - exactly what those claymore mines do.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    16. Re:Claymore Mine by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      If the meth addict charges a cop with a knife, the cop should skip the taser and go straight for the gun.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    17. Re:Claymore Mine by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      I'm sure the bleeding-heart crowd would rather that we not cause any pain what-so-ever, when a meth-addict charges a cop with a knife.

      You may be sure, but apart from your claim, there is nothing to support this strawman. Maybe rather than invent absurd oponents you could actually respond to things which have been said?

    18. Re:Claymore Mine by Kattspya · · Score: 1
      You're mixing up claymores with regular land mines. A claymore is not meant to take someone's foot off it's meant to put down a squad or half a platoon. I'd like to see a single source that claims that claymores are designed to lop off the legs.

      When the M18A1 is detonated, the explosion drives the matrix of 700 spherical fragments out of the mine at a velocity of 3,995 feet per second (1,200 m/s) [1], at the same time breaking the matrix into individual fragments. The spherical steel balls are projected in a 60 fan-shaped pattern that is two meters high (6 ft, 8 in) and 50 meters (165 ft) wide at a range of 50 meters (165 ft).


      I don't know of a single person with six feet tall legs.
    19. Re:Claymore Mine by evilviper · · Score: 1

      I'm talking claymores and tasers. Neither are designed to kill.

      Claymores (and most mines) are designed to kill. The fact that they often injure instead is besides the point.

      And besides that, claymores aren't designed to be used against prisoners, and you don't use 'torture' to protect your lives against armed opposition forces. The two couldn't be more different. The analogy is idiotic.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    20. Re:Claymore Mine by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1

      There's already the Ottowa Treaty, signed by most countries of the world - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottawa_Treaty. (Prominent non-signatories are India, Russia, China and the US. I'm shocked, shocked I say.)

      --
      "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
    21. Re:Claymore Mine by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      I built homemade claymores in the field. And a grenade has an injure radius of 45 feet, but that doesn't mean it kills within 45 feet. Claymores are deployed low to the ground, and shoot directly outward. With any explosion, the blast will go up and down a bit, but the brunt of the blast is low to the ground.

      Standard land mines however just pretty much kill.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  23. No one is criticizing that by Rix · · Score: 1

    The issue is over cops who tase people they wouldn't have otherwise shot.

  24. the value of the concept of "context" by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ok, tasers kill some people, and they hurt

    except that, you need to give cops SOMETHING to control people. that cops will use these tools outside of the proper scenarios is a given: cops will always use lethal and nonlethal tools in ways they shouldn't. yes, you can make the case that because it is supposed to be nonlethal, they will use them when otherwise a few well chosen words would suffice instead

    and still, given all of that, tasers should still be used

    simply because there are plenty of scenarios where lethal force shouldn't be the only option available to a cop. i am making the case that the number of lives using a taser instead of a gun has saved outweighs the situations where someone died who didn't need any force at all

    in other words, tasers are not perfect. but NO weapons of force are perfect, AND not having a range of weapons of force in police force is a nonstarter (cue the wackjobs who think we don't need a police force). welcome to the real world: there is no silver bullet (no pun intended), there is always a downside between two competing concepts you MUST satisfy

    this is actually how propaganda works: you look at the negatives of a technology: say nuclear power, or stem cell research, without looking at the positives, and without the realization that there isn't a better option out there

    in life, you are never given the choice between a golden wonderful choice, and a terrible horrible one. in life, most of the time on complex questions like the proper tool for police work, or who to vote for in an election, or how to confront violent fundamentalists in the middle east, there are propagandists (or downright naive or ignorant people) who glom onto the negatives of one particular attitude, and hurl invectives at it, without ANY ocnsideraiton of how much worse the other choices before you are

    some naive, ignorant, and propagandized people need to recognize that EVERY choice before us is full of negatives, and it is your job, as it is often in life, to attempt to choose from varying shades of gray, choices that are ALL negative, but one less negative than another

    this is called "context"

    and simpletons, propaganda, and the naive haven't mastered the concept

    in such a way, we complain about tasers, without realizing they are an improvement on nothing but guns and pepper spray for police work. but because tasers still have negatives, people will go in to blinders mode, and whine about that. as if whining about the negatives of one choice wihtout balancing them against the negatives of other choices is supposed to have any value in this life on the complex questions that confront us

    "context" people. learn the concept, use it. stop being naive, ignorant, or propagandized

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by Dunbal · · Score: 1, Insightful

      except that, you need to give cops SOMETHING to control people.

      a BRAIN?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      ok, tasers kill some people, and they hurt except that, you need to give cops SOMETHING to control people. that cops will use these tools outside of the proper scenarios is a given: cops will always use lethal and nonlethal tools in ways they shouldn't. yes, you can make the case that because it is supposed to be nonlethal, they will use them when otherwise a few well chosen words would suffice instead

      So maybe what we need are some better regulations and laws regarding how and when cops are allowed to use tasers, like only when someone is in physical danger?

      this is actually how propaganda works...

      This isn't propaganda. Tasers cause significant pain. They are used to torture people, and they are used by police to torture people. Classifying them as torture devices is appropriate. That is not to say they should be banned, only that when a cop tasers someone unnecessarily, or repeatedly, they should be convicted of torture.

      people will go in to blinders mode

      Really? How many posts here have advocated banning tasers? I didn't see any. If people were putting on blinders and seeing only the negative, I'd think that is exactly what people would be advocating. It looks more to me like you're putting on blinders to some degree and seeing this as an attack on the use of tasers, instead of simply an accurate classification of them that can and should be used to help guide how they are used.

    3. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      So maybe what we need are some better regulations and laws regarding how and when cops are allowed to use tasers, like only when someone is in physical danger?

      There will come a time where only the worst most corrupt people will become cops because they're the only ones willing to deal with the ridiculous rules fosted on them.

      Usually by ignoring them completely.

      And the management will let it slide because otherwise they can't get any applicants.

      Have you ever asked yourself what it would take to make a Cop's job better?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    4. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There will come a time where only the worst most corrupt people will become cops because they're the only ones willing to deal with the ridiculous rules fosted on them.

      In some places we're already there. The problem is, some cops honestly and truly want to help people, but they have a hard time because of the other cops. From the cops I know, they are already in the minority. The thing is, rules restricting cops from using tasers when no one is being threatened don't interfere with a normal cops duties at all and don't make their job any harder.

      Have you ever asked yourself what it would take to make a Cop's job better?

      Better funding and better pay would be a start. Also, better rules so that the corrupt cops who just want to hurt people and control them are caught and fired so people begin to trust them again. Why would any cop who is honestly trying to help people object to being restricted from using a taser on a person who is no threat?

    5. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by pipoca · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, do you have any statistics? How many lives does access to a taser save vs kill? Does the death count increase, decrease or stay the same when you give a police force access to a tazer? How much pain is caused with a tazer that wouldn't have been caused (i.e. by talking someone out of stuff) in it's absence, and how much pain is saved (i.e. by tazing someone instead of shooting them)? Only after seeing these numbers can you really make a value judgement as to their worth. Otherwise, your really just talking out of your ass.

    6. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by cynicist · · Score: 1

      I'm not asking for the removal of tasers, just for police to use them appropriately.

    7. Re:the value of the concept of "context" by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      i am making the case that the number of lives using a taser instead of a gun has saved outweighs the situations where someone died who didn't need any force at all

      Sorry, but no you don't make the case - you make a claim. This is important precisely because of the mixture of negative and positive effects you mention. If you do make a case you need to try and measure these effects and weigh them. Blindly assuming that the positive effects outweigh the negative ones is just as useless as the opposite.

  25. official document listing torture devices by icepick72 · · Score: 1

    Tasers are a form of torture. Guns are too by the same rules. Now the two weapons are considered on a similar same level. Does it change your preference whether the guy should be shot or tasered? ... It doesn't for me. Some decisions were made, something was made official. It doesn't support getting rid of tasers.

    1. Re:official document listing torture devices by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Does it change your preference whether the guy should be shot or tasered?

      No, but hopefully it will change some laws and regulations about whether a person should be talked to or tasered in situations where no one would consider shooting them to be appropriate or even vaguely legal.

    2. Re:official document listing torture devices by icepick72 · · Score: 1

      Excellent point.

    3. Re:official document listing torture devices by HangingChad · · Score: 1

      Does it change your preference whether the guy should be shot or tasered?

      It doesn't help the discussion to frame it as a false choice. Law enforcement officers have a wide range of force options available in any situation. It's rarely a choice between a taser and a gun. It's usually a choice between baton, pepper spray or taser. Batons leave bruises and even working with someone after pepper spray can make your eyes water so bad you can't drive. I can't think of many situations when a taser would substitute for deadly force. I'm sure there have been a few but use of tasers is far too routine. It's almost getting punitive.

      And we have to have accountability in law enforcement that has all but disappeared. Accountability in the employment of surveillance, in the choice of force options and especially accountability for telling the truth.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  26. Re:Alternative by schon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't break the law and you won't risk your life to a taser. Also, don't be around someone else who is breaking the law.

    And don't raise your voice around an undercover police officer.

    And don't protest against anything.

    And don't "act suspiciously" on a bus.

    As long as you remain a complete sheep and don't do anything that might resemble, you know, being a free person, you'll be OK.
  27. Re:Alternative by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Don't break the law and you won't risk your life to a taser.

    Bullshit. Because tasers are supposed to be nonlethal they are often abused and used on people who have broken no laws at all. See the recent case of the man who went into a diabetic coma and was subsequently tasered while lying helpless. See the case of the 87 year old woman who was tasered at her rest home for yelling at a police officer from her wheelchair. Neither broke the law, but both were put in danger.

    I fail to see how something that is painful and has a non-zero chance of death is automatically torture and should be outlawed. By that measure we should outlaw the average daily commute.

    Have you ever been tasered? I volunteered to try it. It really hurts, a lot more than a punch to the face even. Have you ever seen the TV show Cops, where they'll hit a guy multiple times while they're laying on the floor. Tasers make muscles contract, and you fall down. That's great, since then they can subdue and cuff a violent offender. Hitting someone more than once, however, is simply torturing someone into compliance. That is torture, unlike a daily commute. Don't believe me, go to a store that sells them and ask for a test shot, a regular 500K stun gun is pretty similar, if tasers are not available to civilians in your state.

  28. Quick, pull the story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    http://news.guelphmercury.com/News/article/263994

    According to the Canadian Press (news agency), Taser sues anyone who claims their device causes death. It must be admitted that they have done a masterful job of managing public opinion; or at least cops' opinions. Now all the cops believe that all crazy people have superhuman strength and all need to be treated with nearly lethal force because they might be able to kill several armed cops with their bare hands. (slimy stupid cowards)

    After the guy in BC died, the first stories were all about excited delerium. Then we started to hear from real (not company owned) mental health professionals calling BS. One guy who runs a loony bin clearly said that they almost never had to rely on force to control the nut cases therein. Confronting these people with force is the worst way to handle them. They can almost always be calmed. Here's an example: http://careerfocus.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/333/7563/64?etoc

  29. Interesting situation by pcgamez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I find it very interesting that Taser International claims that the 150+ deaths that have occurred immediately after the person is shot with the Taser are not caused by the Taser. At the same time their website has pages (see below) of warnings about all the medical risks associated with being shot by a Taser (such as an increased risk of heart attack).

    http://www.taser.com/SiteCollectionDocuments/Controlled%20Documents/Warnings/LG-INST-CTZWARN-001%20REV%20E%20Citizen%20Warnings.pdf

    As other posters have already commented, it is not the Taser itself that is the problem, it is the use of it. If these were being used only in cases where a firearm would normally be used it is one thing. In that situation a small risk of death by Taser is acceptable when compared to the near certainty after being shot multiple times. But that is not what we are seeing. People are dying in situations where without the Taser they would not be seriously harmed....and that is what I have a problem with.

    1. Re:Interesting situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As other posters have already commented, it is not the Taser itself that is the problem, it is the use of it. If these were being used only in cases where a firearm would normally be used it is one thing.

      I disagree... A taser can not be used as a reliable alternative to a firearm for a number of reasons. The most obvious reason is that when a taser deploys it sends two needle-like harpoons hurdling at the victim. If one of these harpoons does not connect with the victim the taser blast is ineffective. One of the two harpoons can fail to connect because of bad aim, a misaligned cartridge, hitting of a solid object (like a button or credit card), or clothing that is too thick (belts, collars, etc).

      During a public awareness meeting provided by my local police department, police pointed out that officers are instructed not to use a taser as an alternative to lethal force. If they are presented with a situation which may call for a firearm, they are to use the firearm without hesitation.

      Therefore, tasers are the problem. Because of the pain they can inflict tasers are bound to be misused as a form of corporal punishment by agents of the executive branch before the suspect has had his day in court with the judicial branch. The judicial branch is the only branch of government which should be deciding how to punish a crime (based on existing law), and that is after a legal discovery of events has taken place and a jury of the suspects peers has convicted him of a crime.

      The misuse of tasers from a moral perspective could be offset if tasers were in fact being used as a non lethal alternative to lethal force. However, this is just not the case.

      I believe tasers to be one of the greatest dangers to our 'free society' that we have faced so far... Imagine how different this country might be today if tasers had existed since its birth. Our rich history of civil disobedience would have been disrupted by law enforcement officers with a no-risk tool at their disposal that could be used to punish (torture) dissenters at the drop of a dime. Even a great man like Martin Luther King might have thought twice about staging a sit-in after watching one of his friends flail helplessly on the floor, squealing like a pig with 50,000 volts of electricity poring through his body.

      -Craig

    2. Re:Interesting situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As other posters have already commented, it is not the Taser itself that is the problem, it is the use of it. If these were being used only in cases where a firearm would normally be used it is one thing.

      I disagree... A taser can not be used as a reliable alternative to a firearm for a number of reasons. The most obvious reason is that when a taser deploys it sends two needle-like harpoons hurdling at the victim. If one of these harpoons does not connect with the victim the taser blast is ineffective. One of the two harpoons can fail to connect because of bad aim, a misaligned cartridge, hitting of a solid object (like a button or credit card), or clothing that is too thick (belts, collars, etc).

      During a public awareness meeting provided by my local police department, police pointed out that officers are instructed not to use a taser as an alternative to lethal force. If they are presented with a situation which may call for a firearm, they are to use the firearm without hesitation.

      Therefore, tasers are the problem. Because of the pain they can inflict tasers are bound to be misused as a form of corporal punishment by agents of the executive branch before the suspect has had his day in court with the judicial branch. The judicial branch is the only branch of government which should be deciding how to punish a crime (based on existing law), and that is after a legal discovery of events has taken place and a jury of the suspects peers has convicted him of a crime.

      The misuse of tasers from a moral perspective could be offset if tasers were in fact being used as a non lethal alternative to lethal force. However, this is just not the case.

      I believe tasers to be one of the greatest dangers to our 'free society' that we have faced so far... Imagine how different this country might be today if tasers had existed since its birth. Our rich history of civil disobedience would have been disrupted by law enforcement officers with a no-risk tool at their disposal that could be used to punish (torture) dissenters at the drop of a dime. Even a great man like Martin Luther King might have thought twice about staging a sit-in after watching one of his friends flail helplessly on the floor, squealing like a pig with 50,000 volts of electricity poring through his body.

    3. Re:Interesting situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As other posters have already commented, it is not the Taser itself that is the problem, it is the use of it.
      Wait. You are from National Taser Association, right? There is some less known Amendment about "right to bear tasers"?
  30. Re:It's called "less lethal force" for a reason by debest · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're damn lucky the cops have less-lethal weapons as an option (lead beanbags, tasers, paintball pepper spray, etc etc etc), rather than just "do I shoot this guy or not".

    I think the main problem is that tasers are not being used only as an alternative to a gun. If police were to think "I will only use the taser in the circumstance that otherwise I would be firing my gun," then your point is valid. However, it seems that in many situations, police are using tasers as a way to simply make their job of arresting someone easier.

    The videotape of the guy in Vancouver shows pretty clearly that he was not in the process of attacking the police when they tased him. I seriously doubt that the police would have shot him had they arrived without a taser in that circumstance. Without a taser, they probably would have tried to slowly convey to him their intent to arrest him (he didn't speak English), and if unsuccessful they would have had to tackle him and struggle to restrain him. Both processes would be lengthy, difficult, and stressful for the police. Instead, it appears that they took an easy shortcut and just tased him so they could get the cuffs on him quickly. The man paid for this with his life. Without a taser, I submit he would likely be alive today.

    So you're right: a taser used as a substitute for a gun (when the use of a gun is warranted) is fine. Using a taser when use of a gun is not warranted is the problem!
    --
    Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
  31. Quick, redefine! by 4D6963 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Things are going downhill with the UN calling tasering "torture". Because we don't torture, therefore, we don't taser. So let's call it something cooler, hipper, like "waterboarding". I'm waiting for suggestions.

    --
    You just got troll'd!
    1. Re:Quick, redefine! by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      I'm waiting for suggestions.

      Happy Fun Ball has a pleasant ring.
      Everybody knows not to taunt Happy Fun Ball.

    2. Re:Quick, redefine! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It's not called torture any more - it was "robust interrogation until death" when carried out in a prison in Iraq.

    3. Re:Quick, redefine! by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      It's not called torture any more - it was "robust interrogation until death" when carried out in a prison in Iraq.

      You don't ever watch the news do you? It's officially called Enhanced Interrogation Techniques, look it up.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    4. Re:Quick, redefine! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > So let's call it something cooler, hipper, like "waterboarding".

      Electroboarding!

      Hmm, how about "Electronically-enhanced interrogation technique". Note the small "e". The ambiguity gives plausible deniability to everyone from attorneys-general to beat cops. They can talk about EIT (enhanced interrogation techniques), or they can talk about EIT (Electronically-advanced interrogation technique). When asked by a defense lawyer whether EIT was used on the suspect, they can "honestly" deny it without perjuring themselves, because they "honestly" (read: with plausible deniability) thought someone was referring to the "other" acronym for tort... umm... EIT.

      A less-ambiguous answer could be extracted under oath by a clever defense attorney, by using the words in full. But given the quality of public defenders, that's a gamble worth taking for the beat cop.

      Similarly, one can assume that attorneys general are only examined by very clever lawyers... but as we've seen, these lawyers are clever enough to value their own lives and careers, which is why (no matter how obvious and glaring the holes and ambiguities in the testimony), the obvious disambiguating follow-up questions never get asked during Congressional hearings.

  32. Don't forget the follow-up. by khasim · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The school's internal investigation determined that appropriate force had been used.

    Translated now: The school determined that the use of torture on a student was appropriate.

    We'll see how that plays out.

  33. Re:Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Coupled with the insane amount of terrorist fear built up beyond all reason by government FUD worldwide being used to trash the rights of everyone in the name of 'security' this has resulted in cases like the diabetic who had a fit on a buss and fell incapable of moving, he was reported as strange by the driver, and the cops decided to taser an immobile man for not responding.

    Oh it gets 'better' when he carried on unresponsive, but had collapsed on the floor with his arm under his body, even more concerned they decided to tase him again!

    Not that spasaming from an electric shock would ever cause someone to clench their detonator trigger or anything if they were a terrorist (after an empty buss)

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/7096456.stm

    Sadly this wasn't even the US, American gung ho stupidity spreading worldwide :o(

  34. Re:Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't break the law and you won't risk your life to a taser.

    I don't think there's any guarantee of that.

  35. Protect and Serve by Ajehals · · Score: 1

    I cant seem to find any confirmation of the 275 killed statistic mentioned in the summary, nor the date from which tasers were approved for use in the US (I assume it will have been state by state..) but if its accurate, and the introduction is with the last 3-5 years then that is a fairly damning figure for a non-lethal weapon (its about the same as three years worth of police related deaths of any kind in the UK and that includes shootings of any type, suicide / other deaths in custody, car accidents etc..).

    I suppose though that as a percentage of the number of people tasered in total that its a small number and as such maybe its not the taser that is the issue but the frequency of its use... Saying that I'd rather be tasered than shot, which I assume is the alternative in the US.

    As an aside, has anyone else noticed how UK police are starting to look more and more aggressive? It seems that utility belts with military style pouches, stab vests, steel toe capped boots etc.. if worn in a suitably paramilitary fashion (with a high vis of course) really can cause an escalation in tension all on their own. I saw a policeman yesterday (in Tesco's getting himself a sandwich and a salad....) in what I remember from not too many years back as a policeman's uniform, i.e. black trousers, white shit, blue jumper (With 'Police' and loops for a radio on it), hat, shiny shoes etc. I realized that he didn't look even remotely aggressive, quite friendly and approachable. Maybe there would be some benefit in making our police look less tooled up and distant, I mean they can still carry their truncheons and pepper spray, maybe they could also get some slightly covert stab vests, basically anything to make them look less like they are looking for a fight, maybe that would be one way of starting to win back the trust and respect they claim to have lost (they could also start walking their beats rather than driving them, that way they might see a thing or two too.).

    1. Re:Protect and Serve by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      In the US, they've been used by the police for at least 10 years in some jurisdictions (about 8 years in the Seattle Police Department). With a population of 300,000,000 and 10 years of use, the actual annual death rate of tasers is pretty low.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  36. Re:Alternative by Maleko · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thats all fine and dandy, IF you could actually live your life without breaking a law.

  37. In other news.. by Ezza · · Score: 1

    Studies show gunshots and batons cause acute pain.

    Also, apparently handcuffs can be quite uncomfortable and inconvenient, so we should ban those too.

    --
    I'm a perfectionist but I'm trying to cut back.
  38. Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by khasim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They WERE being pushed as an ALTERNATIVE to lethal force ("guns").

    They WERE being pushed as "cop is in a dangerous situation, he can shoot or he can use a taser".

    Now the tasers are the FIRST option. If the person is not IMMEDIATELY respectful and obedient, it's taser (defined: "torture") time!

    1. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In other words, the lack of a semi-lethal option like the Taser forces cops to either use their firearms, or find some other way to avoid escalation, ways in which they've been trained but which require more effort and may entail more risk.

      The inappropriate or indiscriminate use of the Taser is no less than a cop out, when you get right down to it. It is not the only example of high technology being used as a substitute for quality police work.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....If the person is not IMMEDIATELY respectful and obedient.....

      Why NOT be respectful and obedient? Is that not a good way to be to everyone, not only the cops who have tasers and guns? An angry, insulting response will only make matters worse and could result in harm to all involved. If the cop wants to arrest you, LET them quietly and then let the judge sort things out.

      --
      All theory is gray
    3. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 1
      In other words, the lack of a semi-lethal option like the Taser forces cops to either use their firearms, or find some other way to avoid escalation, ways in which they've been trained but which require more effort and may entail more risk.

      There would be no issue if they actually used the Tasers as intended, to protect themselves or to stop someone who cannot be stopped by other (less harmful) means. As it is now, the Tasers are used to force someone into submission when there is no need for force at all.

      --
      "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
    4. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

      " Why NOT be respectful and obedient? "

      Easy answer. Because the Police are not showing any respect towards non-officers
      by tasing first and asking questions later. Folks who are doing no more than
      disagreeing with an officer are getting lit up with these things. God forbid
      you question authority. After all, our police force is impeccable and would
      NEVER do anything questionable, or *gasp* illegal. No really ! *rolls eyes*

      Seen any of the Internet Videos regarding police brutality or overstepping
      their bounds lately ? No ? Go see some then ask why I should be obedient or
      respectful towards any officer these days. I look nervous to the officer on
      scene ? Perhaps I'm wondering if he's going to whip out his taser because I'm
      not following his orders fast enough. Maybe I'm wondering if I'm going to join
      the rest of the folks who have died because some lazy ass officer decides to use
      his new toy because my nervousness was making the officer nervous. . .

      " If the cop wants to arrest you, LET them quietly and then let the judge sort things out. "

      You tend to forget that your word vs an officers = you lose. Period. End of story.
      Regardless if you are in the right or not. Officer's word > your word. Every single time.
      ( Unless you have video evidence to prove otherwise )

      I no longer blame folks who run from police. Your safety is no longer a guarantee once
      you are in their control. ( How many have died while in police custody now ? ) Since the
      departments don't feel there is a problem, there must not be a problem. . . . you're not
      questioning us are you CITIZEN ? ( zzzzzap )

      While I cannot condone it, when the first instance of Citizen X gunning down Officer Y
      out of fear for their life, I can only say " Told you so. " Example after example is
      being seen by the public. Nothing is being done and more and more folks are dying daily
      to the so called ' lethal force alternative ' that is known as the Taser.

      To the Police: Failure to reign in your cowboys will ultimately result in a public that
      no longer trusts those sworn to protect them. If you think you have anti-police issues
      now. . . just wait. Pretty soon, you'll be just as much of an enemy as the criminals are.

      Try to imagine working in an environment where absolutely no one trusts you.

    5. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by Seumas · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The connotation of tasers with the phrase "non-lethal" needs to be done away with, as well. Calling tasers non-lethal is like calling being hit to the skull with an aluminum baseball bat "non-lethal". Sure, you *might* not die from it -- but there is also a significant chance that you *might*.

      Unfortunately the problem is also larger than the utility in use. The problem is that the police can not be trusted and they are all too ready to abuse their power. I remember seeing a documentary on the news (60 Minutes or something like that) about five years ago where they were showing horrible abuses of pepper spray by police.

      In the videotaped incident shown, some students were protesting something by locking their arms together and sitting in a circle. Non-violent. Peaceful. They weren't even blocking traffic. Or a sidewalk. Or a doorway. They might have been singing, but I don't recall that for sure. At any rate, they were absolutely not a threat.

      So what did the police do? They sprayed pepper spray directly into a foam coffee cup and then took swaps to sop up huge quantities of the pepper spray from the cup. They then forced the eyelids of the protestors open and rubbed the pepper spray DIRECTLY ON THEIR EYES. All experts agreed that such an action is absolutely torture and the pain would be far exceeding any possible pain from just spraying it at someone (where you will have some contact with the eyes, but most of it will be dissipated by the air and distance between you and the target, instead of concentrated in one spot on their eyeball).

    6. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There would be no issue if they actually used the Tasers as intended

      Absolutely, but my understanding is that, unlike firearms, there really aren't any standards being enforced as to the use of Tasers. Some departments, I'm sure, make sure their officers use them wisely, whereas others seem less conscientious. The only way to know for sure is to piss off a local cop and see if he stuns you.

      So, are we questioning the use of a theoretically non-lethal technology that causes a lot of suffering and humiliation, or are we concerned that it isn't always so non-lethal? Or both? Those are two different issues. If it's the former, then cops should be heavily restricted as to how and when they can Tase someone, and should be penalized if they break the rules. On the other hand, if it's the latter ... maybe we should simply reconsider their use entirely.

      Cops know that everyone is susceptible to bullets so they hesitate to shoot at someone, and there are rules to that game: a bad kill and your career can be over. Enter the Taser, which they've been told is "safe". The thing is, with any given individual there's no way to tell if that's actually true, other than by Tasing them and see if they survive the experience. I suppose the cops could be required to ask if their target has a physical problem that might prove fatal. "Sir, we are authorized to Taser you now. If you have a heart condition or other medical condition which would contraindicate the use of Taser technology, please let us know immediately so that we may switch to an alternate non-lethal methodology to subdue you." Sure. That'd work.

      Hell, even in Star Trek sometimes people were killed when hit by a phaser set for stun. Not everybody can take the same degree of punishment.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    7. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by anagama · · Score: 1

      It is not the only example of high technology being used as a substitute for quality police work.

      And this will ultimately make cops less safe. When the public begins to understand that cops "will shoot first and ask questions later" rather than try to be reasonable -- well, the cops might find that the real criminals take up the same philosophy. Violence does not make people safer. Quite the opposite in fact. Of course, all the regular citizens getting abused will just have to suck it up.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    8. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by anagama · · Score: 1

      Well said!

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    9. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by b.foster · · Score: 1

      Here is the video you are referring to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTJCqOlh_4w

      These individuals were trespassing and had shackled themselves together. The officers gave them ample opportunities to leave the premises on their own, and even showed them the OC spray in the cup and gave them a final chance, but the suspects refused to budge. They were bound and determined to become martyrs for the cause.

      If you were an officer in this situation, what would you do?

      (Keep in mind that you have been dispatched to remove these individuals, and if they are still there when you leave the scene, you will be written up for insubordination.)

    10. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      The connotation of tasers with the phrase "non-lethal" needs to be done away with, as well. Calling tasers non-lethal is like calling being hit to the skull with an aluminum baseball bat "non-lethal". Sure, you *might* not die from it -- but there is also a significant chance that you *might*.

      Heck, in that context a .38 cal Police special is a non-lethal weapon, I mean, you might survive being shot in the chest. That hardly qualifies a handgun as non-lethal.

      If a device is truly a "weapon" then it carries the potential of causing serious injury or death. If it doesn't, then it's not a weapon ... it's at best a tool. That also is no guarantee of safety: many tools are at least as dangerous as a gun or knife.

      If you are a cop, and you are using force upon someone, you are depending upon that person's ability to survive that application. Furthermore, you have no way to discern, in advance, how hardy a given individual is. That big guy with all the muscles might also have a heart condition, or be on the verge of a ruptured brain aneurysm. How can you tell?

      This is true whether it be purely mechanical force, as in the case of the aforementioned baseball bat, or electrical as with a Taser. There will always be a certain percentage of any population that will die or become seriously compromised no matter what variety of "non lethal" technology you employ.

      There is no panacea here, the manufacturer's claims to the contrary notwithstanding (that is extraordinary it it's own right.) The only thing that is keeping us from more civilian deaths is proper police training and oversight. The Taser is not a solution, in and of it self, even though it is being sold as such.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    11. Re:Remember WHY tasers were introduced. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were an officer in this situation, what would you do?

      Cut their shackles, and arrest them.

  39. Re:Alternative by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    this has resulted in cases like the diabetic who had a fit on a buss and fell incapable of moving, he was reported as strange by the driver, and the cops decided to taser an immobile man for not responding.

    The perfect treatment for those idiots^Wpolice officers would be 2400VAC for a few minutes in a wonderful American invention known as the Electric Chair. Give them a taste of their own medicine, except stronger.

    -b.

  40. Causes acute pain? by rindeee · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So does O.C. spray (speaking from experience). Torture? Sure, both COULD be say if someone were to strap me down and use either in an attempt to obtain information or to procure a false confession from me, etc. If, on the other hand I am tasered or sprayed because I am threatening someone and as such the action is an alternative to being my shot, then please...tase away. "Ouch, that hurts" alone does not constitute torture.

  41. 275? by Eddi3 · · Score: 3, Informative

    How do they figure 275 people being killed by tasers, when only 30 have been reported as such by the coroners? Where does this figure come from?

    1. Re:275? by pcgamez · · Score: 3, Insightful

      IIRC, 275 have died immediately following being shot with a Taser. In at least 30 cases the coroner has stated that the Tasering was the cause. The problem is that there is almost no way to absolutely prove the Taser was the cause. If a person has a heart weakness that has been with them their entire lives and has never caused problems yet kills them after being hit with the Taser, what is the cause?

    2. Re:275? by Eddi3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I hate to reply to myself; However, I thought I'd also point out that, given the US' population is almost 10 times that of Canada [1], one would expect the US to have at least 10 times as many deaths from any specific cause, statistically. The article is trying to make the US sound so bad with 275 (unconfirmed) deaths, when even this number is still around the same percent of the general populace as Canada's 17 (confirmed) deaths.*

      * Also, keep in mind: There are only 30 confirmed reports of it in the US. 30 / 10 (to make population proportional) = 3, and 17 / 3 = 5.667, making it 5.667 times more likely that you'll die from being tasered in Canada then in the US.

      1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_North_American_countries_by_population

    3. Re:275? by TheGoodSteven · · Score: 1

      Its not that 275 have been killed by Tasers, its that death followed the application in 275 instances. That death might have been from a drug overdose or other factor. Only the 30 cases where the Taser was listed as a contributing factor can be said to have caused the death in any way. I wouldn't doubt that the Taser was a contributing factor in these deaths, however considering the thousands of applications of the Taser, 30 deaths isn't all the bad. That however, is considering the amount of deaths caused from other less-than-lethal alternatives. Even OC spray (pepper spray) has caused deaths, and although I do not have any statistics in front of me, I would bet it is more than 30.

    4. Re:275? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Also, keep in mind: There are only 30 confirmed reports of it in the US. 30 / 10 (to make population proportional) = 3, and 17 / 3 = 5.667, making it 5.667 times more likely that you'll die from being tasered in Canada then in the US."

      There is another explanation for this, that Canadian coroners are more honest(don't know if this is the case).
      Cheers

    5. Re:275? by loraksus · · Score: 1

      Those are all just lies! The coroner has absolutely no conflict of interest, and just because his paychecks come from basically the same place, there is no pressure to provide the city with a nice and easy way to avoid a lawsuit. /cue Iraqi Propaganda Minister

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    6. Re:275? by ppanon · · Score: 1

      If a person has a heart weakness that has been with them their entire lives and has never caused problems yet kills them after being hit with the Taser, what is the cause?

      If a person has a heart weakness that has been with them their entire lives and has never caused problems yet a bank robber shoots them near the heart during a robbery and the trauma caused a fatal heart attack, do you think a judge or jury will let them off saying "Sure what the hey, the guy was living on borrowed time and could have kicked off at any time"?

      The point is that police can never know whether a suspect that they wish to tase could have a medical condition that would render the tasing deadly. They should treat it as deadly force. Instead, some use it repeatedly for extended durations with minimal or no justification. Sure they are probably bad apples in a good barrel, but if so why all the resistance to changing policy to stop the abuse? Because it's easier to pretend they don't exist and doing so would hurt the police's public image? Ask the Roman Catholic church how that worked out for them.

      If a taser is supposed to suppress muscular control and the heart is a muscle, what do you think happens to the heart when the shock hits it? Just because the frequency isn't the right frequency to cause fibrillation doesn't mean that you aren't temporarily stopping the heart. Repeated extended application is more likely to cause damage to the heart or other organs.

      Police tasers should be limited to two discharges. If a police officer can't have somebody subdued after two shock applications, they should be using other "non-lethal" (or lethal) means, and they should be prepared to defend their actions in an inquiry.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    7. Re:275? by ppanon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I guess you're innumerate since you can't tell that the US has double the rate per population as Canada at 275/300 million vs 17/35 million. The rest of your math is just as bad since you start comparing numbers that aren't the same (i.e. 30 US deaths where the coroner confirmed the taser vs. the 17 Canadian death count using criteria that more closely correlate the 275 US death count). Of course what really matters is how many police tasers are actually in use in each country.

      The point is that the current Canadian death count is high enough that the policy for taser use is being reviewed for the RCMP and certain provincial police forces. Even in June, prior to the recent incident in the Vancouver airport, Paul Kennedy, the chair of the RCMP complaints committee had recommended changes to the way the RCMP use Tasers.

      Generally, the RCMP are better educated and better trained than most US cops. So if the RCMP are misusing Tasers, I'd rather not think too hard about how your boys are abusing them down there.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    8. Re:275? by eraserewind · · Score: 1

      No, it just means that when you die from being Tazered in the US, the coroner is less likely to confirm it. (unlike NetCraft, who can always be relied upon in these matters).

  42. Re:Alternative by skeeto · · Score: 1

    Just as John Gilmore says, "How many of you have broken no laws this month?"

  43. Tasers dont kill people by tristian_was_here · · Score: 1

    Tasers don't kill people, People kill people, Tasers defend people from smaller tasers.

  44. Something is wrong here by wap911 · · Score: 1

    Less than 150 incompetent drivers died when a tire blew out and Firestone [the tires not the stores] became history. But everything is OK in the name of the "War on Terror". Front page paper today had a article the fire and ambulance people are being trained to "sniff out suspected terrorist and activities" -- http://www.caller.com/ Sad.....very sad.....but at my age I probably will not see The Big End(R) after 2016. [eat, drink, and be merry....for tomorrow you will die in a dungeon somewhere]

    1. Re:Something is wrong here by urcreepyneighbor · · Score: 1

      But everything is OK in the name of the "War on Terror". You wedge that line in with as much grace as a 300 lbs, methed-up hooker getting tased. ;D

      Wrong fucking story, man.
      --
      "The fight for freedom has only just begun." - Geert Wilders
    2. Re:Something is wrong here by ChrisMaple · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Firestone was bought out by Bridgestone.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  45. reality check by m2943 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've always viewed the U.N as a corrupt orginization and an enemy of the US. I'm sure many agree.

    Actually, the UN is pretty mild in what it does, mostly because the US set it up that way. If the UN actually were a democratic organization, the US and Europe would fare far worse. That's not "corruption", it's reality.

    The best thing the US can do is listen to what the UN has to say, because sooner or later those impoverished and powerless people that make up the majority of the world's population are going to be not so impoverished and powerless anymore.

    1. Re:reality check by wanderingknight · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Mod parent the fuck up. Fuck you if you can't face reality, people: The fact remains that the countries in power are the ones making the rules.

    2. Re:reality check by oatworm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's absolutely true. What people seem to miss, however, is the following:

      1. If the US and Western Europe aren't making the rules, somebody else is. After all, for rules to exist, somebody has to make them, right? So, of the alternatives, who do we want making the rules for us? China? Russia? Saudi Arabia? Fiji? (I kid about the last one.)
      2. It's easy to forget here in the US and in other similarly run countries (Canada, Australia, Western Europe, etc.), but, contrary to what Thomas Paine thought, not all governments derive their power by the consent of their people. You think the North Koreans are happy about their government? How about Iran, which actually has an open dissident movement and numerous student demonstrations? It's true that some Western countries have governments that aren't representing the majority of their citizens' interests - the difference, though, is that, in a relatively short amount of time (usually within ten years), mechanisms put into place many years ago go into play that do something about that. The same cannot be said for, say, Iran or North Korea. Consequently, when other governments make objections or make declarations about the treatment of Canada's indigenous people, many of those other governments do not do so with the interests of their own people in mind (or even the veneer of such interests) - they're doing so blatantly for the purposes of the group in power of that country.

    3. Re:reality check by wanderingknight · · Score: 1

      1. If the US and Western Europe aren't making the rules, somebody else is. After all, for rules to exist, somebody has to make them, right? So, of the alternatives, who do we want making the rules for us? China? Russia? Saudi Arabia? Fiji? (I kid about the last one.) The problem is that the US is forcing their unequal rules on other countries. It's called domination. I understand that you like living under those rules, but don't assume we like to do so.
    4. Re:reality check by wanderingknight · · Score: 1

      Sorry, add "you like living under those rules because they benefit you ".

    5. Re:reality check by dryeo · · Score: 1

      You do realize that Iran is a democracy right? It does have a somewhat weird voting system but if the people are not happy with their government they should be able to change it in 10 or 12 years (legislature voted in for 4 years, assembly of experts voted in for 8 years so change might be a little slower).
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politics_and_Government_of_Iran

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    6. Re:reality check by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Implicit or forced consent is still consent. Do you think North Korea would still exist if its whole population just rose up and fought the govt? Even if the govt would not get killed directly the whole infrastructure would collapse and be unusable.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    7. Re:reality check by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Mostly the consent is forced. There's not a local government in the world that wouldn't be overthrown by united effort of the people, but even if they did, the people of weaker countries like Iran and Pakistan live in practice under the governments of the great powers. The people can't give nor take away their consent to be governed by the foreign powers.

      Iranian democracy was destroyed in the Cold War by the CIA.

    8. Re:reality check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that Iran is a democracy right?

      Only if you think a country can be a democracy without freedom of speech or the press. You really think a country where you can be arrested for listening to the wrong news channel can count as a democracy?

      http://www.rsf.org/country-43.php3?id_mot=92

    9. Re:reality check by level_headed_midwest · · Score: 1

      Yes, and China is a republic. Why else would they call it the People's Republic of China?

      --
      Just "gittin-r-done," day after day.
    10. Re:reality check by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      Fiji? (I kid about the last one.)

      I hope not - it hasn't exactly been a shining beacon of democracy in the last couple of years. But maybe there would be some merit in putting the Clinton/Bush/Kennedy families into the Great Council of Chiefs and keeping them out of the executive for a while.

  46. I think ... by Cyryathorn · · Score: 1

    I think, whenever someone resists arrest, the police should be all like, "well, I guess we have to let him go -- wouldn't want to do anything that could cause acute pain (for anyone's definition of 'acute') or has the possibility of resulting in death". Geez, what if the guy has blood clots in his leg and tackling him might cause an aneurysm? Best not take the chance.

    1. Re:I think ... by EaglemanBSA · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't that tasers are painful. The problem is controlling the humans who use the tasers, forcing them only to use them when appropriate . When a person wields that kind of power over another, significant implications exist for the probable outcome of use of force (see the Stanford Prison Experiment, it ought to at least make you say 'hmm').

      --
      Quiz: True or False -- On a scale of 1 to 10, what is your middle name?
  47. Herding cattle by roman_mir · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Utah cop tasers a guy without provocation and then lies about it.

    Robert Dziekanski died in Vancouver after senseless tasering by four cops. The Vancouver police department later lied about what happened.

    To me it looks like the pigs are using the tasers not as less-lethal instruments to be used against dangerous suspects instead of guns, but as whips are used to herd the cattle by a bunch of cowboys (or jackals, that's what it looked like in case of Dziekanski.)

    We are the cattle, and the pigs are the cowboys herding us. We are not human to them.

    I always saw cops as the force used by those in power to control the masses and not for public protection, now it is only more apparent.

    1. Re:Herding cattle by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 1
      Utah cop tasers a guy without provocation and then lies about it. ...

      That rogue cop seems retarded (the way he talks etc.) ... One can still hope that the sorry state of the US will be fixed some day, at least the fact that such incidents have to be recorded is a silver lining on the horizon.

      --
      "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
    2. Re:Herding cattle by stewbacca · · Score: 1
      Getting yourself arrested for refusing to sign a traffic ticket is pretty stupid (on both guys' part). But I'll be damned if I ever let myself get tased just because I'm too pig-headed to admit I was doing 60 in a 40 zone. That's what, an $80 ticket? Pay your stupid ticket fool, or let the rest of us watch you eat pavement over and over again on the 'net.

      Incidentally, I hope they go after the cop and ruin his life. What a freakin' prick.

  48. Meaningless numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three men ... died from after tasering... a Polish man died... after being tasered... 17 deaths... following the use of Tasers... 275 deaths... Taser... a contributing factor in more than 30 of those deaths.

    All of which, to anyone remotely competent at statistical analysis means... absolutely nothing.

    If you need to ask why, you aren't competent to enter into this debate, and the public interest would be served if you would shut up.

    This, mind, from someone who believes tasers are not an appropriate policing tool because they encourage the "shoot first, make up a lame excuse that will be accepted by the lying bastards pretending to investigate the incident later" attitude that is already far too prevalent amongst police.

    But the fact is that citing death rates post-tasering is not an argument against their use, nor is it even a premise an argument against their use unless other premises include statements of fact regarding the death rate in comparable situations where tasers were not used. Unfortunately gathering actual data and doing real analysis rather than citing meaningless numbers that inflame the ignorant looks too much like work, so the public debate on this issue is basically dead in the water from the word go.

    On the one side we have ignorant idiots, who are so completely moronic that they believe that citing death rates post-tasering constitutes an argument against tasering, and on the other hand we have amoral corporate shills and self-righteous police departments who will do and say anything to protect their revenue stream and power, respectively.

    1. Re:Meaningless numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no need to find causation when there are plenty of videos of entire incidents on you-tube where people die after being stunned by tasers when there were more than enough police officers present to subdue the person while at the same time in my estimation there was no credible threat to the arresting officers.

      It is unecessary to relate deaths to use of tasers. It is only necessary to show that an avoidable use of the taser occured weather the person would have died or not makes little difference.

      Tasers are nothing more than tools and as such should not be banned, very few here are pushing for an outright ban. Its the seemingly unnecessary gratuitous use thats at the heart of the issue.

      IMHO there needs to be some mechanism put in place by the LEA community to push back against understandable pressures for unecessary gratuitous use of this tool before unhelpful political sentiments and negative public opinion cause more problem for LEA communities than ignoring the issue and pretending all is well solves.

  49. The UN by nurb432 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Needs to keep their noses out of a sovereign nation's business. This move towards a one world government is really scary, and offensive.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps. But they're not the only ones.

    2. Re:The UN by Faylone · · Score: 1

      As long as that sovereign nation is the United States, of course.

    3. Re:The UN by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Fair enough. Please pass that message onto the government of the United States of America also. Much appreciated.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    4. Re:The UN by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      I would be a hypocrite if i agreed with you.

      The UN should exist as a non binding arbitrary between nations ( we don't all agree all the time ), and to facilitate 'group' projects sponsored by member nations. Nothing more.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  50. Why tasers are bad by realdodgeman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Tasers are supposed to be a replacement for guns. Instead is has become a replacement for "Stop!". I have seen videos of people been tased several times for not being able to show a drivers license. The US has become a weapon-loving country. Both the public and the police love guns. Here in Norway police don't even carry guns unless there is a case where the suspect has a gun or other equally dangerous weapon. We can keep it like this because most people don't have access to guns, and if they do it is mostly shotguns or rifles for hunting. We also have the lowest crime rate in the world here. Now don't come complaining about how we are a smaller country, because it doesn't matter (you could enforce it at a state level in the US). The biggest problem in the US now is that people are so used to having weapons, and of course that it is in the constitution (though people seem to have given up that anyway). Back on topic: Tasers would be okay if they are only used in dangerous situations (where people can get killed or seriously injured). But since they are not, it should be regulated if not banned.

    1. Re:Why tasers are bad by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      The US can do nothing about the guns on the street today. If you shut off legal sales of guns, you will have people smuggling them in.

      What would happen in Norway if someone was caught with a trunkfull of handguns? Would their boss make enough money from one day's sales that it wouldn't matter if the rest got confiscated? Or do you believe that it would be impossible to smuggle in a trunkful of handguns? How about a container load? With 300 million people there is a ready market for illegal sales of guns to at least five or ten million people. This means you can bring in a million handguns and sell them for $100 each and make $100,000,000 dollars. This level of money means gun control advocates are talking about a pointless and futile strategy.

      The US is not in control of the ports. It would be trivial to ship in a container load of illegal weapons and there isn't anything that can be done about it. There is just too much money to be made that way.

    2. Re:Why tasers are bad by photomonkey · · Score: 1

      There is nothing wrong with guns, or countries that have lots of guns. Keep in mind that firearms are inanimate hunks of metal that are given purpose by their user.

      The problem is that some Americans, and people of other nationalities as well, have a wild thirst for power but no honest means to obtain it. Therefore, they turn to threats and violence as a means of getting their way. This unchecked aggression leads to more aggression on the part of the would-be assailants as well as their victims (as caused by fear).

      If it weren't guns, it would be sharp, pointy sticks. As a person who's read a lot of history, I'd rather be shot than cleaved with a semi-sharp sword or dagger.

      --
      Message contains 1 attachment: spam.gif
  51. Taser abuse by JustNiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I think that using tasers can be a better idea than guns or nightsticks, you've only got to watch youtube videos and TV shows like Cops to see how much American police abuse their use.
    They seem far too quick to reach for the taser, and often use it as an immediate punishment for verbal non-compliance rather than to disable someone who is actually a physical threat.
    So much for free speech.
    They also regularly seem to shock the target continuously or multiple times sometimes rather than just administer enough to disable them.
    I think the US cops could learn a lot by working with the UK cops who often don't even carry weapons. They know how to deal with the same problems the US cops deal with, but by talking and using their heads instead of escalating the violence by attacking first.

    1. Re:Taser abuse by ScrewMaster · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      They know how to deal with the same problems the US cops deal with, but by talking and using their heads instead of escalating the violence by attacking first.

      Trust me, those UK cops wouldn't last ten seconds on the South Side of Chicago. I don't have a beef with cops going around armed, as long as they're trained in the use of those weapons, have to account for the use of their weapons, and suffer the consequences of any abuse they mete out.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Taser abuse by galadran · · Score: 2, Insightful

      UK cops are unarmed US cops are armed US cities have a far higher rate of crime than UK cities. Therefore the weapons cannot be said to have a positive impact on crime...

    3. Re:Taser abuse by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      I agree that the US police even with unlimited access to guns have already failed so badly to control some areas they have become no-go areas for unarmed anyone let alone policing (a sure sign in itself that just arming cops isn't a whole solution in itself).

      Anyway that can't be true for all areas of the US, so in those areas where it isn't true, the cops should be trained well enough so they don't loose control of the situation even without physically attacking non-threatening citizens.

    4. Re:Taser abuse by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      You're inferring cause and effect. The same as a lot of people here are doing with Tasers, for that matter. Helps to get the facts behind the situation, which does involve firearms but not in the way that you probably think. We have plenty of good research on the subject of firearms. So far as I know, we have nothing comparable when it comes to the use of Tasers.

      There are many reasons why a given society (or even a particular region within a given country) has a high crime rate. Most of those are economic: people with something to lose generally don't go around shooting up other people for fun and profit. People with nothing to lose, on the other hand ...

      When you look at the numbers, the defensive uses of firearms (which includes all the millions of times a weapon's mere presence ameliorates or prevents a violent confrontation) on the part of both law enforcement and private citizenry far outweigh the negative impact. Doesn't matter if you gun-control advocates think otherwise: facts speak for themselves and need no interpretation. Contrary to popular belief, the prime function of firearms in civilized cultures is not the launching of projectiles at people: it is the projection of fear.

      I don't own a gun (well, I have a BB pistol) but I accept that America would be much worse off if the government truly tried to completely remove them from the population. In some places that has happened, and the result was rarely what the local leaders expected, although it was predictable. The sheep does not, after all is said and done, hold its own well against the wolf.

      Everything we know about the psychological effects of firearms might be true with Tasers, I don't know. Probably not: if you're a physically healthy criminal capable of handling a Taser charge (particularly if you've already had the experience) you aren't going to be anywhere near as afraid of a good Tasering as you would be of a bullet. As a deterrent to violent crime a Taser is, by its very nature, less potent than a gun.

      I'm not really sure where gun control advocates draw the line. Some of them just don't want "We the People" to have guns, others seem to want guns removed from everyone's hands (as if that were possible.) If it were up the the latter crowd, the next logical step in the program would be to remove guns from the police, replacing them with Tasers or other "non-lethal" technologies: I suspect that will result in a lot more dead cops.

      Any way you slice this, treating a Taser like a watered-down police special is insufficient. Cops need to know when to use them, when not to use them, and when to just pull their guns. That all requires expensive training, and perhaps the powers-that-be have decided that a few dead citizens is a reasonable tradeoff for saving the bucks.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  52. The taser is the 21st century bullwhip. by johnnys · · Score: 1
    The taser is a weapon that causes severe and debilitating pain from a short range with no risk to the user and a low but genuine risk of death to the target.

    We've seen another weapon exactly like this before: It's called a bullwhip. Not the cool toy that Indiana Jones uses in the movies, but the brutal and vicious tool used by slavemasters to punish, abuse and control people since before written history. The only real difference between the taser and the bullwhip is that the taser is easier to use.

    Here's a question: How would YOU feel if the police in your country were issued bullwhips to use on citizens? Would you still think of your country as a stable and mature liberal democracy with a history of respect for freedom and with a respected and authoritative "Charter of Rights and Freedoms"?

    As a Canadian citizen, I'm appalled with what I saw in the video of the RCMP officers tasering the Polish immigrant in the video that was posted on the Internet: What the hell is wrong with a system that lets that happen?

    I call for an immediate and complete ban on all tasers in Canada outside of the military. NO tasers should be in the hands of any citizen, police officer. Any civilian, security guard or police officer found with a taser should be subject to the same penalty as anyone possessing an illegal handgun.

    --
    Sometimes the "writing on the wall" is blood spatter...
    1. Re:The taser is the 21st century bullwhip. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For every yuppy I see ask to ban tasers, I ask you to put yourself in their position. Here, in the case of the polish dude, was a guy with a heart condition, working himself into a fit, throwing computers and chairs and what not around. Then, when the cops try to arrest him, he puts up a fight.

      The alternative would be for them to either all jump him, or for one of them to asp him in the arm/collar bone/etc.

      Well, from tackling him you can break bones, crush ribs, break necks, not to forget positional asphyxiation.

      Then from the asp point of view, you can break bones, rupture arteries, etc...

      Let's face it, subduing a violent person is never safe. Ever. He could have died in any of the situations.

      That's not to say that some cops aren't abusing tasers. But we wouldn't argue they shouldn't have side arms would we? Even though cops have been convicted for abusing them in the past. Tasers are perfectly acceptable tools that help unwind situations with less than lethal force. All it requires is good aim and the right situation.

      But since we're against tasers, let's also remove the cuffs, batons, hand guns, and pepper spray. Because god forbid we interfere with the criminals god given right to cause mayhem...

      As a fellow Canadian, I prescribe you a pair of balls. Go to the local clinic and pick them up ASAP. People die in this world. Shit happens. And in the end, if the polish guy with a heart condition, wasn't going around getting all worked up, throwing shit around, he wouldn't have gotten tasered, and probably wouldn't have died that day. He has nobody to blame but himself, and he's dead now, so I think we're done.

    2. Re:The taser is the 21st century bullwhip. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      For every yuppy I see ask to ban tasers, I ask you to put yourself in their position. Here, in the case of the polish dude, was a guy with a heart condition, working himself into a fit, throwing computers and chairs and what not around. Then, when the cops try to arrest him, he puts up a fight.


      Perhaps you would be good enough to tell me at what point during the 29 seconds from the cops' arrival in the room and when they decided to zap him and stand on his neck that put up a fight.
      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:The taser is the 21st century bullwhip. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you see the entire clip where he was throwing shit around?

      I'm saying that working yourself into a fit is not good for your heart. That it only made things worse.

      And sure, they could have not used tasers. The alternative is brute force [literally] which is also dangerous. Which is why police are trained on how to restrain people [otherwise they could easily asphyxiate people].

      I'm not saying the police acted perfectly [and honestly from the video alone it's hard to see the entire situation], but the wholesale ban on tasers is just a thoughtless knee-jerk reaction. What you're not reading about is for the two dozen people who have died from tasers, thousands more [if not more] have survived and were subdued successfully.

      I mean you need to see the bigger picture. Using this logic ... 20 people died last year as a result of their seat belts crushing internal organs. Therefore, seat belts are dangerous. Similarly, 1000s of people drowned last year, therefore, H20 is suspect as well. etc, etc, etc.

      Yes, they should [and I think do] receive training on when/how to use the taser. Yeah there are rogue cops would like to play tough guy. Yes, they should be punished.

      But totally banning what is decidedly less lethal [and permanent for most] than bullets and the batton, is just ludicrous.

    4. Re:The taser is the 21st century bullwhip. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Since you are also claiming that tasers save lives, please provide full citations to independent studies that show they do. In the absense of that, be good enough to admit you're just making this up, or aping the claims of the cops.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  53. Shocking! by Ngarrang · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, let me get this straight. Incurring a sudden electrical shock in the human body, a system that is a delicate balance of electric current, can harm the body. Got it.

    --
    Bearded Dragon
  54. Shocking news! by TheMiddleRoad · · Score: 1

    I'm electrified by this story.

  55. Papers, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would say all of you need to take a ride in a hard suburb where cops risk theirs lives every day, and maybe we might less retarded cop hate on the internet.


    I don't care a whit for the temporal safety of police officers. They knew they were risking their lives when they signed up. What I do care about is citizens being free to go about their business without having to explain themselves or get searched because they look a little odd. The police will take things from your person without your consent, beat you, search your car, then lie on the report, just because they're paying child support to their two ex-wives and are angry at the world. That tape from the hood of the car? There's no reason it can't get lost. The judge will always rule in their cops' favour because they had a reasonable suspicion, and if you spend a few thousand dollars to go to appellate court, you MIGHT get some recourse. Hope you have a witness, and try not to ever jaywalk again.

    My opinion is that there should be no protected class of people in whose presence your hands must be visible at all times, and whom it is a great offense to even touch. I take great exception to the idea that anyone should be allowed to stop me on the street at night and demand my wallet and weapons, as to let the peasants have weapons would create a threat to the social order. I have known cops to give law-abiding people a hard time because they had long hair, because they were skateboarding, because they were carrying a bag, and, yes, because they were black. Some of the cops who get away with this stuff are my personal friends. Many Americans have perfectly legitimate reasons to hate cops, and while my experiences have not led me to conclude that there should be no law enforcement, current police authority is overreaching. Those with power will always be insensitive to the humanity of those "below" them, but we shouldn't have this powerful, completely corrupt system backing them up.
    1. Re:Papers, please by dosius · · Score: 1

      They give people a hard time for being transgender in Niagara Falls. The nail that sticks up gets beaten down, as they say.

      -uso.

      --
      What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
    2. Re:Papers, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hope you have a witness, and try not to ever jaywalk again. I can do you one better... I knew a woman who blew off a cop who was hitting on her one night, and not long afterwards he stopped her and ticketed her for walking down the sidewalk on the wrong side of the street. Fortunately he didn't last long on the local force. Unfortunately he moved on to become chief of police somewhere else. And, in what I can only assume was divine justice, he then quickly went insane and got himself locked up.

      From the way it was explained, with the scene she made at the time, she would probably have been gotten a couple jolts from a taser if it happened today.

      And before anyone makes any accusations, I don't mean to paint all cops negatively... Hell, I personally watched one rush into a burning building (my house), against direct orders, because he knew there was a cat inside and he wanted to save it. I've thrown a party out in the middle of nowhere, had the sheriff show up, and basically say "I'm sure there's underage drinking going on here, I'm sure there's drugs. But hell, I don't want to ruin someone's birthday - so, am I going to have to bust this up, or are you going to give me your word that you aren't going to let anyone drive out of here until they're sober?". Unfortunately, these kinds of things are becoming increasingly rare... And even the good cops typically cover up for the bad ones. *sigh*
    3. Re:Papers, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't mean to paint all cops negatively... Hell, I personally watched one [do something], against direct orders...

      had the sheriff show up, and basically say "I'm sure there's underage drinking going on here, I'm sure there's drugs. But hell, I don't want to [do my job and arrest the lawbreakers]...

      Umm, you're not helping your case...

    4. Re:Papers, please by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Your utter lack of concern for the safety the police officers is exactly what created the things you dispise about police authority.

      Self-fufilling idiocy is what I call it. Enjoy the reactionary police state you are creating.

      Oh and this statement "Many Americans have perfectly legitimate reasons to hate cops" is just downright moronic. I have been mugged 4 times in my life. Every time I was mugged it was by a black person. Does that mean I should hate every black person I meet from now on? Wait, dont answer that. Let me keep my innocnet hope and optimism.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
  56. Not THAT bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've long advocated the use of the "comfy chair".

    Seriously, the US Army requires that every MP gets Tasered once to see what it feels like during training. It's disconcerting but not unbearable. The alternative, beating people into submission isn't that great...

  57. Alternative! by khasim · · Score: 1

    The taser is a "non-lethal" ALTERNATIVE to deadly force.

    That means that the situation MUST be evaluated to see if the cop would be just as justified in shooting the person.

    If three cops are holding down a guy and a 4th cop puts a bullet in the guy, would that be "justified"? Not for most people.

    And that is the problem. The situations are "evaluated" to see if a taser was "justified" when they SHOULD be evaluated to see if shooting the guy was justified.

    1. Re:Alternative! by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I don't know. When you are struggling with and nearly holding your own against three cops, I am hard pressed to criticizing them for tasing him the first time. At some point you have to consider that there is a possibility of serious bodily harm to the officers whether or not the suspect is armed.

      But the second time is needless and senseless.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:Alternative! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I buried a friend who got shot by the shitbag after Gus tazed him once. The second tazing is justified. If my buddy had tazed him again before patting him down, he'd be alive.

  58. The link isn't of consequence but the facts are! by postbigbang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It doesn't matter if it's on YouTube or LiveLeak or wherever. The citations that can be made for improper use of tasers are many. They've become an unfortunate and easy and deadly choice.

    I understand that police officers are confronted with hell and tough choices, but they have to make the proper ones, and tasers ought to be a very last resort, not one that simply allows a cheap way out of a potentially hostile situation. I feel for peace officers, but tasers remove the peace from the officer at the increasing cost of lives that shouldn't have been taken under the circumstances. That poor Polish immigrant in Vancouver-- he didn't deserve to die. It granted judge-jury-executioner status to the mounties at Vancouver Airport. They are none of those. It's abhorrent.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  59. If you really need to subdue somebody by mousse-man · · Score: 1

    ...use rattan. A good old rattan cane, backed up by a solid baton. I've once seen somebody who's been caned for multiple extremely stupid traffic offenses, and believe me - after strike 1 - you ARE out of commission. And the pain is disabling, IMHO everything you need.

    Tasers should be the replacement for using a handgun on the suspect's legs.

    If that doesn't work - get a well-trained dog that will grab the suspect by his family jewels without biting them off - instant compliance, across every cultural circle.

  60. Let's look at the makeup of this committee by kaufmanmoore · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Let's see who some of the members of this committee are who are telling the world about what's torture:

    Egypt
    Senegal
    China
    Cyprus

    I guess these countries don't engage in any torture

    1. Re:Let's look at the makeup of this committee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative


      Let's see who some of the members of this committee are who are telling the world about what's torture:

      Egypt
      Senegal
      China
      Cyprus

      I guess these countries don't engage in any torture


      Egypt and China: fair enough, but the other two?

      From the 2006 State Department report on human rights:

      Senegal. The government generally respected citizens' rights; however, there were problems in some areas.

      Cyprus. The government generally respected the human rights of its citizens; however, there were problems in some areas.

      Not quite the same as:

      Egypt. The government's respect for human rights remained poor, and serious abuses continued in many areas.

      or

      China. Although the constitution asserts that "the state respects and preserves human rights," the government's human rights record remained poor, and in certain areas deteriorated.

      I wonder what the report would say about the US if it weren't written by Americans...

    2. Re:Let's look at the makeup of this committee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that's the thing you see, they have EXPERIENCE. (To be fair, cyprus refers to the southern part of the island, which as far as I know hasn't had all that many torture allegations against it)

    3. Re:Let's look at the makeup of this committee by Oriumpor · · Score: 1

      Well if anybody would know they would.

  61. Is gratuitous use of pepper spray by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    any less of a form of torture than tasers?

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Is gratuitous use of pepper spray by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      any less of a form of torture than tasers? Pepper flies every which way, you'd need to wear a gas mask to use it as torture.
      AND you'd probably need to tie the subject down, or they'd just go and wash it off / cover their faces.

      With a taser, it's zap-o-matic paralyzing agony at the push of a button. A point and click pain interface, if you will.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Is gratuitous use of pepper spray by caller9 · · Score: 1

      It's also over after max 7 seconds, with more doses possible if it didn't hurt enough.

      Pepper spray gets on your skin, "washing it off" isn't as easy as you imply either. It makes it hard to breath and see for a prolonged period and effects everyone around the person. Its not like pepper spray hasn't killed or blinded people.

      I would rather be tasered than pepper sprayed. 7 seconds of intense pain, or 30-45 minutes of burning pain and inability to breathe or see properly with a possibility of being blind if applied improperly.

    3. Re:Is gratuitous use of pepper spray by kimvette · · Score: 1

      It's also over after max 7 seconds, .


      I don't believe it. Ever get jalepeno oil in your eyes while making dinner? I did just last week when I made some poppers. It hurt a LOT and I jumped in the shower and let the water run down my face while blinking for a good 15 minutes or so - wiped the water off my face with my hand, forgetting I hadn't scrubbed my hands yet, and repeated the process. It's not over after 7 seconds, and isn't pepper spray concentrated capsicum?
      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    4. Re:Is gratuitous use of pepper spray by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, GP is talking about tasing. You are both correct and in agreement.

  62. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by postbigbang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is time worth a life? Can you wait a minute, potentially diffuse a situation, and save someone from dying?

    Or is it: fuck it. Taser the sucker. I don't care if he/she croaks.

    I know what kind of peace officer I'm willing to pay for: a little patience in the face of hostility. Tough to do. Might take a little patience and/or courage.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  63. Yay violence by billcopc · · Score: 1

    The fun part in all this is that violence will only escalate.

    If the "less lethal" weapons are abused like this, the resistance will continue to grow ever more lethal as well. If we live in a society where cops are a threat, the result will be more dead cops because normal non-violent people suddenly need to be armed for self-defense.

    A man (or woman) needs no weapon to be deadly, even the weakest little person can kill with the proper technique. I think we need to take these bad toys away from today's infantile police force and go back to teaching them how to survive on the street: intimidation and hand-to-hand combat. Guns are great if you're a thug (or trying to solve the thug problem), but for everything else they're useless and more dangerous than the situation itself.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  64. Or by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 0

    Maybe the problem with batons is that they can cause permanent damage. You are trying to subdue someone and hit them, but crack their skull and cause permanent brain damage. Maybe the good police want tasers because it gives a less lethal means of subduing someone that is very rarely going to lead to serious injury or death. You are kidding yourself if you think classic techniques like submission holds aren't dangerous, they are, both to the person doing it and to the person it is being done on.

    What you forget is that there is a legit need for some means of subduing suspects. In most cases, the person is resisting a legitimate arrest. It isn't an option to say "Well they are fighting being arrested so we'd better just let them go," that would be a real bad idea. So you have to give the police some tools to use. Physical violence is a candidate but, as I said, it is dangerous. You screw it up, someone can end up injured for life.

    A taser is not without risk, but you run the numbers and it is pretty damn low risk. That's why it is seen as a good option.

    I know that some of the anti-government types would like to think that everyone who's being arrested is just a poor soul being picked on but really that is by far the exception. Unless you want to live in an anarchy (in which case I suggest you try an African nation who government has collapsed) you are going to have laws and those laws need to be enforced. Part of that enforcement means the police need to have the ability to arrest people, and to force the issue if people resist.

    1. Re:Or by FauxPasIII · · Score: 1

      Part of that enforcement means the police need to have the ability to arrest people, and to force the issue if people resist.

      That's perfectly fine, but we're talking about the situations when officers cross the line beyond necessary force to subdue. You can arm a law enforcement officer with a non-lethal weapon to use to subdue suspects, without condoning or allowing the same weapon to be used as an implement of torture.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    2. Re:Or by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      Maybe the problem with batons is that they can cause permanent damage. You are trying to subdue someone and hit them, but crack their skull and cause permanent brain damage. Maybe the good police want tasers because it gives a less lethal, means of subduing someone

      That's absolutely true, tasers are devices with a very valid purpose. Don't assume people criticizing how they're used are anarchist tree-huggers. Too many people and organizations do seem to forget what less lethal means -- it means they're still dangerous devices that should only be used when absolutely necessary. Firing a taser should be treated like firing a gun in terms of procedure -- in many places it would immediately remove the officer from the street while a civilian review board looks at the case. We've seen cases here in Texas where it was clear that the officers basically used the tasers as a form of entertainment because they were annoyed by someone talking back to them. A taser isn't meant to make up for a small penis.

      That said, I think you underestimate how many police and military organizations outside the first world genuinely do seek means to actively assault people without leaving evidence. It's not an accident that our friends in Central and South America switched to using electrical torture and other evidence-less means of persuasion in the 80s, when we wanted to support them but found images of mangled dissidents or dead relatives politically troublesome on the evening news. I suspect the UN is a little more concerned about how tasers and similar devices are used in those places than they are about how they're used in Akron, Ohio.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    3. Re:Or by Anzya · · Score: 1

      I know that some of the anti-government types would like to think that everyone who's being arrested is just a poor soul being picked on but really that is by far the exception. Just for the record I'm a socialist so I'm hardly anit-goverment _but_, I do live in the belief that it's better to risk letting some guilty persons get away with it than to hurt and/or incarserate an innocent. I belive that the police first step would be diplomacy and only if that fails use any type of physical force. I also belive that the police should not use physical force _unless_ they are being faced with physical force. Some one talking back is not a reason to zap anyone.

      I don't know if you have any siblings but lets imagine that you have sister who you're babysitting. As per mothers orders you tell her to go to bed at eight o clock but she refuses. How would your mother react if your sister complained that you punched her in the stomach to get her to comply? This might seem like a strong simile but both you and the police are put in place to protect someone who are weaker than you, needs to follow instructions, might not no the reason to why it is important to follow these instructions and to punch/tazer them might or might not lead to permanent damages.

      I belive that there are few at /. who don't think it is ok to use a tazer on a 200 pound dude with an ax. It's the other cases we are conserned about.
      --
      "This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (or STFU, for you un-hip people)."
    4. Re:Or by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well here's the ting: The cases of cops using tasers for minor things are the exception, not the rule. They are all you hear about because that is all that is news. You won't very well see a news story that goes "A suspect got violent with police today when they tried to arrest him, police tased him and he was arrested without further incident." However it is news (and should be) when a bad cop shocks someone with no good reason.

      What it comes down to is that saying no to being arrested isn't a legitimate answer, and in any society that wishes to have a rule of law, it can't be. The You can't hold people accountable to the law if you can't force them to submit to it, the first step being arrest. Certianly you first tell them they are under arrest and attempt to peacefully restrain them. However if they start fighting the police have to fight back. It can be a physical confrontation, trying to put the suspect in submission holds, hitting them with batons, fists, whatever, using chemical spray, using a taser, etc. Point is that is isn't an option to just say "Ok well they are fighting so let them go." Also it isn't as though just getting in a scuffle is safe. The suspect and be hurt, and so can the officer, especially if the suspect is larger and high on drugs (a number of drugs provide a near immunity to pain as well as a great deal of adrenaline).

      Just because someone isn't holding a deadly weapon doesn't mean they aren't a danger. In fact, in your axe scenario, the cop will have their gun out. It's past a taser at that point.

      A good number of cases where people are mad about taser usage, they really aren't thinking. The most recent example is the "Don't taze me bro," guy. That was an appropriate case to use a taser, or other means to help restrain the suspect. He had been told to leave, they attempted to escort him out, he then started attempting to run to the stage, they grabbed him and he started fighting. This is safe to no one. What happens if he manages to grab one of their guns? What happens if they decide to try and wrestle him down and end up choking him? Hence the use of a taser.

      A person is still a threat until they've been cuffed. Once their hands are under control, there's little of real danger they can do (and their legs can be cuffed if they start kicking). Trying to drag someone along who's flailing and struggling is asking for trouble. As such, they had good cause to tase the guy and get him subdued.

      A more apt analogy with the family would be if I told my sister to go to bed, she repeatedly refused, so I tried to escort her to her room, she fought back and started trying to hit me. Mom probably wouldn't have a problem if she got socked in that case.

      Even then there's no direct analogue since as I said: In a society with rule of law, the ability to hold people accountable to that law must exist. That must include arrest powers, and those powers need to be something you aren't able to refuse. If you don't have this, you cannot have a real rule of law since those who are willing and able to resist arrest will just operate outside the law. Force should never be the first option, but it must be an allowable one.

    5. Re:Or by Anzya · · Score: 1

      I totally agree with you, the cases we hear about the bad apples are not the norm just as the "what if a methed out drugger attacked you" cases not are the norm.

      I never said anything about letting someone go but I believe that you can make a situation worse by acting in a way above the need in the specific case. If not at that instance then maybe the next time something happens. There is a chance that you are reinforcing peoples fight instinct by giving the impression that they are getting hurt what ever they do. It doesn't matter what the actual norm for when a tazer is used is. The important thing is what people _feel_ will happen. Maybe we do need more reportings on when the police did use a tazer in good situations. If it's not good news then we need to find a way to minimize the events of bad usage and make sure that there are consequences of using it wrong. Or as you did in your post now explain why a seemingly bad usage might actually have been reasonable.

      I would think that a tazer would be good against someone with an ax. Guess it depends on the range the perpetrator appears but if he "appears" at an effective range of the tazer then it would be as good as gun. At longer ranges a gun may be more appropriate.

      I agree, the police needs to be able to do their jobs but it must also be possible to hold them responsible for their own actions.

      I think what we're disagreeing on is where the line for when force is acceptable should be drawned.

      Oh and I think your mom would be displeased with the both of you ;)

      --
      "This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (or STFU, for you un-hip people)."
  65. You are wrong taser breath by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    "This government does not torture people."

    --
    What?
  66. Well heck.. by 56ksucks · · Score: 1

    Why don't we just ask criminals nicely to surrender and stop their attempt to run away. We could use mean looks and stare at them angrily. If they don't comply we can repeat our request for them surrender and add the words "or else". Ever see the movie "Demolition Man"? We could even shine flash lights in their face. That'll stop them! I don't support cops tasing grandmothers in wheelchairs. However, I'm amazed at the liberal compassion for hard criminals. There's a reason why it's called law enforcement. They must be armed in a manner which will enable them to neutralize their aggressors, or they will be of no use. That might actually cause pain to the law breaker. But we can't let the man who just raped an 11 year old girl experience any pain while we try to stop him from running away, no, that would be torture.

    --

    ---- "Excuse me. Where's the children's gun section?"

  67. Good Rule from My Uncle Ken by Hangtime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a former deputy sheriff. Don't point a gun at something you don't mean to kill. In this case, a Taser is a GUN. The lack of regulation and procedures regarding their use is troubling. If the paperwork involved was half of what was needed after pulling a gun then the incidents of their use would go down.

    I believe a Taser is a safer and effective weapon, but should be respected just as much as a firearm when its drawn.

    1. Re:Good Rule from My Uncle Ken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point.

      It is a bit disappointing though that this even needs regulation.
      These people have brains, why don't they use them.

      I don't stick a fork into someones chest when I get yelled at or if I'm annoyed by someone.
      Yet forks aren't regulated:)

      If the amount of paperwork is the moral barrier preventing someone from using excessive violence, then we are living in said times...

      Steve

  68. Re:Alternative by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    See the recent case of the man who went into a diabetic coma and was subsequently tasered while lying helpless. Yes, that is unnecessary, but I am hard pressed to call that torture. I would think for reasonable torture to exist, some consciousness of the events, pain, or other consequences must exist. You can't torture someone in a coma by doing things that are not felt or perceived upon recovery from the coma.
    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  69. Tin foil-Juices. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How appropriate considering it's Thanksgiving.

  70. Well the question I would have by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Is not taser in relation to firearm, but taser in relation to other submission mechanisms, in particular the more class is submission holds, batons, etc. That's really what it comes down to: You are going to have situations where suspects will not cooperate. They aren't a situation where lethal force is called for, but nor is it an option to just let the person go. So what needs to be evaluated is how dangerous are tasers as opposed ot simply using physical violence, because that's the other option.

    Don't think for a minute that it isn't a risk, either. People can be permanently injured or killed when it is physical restraining methods use, both the suspect and the officer are at risk. So that's the real question: Is a taser safer than the alternative of using non-lethal force? Doesn't matter if it isn't 100% safe, if it is safer than the alternative, then it is the way to go.

  71. Been there, done that... by tech10171968 · · Score: 3, Informative

    As someone who used to work in law enforcement (San Diego 1993-1997) I think I may be able to shed a little light on the subject. You see, in the academy you're taught a concept called "escalation of force" (some instructors may also call it "the force ladder"). What this means is that there exists different levels of force, starting with Vocal (basically shouting "Police! Stop what you are doing, NOW!") and ending with deadly force (your firearm). Between those extremes you have varying and increasing levels of force (baton/PR-24/Asp; pepper spay or mace; etc). Usually you want to step into a situation using a level of force sufficient enough to stop whatever situation you're facing, and in many (but not all) cases this usually means going one level above the force being used against you or the person you're protecting (I know what some of you are going to say about that but remember - it's not the officer's job to have a fair fight, it's his job to STOP the fight in its tracks). One of the issues is that not all agencies arm their officers with all the less-than-lethal options available to them. This can be a real problem because, for example, you can easily have an encounter where you come in using the lowest level of force but the situation escalates (thereby requiring the officer to also increase the level of force he's using). You can already see where this is headed - the fewer less-than-lethal alternatives an officer has at his disposal, the more quickly he ends up pointing a gun at someone. If anything, someone should tell the UN that actually BANNING tasers would be inhumane. Also, as some other posters have already pointed out, it's not that tasers themselves are that bad; the real problem is that now we have officers badly misusing tasers. I believe if academies did more to emphasize APPROPIATE usage of tasers (much like they do with firearms) then their usage wouldn't be so controversial.

    --
    This space for rent!
    1. Re:Been there, done that... by heresyoftruth · · Score: 1

      I'm a psych student. The whole escalation of force thing is hard to understand as a tactic, when it's well known in psychology that if a person is in a heightened state of arousal, it's hard for them to process simple commands.

      It's always disturbed me to watch cops, when the police are escalating the level of force by yelling, and pulling weapons. Even an introductory cognitive psych class, or social psych class, will point out that people reliably have trouble when they are in a heightened state of arousal. (Like anxiety, fear, etc)

      Just to be clear, I have dealt with violent, unreasonable people. I have worked as a nurse for the last ten years, before going back to school, and we don't get to escalate things. We don't get to fight back when a patient hits us. I have been hit, bitten, kicked, and even dragged into a bed and had two ribs dislocated. I have even had scalpels brandished at me. (Hoo boy! That was tough!) I have never once hurt, or escalated a situation with my patients. That would be illegal. Even with dementia, or schizophrenia, I am more often than not been able to diffuse the situation. Escalating the level of force used, will only reliably cause the patient to completely wig the hell out.

      I guess, it's always shocking that what is taught in even the basics of nursing, and psychology, isn't being taught to the officers that need it most. Escalation is not really the best way to deal with folks in most situations.

      --
      Nothing hides evidence like a stew. -Gus Pratt
    2. Re:Been there, done that... by tech10171968 · · Score: 0

      Maybe you misunderstood: it isn't the cop who's doing the escalating. It's the person being dealt with who determine what level of force (if any) is to be used.

      --
      This space for rent!
    3. Re:Been there, done that... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you misunderstood: it isn't the cop who's doing the escalating.

      Say what? Of course it's the cop escalating. The OP specifically said cops are expected to "[use] a level of force sufficient enough to stop whatever situation you're facing", which apparently means "going one level above the force being used against you". That's escalation, by definition.

      The GP's point, which you apparently missed, was that such a tactic, of meeting violence with (greater) violence is useless when faced with someone experiencing a fear- or pain-induced adrenaline rush, as they will be incapable of judging the situation rationally. In fact, I'm betting they'll be more likely to go "one level above" the force being used by the cops in order to protect themselves (yay fight-or-fight instinct), which will trigger further escalation by the cops, etc.

  72. The real torture... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    touchy feely progressive that can make press releases is the real torture.

    It's easy to criticize tasers without proposing an alternative that doesn't include nightsticks, physical beating or guns.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  73. It's a control issue by lena_10326 · · Score: 1

    The definition of peace has been perverted to mean maintenance of subservience. You will obey or you will be put down. Circumstances be damned. Kneel or die.

    Everyone speaks about the risks our policemen endure, but no one talks about why they're enduring them in the first place. People are extremely fearful of police, and if you've had contact with the American variety then you know why. The reality is police manufacture incidents. What I mean by that is upon confronting you, they interpret your every reaction as guilt. In fact, there's generally a predetermination of guilt. You're placed in a position of proving your innocence. People respond to this in several ways; nervousness, fear, confusion, irritation, and a desire to flee.

    So why are people fearful? Because police often misinterpret minuscule movements and black objects as instant threats. There is no reasoning, no respectful requests; there is only your submission. If you're unfortunate in that you're misinterpreted as a threat, police will unload their clips on you. You will die. Knowing this, the natural instinct for citizens is to flee, which causes police to initiate maneuvers to contain and bind you. The taser is their tool for speeding up this process.

    It does not matter what the situation is or your age or your location. They could be questioning you simply to harass you, because you're suspicious, or because you're engaging in a crime. All are considered equivalent scenarios requiring your 100% submission.

    So what do we have then? We have a tool--the taser--that operates as a population control device, which is sad in my opinion because freedom of movement as well as freedom from overbearing government officials that dictate your innocence or guilt on the spot is exactly what the forefathers had escaped from. Of course it's really our fault. Enacting a law for everything only empowers them and disarms us because at any given moment we're all likely to be violating at least one of those laws, thus giving police vindication and morale grounds for your interrogation.

    --
    Camping on quad since 1996.
  74. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by doxology · · Score: 1

    Exactly,but why even bother with tasers? Just shoot the bastards. Or better yet, bomb the building. How's that for expediency?

    --
    sigfault. core dumped.
  75. plenty of qualms by m2943 · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure what you're trying to imply, but the US doesn't have a good track record on the issue of land mines.

    The UN, in fact, has tried to ban land mines. The fact that some mine types aren't included in the Ottawa treaty is a political compromise to get at least the worst kind of mines banned. But the US didn't even sign that compromise and continues to manufacture mines.

    But, no, land mines aren't "torture", they are something even worse: they are designed to permanently disable and kill.

  76. Back to Bulletts and Clubs by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

    Since Tasers are torture I guess the police have to go back to using clubs and guns as their only weapons.

    --
    If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
  77. Tasers by dorix · · Score: 1

    If tasers are outlawed...
    only outlaws will have tasers.

  78. Tasers are inherent torture? I dont think so by hcmtnbiker · · Score: 1

    Basically what it comes down to is how they are used. If you can't subdue someone any other way then it obviously isn't torture. If you believe it's the only way to subdue someone without causing serious harm to an officer, bystandards or themselves, then it doesn't constitute as torture. If someone is caught j-walking and the police immediately pull out a taser and zaps him, following it up with a few more zaps as he asks "what the hell was that for?" then you could consider that torture. But trying to say that all taser incidents are obvious forms of torture is crazy since they cause no significant/life-threatening/terminal harm to someone who is in good physical shape and if used in the correct instances. Just because something isn't a magical way of fixing a problem you have doesn't mean it isn't a better way to handle it. If used correctly tasers are some of the most useful tools at the disposal of law enforcement. Anything can be used incorrectly, and in a way that would constitute it as torture, for example; beating the shit out of someone with a nightstick when they had started to follow your orders after the first hit. Tasers are no more inherently a device of torture then anything else.

    --
    If i had one dollar for every brain you dont have, i would have $1.
  79. That's where the problem starts. by khasim · · Score: 1

    I don't know. When you are struggling with and nearly holding your own against three cops, I am hard pressed to criticizing them for tasing him the first time. At some point you have to consider that there is a possibility of serious bodily harm to the officers whether or not the suspect is armed.

    What you are describing is a "force multiplier". One cop + one taser = 2 cops (effectively).

    When you start to see a taser as a way to effectively simulate more cops on the scene is where the problem starts. At that point it becomes easy to justify any usage of the taser.

    The standard should be whether the cop would be justified using a gun instead of a taser. And the cops should be held accountable for using a taser as he would for using a gun.

    Otherwise, the cops will be justified for using a taser on any person for any reason. Just as we are seeing now.
    1. Re:That's where the problem starts. by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand my point. It isn't a matter of force multiplier at all.

      Instead, when you are having these sorts of issues, you start to have to worry about physical injury to the police officer. Being unarmed does not necessarily mean not posing a threat to serious bodily injury (which is where I would draw the line regarding tasing). I don't care if it is one cop-- if the cop is in reasonable danger of serious injury, the tasing is justified. Yes, this is a lower barrier than I would put on lethal force, but I think it is reasonable. It also draws a line which cuts off most of the cases of abuse, and it is something which can be reasonably reviewed (would a reasonable cop believed there was an imminent danger of physical injury?).

      Hence tasing is justified in the case of imminent physical threat. It is not justified merely by the act of resisting but by someone who is strong enough to pose a physical danger to the police.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  80. You guys are playing right into Bush's hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Bush administration is narrowing the definition of torture so that they can torture people without it being torture. The UN and the highly modded commenters here are expanding the definition so far that torture loses most, if not nearly all, of its stigma. The end result is the same. Therefore Slashdotters and the UN are really the Bush Administration's best friends vis-a-vis torture.

  81. Tasers are for special purposes by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    That means that the situation MUST be evaluated to see if the cop would be just as justified in shooting the person.

    Not exactly. If a cop would be justified in shooting the person, then the cop should shoot the person for the cop's own safety.

    Tasers are for cases when, for example, you have a small (e.g. female) cop who needs to take down a guy who is unarmed but huge (and the guy is drunk and won't come peacefully, etc.). Another example would be when a guy is waving a knife around, threatening to kill himself, and the cop reasonably thinks he'll really do it. In both cases, the cop wouldn't really be justified in shooting the person, but would put himself in danger of physical harm to tackle the person.

    Every use of a taser should require the officer to file a use-of-force report, and these reports should be scrutinized. From what I understand, this is already done in some jurisdictions in Canada.

    1. Re:Tasers are for special purposes by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      here in australia just pulling out the pepper spray is a 2 page report ( my buddy is a cop ).

      cops have plenty of paper work for everything alread

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  82. Ever hear of liability? by dammy · · Score: 0

    Let's set this straight. If you take away stun guns from law enforcement, that leaves them with:

    1. OC (pepper) spray. I have never been in so much pain in my life and it lasted a hell of alot longer then a stun. People have died from this too. Then there is the back spray issue or accidental exposure to non-combatants from the OC cloud drifting away. Got any idea on what ten or so people going to the hospital for breathing issues is going to cost a dept?

    2. Impact weapons. Good old T-handle or my favorite, expandable batton (Asp). Broken bones? Sure. Accidental skull fractures or death because the idiot try to dodge his way out of a arm hit, not a problem.

    3. Hand to hand. Now your talking a good chance an officer of getting injured or worse if there is a gun take away. Back in the old days when LEOs were all former military and females were metermaids, slugging it out may have been acceptable, but not today. So you have to worry about officer safety, life long disability checks would suck for a small dept.

    Today the courts will ask, "was it reasonable and prudent to use x while you could have used z isntead"?

  83. I have been tasered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. I bought one, and asked a friend of mine to taser me so I would know how it felt. Just a second or so, and it was really effective, it hurt, and it left burns in my skin that my clothing rubbed into small open wounds. I don't regret it.

    I've seen the videos of the cops using them over and over and for extended time.

    Yes, what they are doing is torture. Just like beating someone over the head with a billy club repeatedly.

  84. How ironic, cookies are a torture device too by Doug52392 · · Score: 0

    About a month ago, I heard on the news a teenager was arrested for using a cookie as a torture device. http://www6.comcast.net/news/articles/national/2007/11/07/Cookie.Torture/

  85. So if a Taser is Bad... by johnshirley · · Score: 1

    ...then they'll be really pissed off about my 40 S&W, 10mm, 38 Special, 357, 20-gauge shotshells, and the shit-load of "underpowered" 22LRs that I have squirreled away. I'd like a taser, but as a one-shot defensive weapon, the odds of using one to stop an attack of some psychopath are pretty low. Give me a concealed handgun with a couple of 16-round magazines to balance the odds against the psychotic animal attacking my family.

    1. Re:So if a Taser is Bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are there a lot of psychopaths roaming around looking to attack your family in your neighborhood? Where do you live? I'm genuinely curious as my approach to protecting my family is to try avoiding areas where that sort of dynamic is playing out. Thanks.

    2. Re:So if a Taser is Bad... by SagSaw · · Score: 1

      Give me a concealed handgun with a couple of 16-round magazines to balance the odds against the psychotic animal attacking my family.

      IMHO, tazers being used instead of lethal force is a great idea. Tazers being used so that the police can avoid chasing down a subject or to force compliance in a subject who is passively resisting arrest is a problem, since there is risk that the tazer will cause death. If lethal force was not justified and use of a "less-lethal" weapon results in a subject's death, I see no reason why the officer should not be held responsible.

      --
      Come test your mettle in the world of Alter Aeon!
    3. Re:So if a Taser is Bad... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      I'm less pissed about the handgun. At least you know that anyone who you use it on is likely to be killed, and if you use it without VERY good justification, you'll be brought up on charges of manslaughter or murder. With a Taser, since it's perceived as non-lethal and doesn't leave long-lasting marks on the body, you'll be much less sparing in using it.

      -b.

  86. Unfortunately.. by DigitAl56K · · Score: 1

    ... that's not the choice in many cases where tasers are actually used. Countless YouTube videos prove it, and those were just the incidents caught on film.

  87. if by "in depth article" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    It's a lack of training. Any cop that can't wrestle a belligerent unermed suspect to the groud without a taser is a pussy.

    Learn some jujutsu-- It's only been around for the last hundered years.

    1. Re:if by "in depth article" by JPriest · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Wrestling down a suspect may be easy, but wrestling a suspect and not letting them grab the gun/tazer etc. from your belt might not be as easy.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    2. Re:if by "in depth article" by trianglman · · Score: 1

      So is this an argument for not carrying those weapons, or that those weapons should be the first line of defense to prevent them from falling into the wrong hands?

      --
      Clones are people two.
    3. Re:if by "in depth article" by JPriest · · Score: 2, Informative

      Neither. If it were a simple problem to solve we wouldn't be talking about it. You can't not arm the police (well not all of them) because they would be out-gunned, and you can't ask armed policemen with 20lbs of gear to go hand to hand 1 on 1 with every idiot that is resisting arrest. There are no cut and dry policies to resolve the situation. There are policies in place now dealing with use of "non lethal" force, but the police are not following them. When someone is pinned down under 6 police officers but is still trying to wiggle around, it does not warrant the use of a tazer.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    4. Re:if by "in depth article" by towermac · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "... and you can't ask armed policemen with 20lbs of gear to go hand to hand 1 on 1 with every idiot that is resisting arrest. "

      that's exactly what I want them to do. We got in this mess by letting 90lb blondes become police officers. Her only option is to tase or shoot you

    5. Re:if by "in depth article" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "When someone is pinned down under 6 police officers but is still trying to wiggle around, it does not warrant the use of a tazer."

      Then this is precisely what they should be doing in the first place. Patrol in groups and you won't ever have to go 1 on 1 with anyone. One fool with a knife is no match for six cops. If the criminals have greater numbers, call for backup -- the answer can always be superior numbers, up to the point when the bad guys start shooting and you call in the SWAT team to shoot back. Actual murderers are by far the exception rather than the rule and passing out lethal weapons like candy "just in case" rather than treating the special circumstances as such generate, as demonstrated, a series of fatal accidents waiting to happen.

    6. Re:if by "in depth article" by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      When someone is pinned down under 6 police officers but is still trying to wiggle around, it does not warrant the use of a tazer.

      You'd rather the suspect asphyxiate? Figure 150 pounds per officer, that's 900 pounds on top. Actually, 150 pounds is light, I could see 1200 pounds easy. Of course, they won't all be on the chest area, but I think you might get the point.

      I've seen videos of people resisting. I'm not sure that a taser wouldn't be the lesser injuring option.

      A single quick shock - and while the suspect has lost the control of his limbs, grab them and finish putting the cuffs on.

      From the deaths I've heard about, they all involved multiple shocks.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    7. Re:if by "in depth article" by DJCacophony · · Score: 1

      One fool with a knife, about to attack somebody, is exactly when the taser should be used. Tasers should have the exact same rules of engagement as handguns. They were supposed to provide an alternative to handguns, not an alternative to a lazy fat cop not wanting to do work. I encourage anybody who was tased when they weren't presenting an imminent, life-ending threat to sue their respective police agencies for as much as they can. Hopefully the agencies will get a fucking clue and start using them right.

      --
      Slow Down, Cowboy! It's been 60 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment.
    8. Re:if by "in depth article" by uncqual · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "one fool with a knife" (especially one who turns out to be on meth) may eventually be subdued by six officers. However, one of those police officers may not go home to their family that night (or, perhaps ever again). Knife wounds can be very lethal and can be inflicted in the initial stage of combat before the suspect is under control. Being a police officer is a job (and, not a great paying one at that). A police officer has no obligation to put themselves at substantial risk of dying just to make life more comfortable for a "fool with a knife". A police officer who stays "on the street" in a high crime area in the United States for 25 years can't take much risk on each encounter or the odds are that they will die "on the job" since they may encounter a situation where, without a tazer, they would need to engage in physical combat with "fools with knives" a few times each year (esp. as the bad guys figured out that the risk of being tazered or shot if they threatened officers with knives was minimal). Deciding to be a police officer should not be a "death sentence". We spend a lot of effort to protect workers in other hazardous jobs, police officers deserve the same.

      As well, even if six officers attempt to subdue a suspect with a knife instead of tazering them, some percentage of those suspects will be injured or killed by accident also (ranging from broken bones, paralysis, or death by various means - esp. if the suspect has a medical weakness of some sort).

      The notion that police can travel in "packs" of six in case it's necessary to detain a belligernet individual is absurd. Note that when someone is pulled over for a traffic stop and pulls out a knife, the officer in the car doesn't have time to call for backup - (s)he's got to deal with the knife now if the suspect is coming closer to them because backup is minutes away, the suspect is one or two seconds away at most. The notion that, for example, the California Highway Patrol can/should stop having one-person cars and instead have (perhaps?) minivans full of six officers is not cost effective and will result in a reduced ability to respond to situations such as a report of a drunk driver OR about six times the cost of labor.

      It seems fairly rare that someone gets tazered when they are following an officer's instructions. Also, I suspect it's rare that being belligerent or threatening an officer actually makes one less likely to be arrested or detained. Hence, it's just stupid to be belligerent or threatening to an officer. There are obviously excesses here and there, but in the vast majority of the tazer cases I've heard of, the recipient worked pretty hard to get tazered.

      Note that I'm not defending all uses of tazers (it's hard to imagine, for example, why a handcuffed suspect should be tazered) and policies, training, and disciplinary action should control the use of tazers a bit more than they are now.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    9. Re:if by "in depth article" by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      If the situation calls for a gun, then no other tool will fit the bill. If you can solve the situation without a gun, then you didn't need the gun in the first place. By definition, taser's will ALWAYS have loose ROE compared to guns.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    10. Re:if by "in depth article" by DJCacophony · · Score: 1

      If the situation calls for a gun, then no other tool will fit the bill.

      Your argument is wrong from the very first situation. If a situation calls for immediately stopping somebody who presents an imminent threat, a gun and a taser will do equally well. Except the taser will probably stop the suspect sooner and has less of a chance of killing him.

      --
      Slow Down, Cowboy! It's been 60 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment.
    11. Re:if by "in depth article" by Brickwall · · Score: 1
      It's a lack of training. Any cop that can't wrestle a belligerent unermed suspect to the groud without a taser is a pussy.

      The truth in the Vancouver case is even worse - FOUR burly cops against a middle-aged man armed with a small table. They tased him approximately 30 seconds after they entered the room. They didn't even make an attempt to negotiate with him (though, given that he didn't speak English, that probably wouldn't have worked).

      There's now an official police inquiry; my bet is it will be a complete whitewash.

      --
      What was once true, is no longer so
    12. Re:if by "in depth article" by Brickwall · · Score: 1
      It seems fairly rare that someone gets tazered when they are following an officer's instructions. Also, I suspect it's rare that being belligerent or threatening an officer actually makes one less likely to be arrested or detained. Hence, it's just stupid to be belligerent or threatening to an officer. There are obviously excesses here and there, but in the vast majority of the tazer cases I've heard of, the recipient worked pretty hard to get tazered.

      Um, have you actually read the details of the Vancouver case? Four policemen, one middle-aged man armed not with a knife, but a small table. He was hit with the taser less than 30 seconds after they entered the room. He must have worked really hard to get it.

      And I call shenanigans on your statement that police officers are likely to "die on the job". Only 60 police officers were shot in the US last year, out of more than 700,000 state and local police (I'm not including federal police.) That's a rate of 0.1%. Meanwhile, there were more than 500 work related deaths in the 800,000+ agricultural workers. You're more than 8 times as likely to "die on the job" as a farmer than you are as a police officer. And I say that with all due respect for the police officers who give their lives to protect us, and with all sympathy for their families.

      --
      What was once true, is no longer so
    13. Re:if by "in depth article" by uncqual · · Score: 1

      I was responding more generally to the notion that tazers are inappropriate because officers should respond in teams (apparently in teams of six) and wrestle knife wielding "fools" to the ground instead of using a tazer.

      As I noted, there are tazer abuses and, perhaps, the Vancouver case is an example of this. I would not presume to have an opinion on this specific case without seeing at least a detailed impartial analysis and the evidence (and maybe even then I would conclude that there was insufficient reliable information to form a firm opinion). Certainly, however, I could not form an opinion based solely on the fact that (1) the weapon was a table and (2) the tazer was used less then 30 seconds after the initial threat. For example, if the middle aged man was in good shape (or appeared to be anything but feeble - police actually don't have a chance to administer strength tests and EKGs to a suspect before responding to a physical threat by the suspect), the attack was in a narrow hallway where only one officer could access the suspect, and the suspect was swinging the table vigorously while approaching the officer rapidly, the use of a tazer might be completely appropriate.

      I never claimed that police officers are "likely to die" on the job. I asserted that police should be able to pursue a lifelong career "on the street" with an expectation that they will have a very small chance of dying on the job and that expecting police to engage in hand-to-hand combat with a knife wielding "fool" instead of using a tazer (or, I suppose, just killing the person since if a tazer is unavailable, that's the realistic option) is inconsistent with that expectation. And, yes, I would believe that swinging a table at police in an threatening manner in an enclosed area at close range is working pretty hard to evoke a response from the police that is sufficient to stop that behavior without putting a police officer at substantial risk of personal injury.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    14. Re:if by "in depth article" by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      But how often are tazers used only once? Even Andrew Myers was given multiple shocks and he was already in police custody at the time.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    15. Re:if by "in depth article" by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      If the taser will do the job better and faster then the gun is not required for the situation. The first rule of gun usage is that if you draw your gun, it's because whatever you are drawing on needs to die. If you don't intend to kill, you shouldn't draw a gun. Like I said, by definition, a taser will always have a lower level of force usage than a gun.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    16. Re:if by "in depth article" by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      You know, I'd like to see a study on that. I do know that all the fatalities I've heard about were with multiple/long shocks. I also know that there have been fatalities from more 'traditional' arrest methods - to include asphyxiation.

      I'm pretty sure we only hear about the problems and abuses - making them seem more common than they actually are.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  88. Tasers violate the Convention Against Torture... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but guns don't? WTF?

  89. Re:Alternative by Faylone · · Score: 1

    consequences like death?

  90. No Pleasing Some People by steve_thatguy · · Score: 1

    This is very close to a no-win situation. You try to prevent killing people by providing tasers as an alternative to guns. In my opinion, that's perfectly valid and how it should be. Then cops overuse and abuse their power since the taser won't actually kill their target. I think we're all in agreement that sucks. So which is worse? Only offering cops the option of lethal force which they'll be more hesitant to use but will cause near-certain death when it is used or offering cops an option that they'll abuse and will harm a lot more people but (theoretically) kill or maim none? Obviously the ideal situation is that cops get more and better training and take using the taser more seriously. That said you're never going to prevent 100% of abuse of a situation like that, and it's going to get significantly worse as long as cops are underpaid and tend to attract the type of people who shouldn't be cops in the first place (policemen, firemen, and military are the three most likely professions for an abusive husband/boyfriend). In an ideal situation police officers and teachers should be some of the highest paying professions so that they attract the best candidates, instead of being some of the lowest paying professions. But then again if the world was ideal what would people on Slashdot have to complain about?

    1. Re:No Pleasing Some People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That said you're never going to prevent 100% of abuse of a situation like that

      Nor are you ever going to be 100% effective in preventing police from putting 40 bullets in a man for taking his wallet out of his pocket.

  91. Forms of torture by CelticPirate · · Score: 0

    Having the UN take up space in Manhattan, and suck away US resources is a form of torture.

  92. Re:Alternative by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Exactly.

    If the person dies, they wouldn't have been conscious of the consequences, right?

    Look, in that case it might be murder or manslaughter, but I would be hard pressed to suggest one can torture to death someone who is in a coma.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  93. Re:UNFortunately... by Xlipse · · Score: 1

    The problem is, a lot of cops don't know when it's appropriate to use either.

  94. Re:UNFortunately... by Xlipse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A lot of cops don't know when it's appropriate to use either. If you want to be a LAW *ENFORCEMENT* Officer, you should be physically strong, mentally awake and morally straight (you know, like a boy scout!) The standards for police officers should be raised and their pay should be raised with it. The bad cops should be fired and there's a hell of a lot of them around the media lately.

  95. Tasers kill people aka lethal weapon. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "no sane person would say the gun."

    I would. Obviously you haven't thought matter enough.

    Gun usage is controlled and monitored, but tasers are used on a whim. As can be seen everywhere.

    It's better to get shot and get compensated than to get tasered and get nothing for that. If you don't die, I mean.

    I'll predict than sooner or later police (and every so called security) manages to kill more people with loose usage of tasers than with guns.

    Taser _is_ a lethal weapon and those lying bastards who say it isn't, can't explain almost 300 dead people.

    One or two might be genuine accidents, but almost 300? BS.

    1. Re:Tasers kill people aka lethal weapon. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well how many people were tased in the last few years? Maybe the 300 could be a one in 10,000 chance. (I don't know.)

    2. Re:Tasers kill people aka lethal weapon. by Grave · · Score: 1

      You want to argue that tasers are being used when they shouldn't be. Sure, many times they probably are. What about the times tasers are used instead of a gun, resulting in fewer deaths? 300 taser deaths vs how many non-deaths from the ability to subdue a suspect without using a gun? Where are the statistics for that? Certainly any method of subduing a person is going to have risks for all involved parties, but with proper oversight and training, tasers seem to be the best option available for the police.

    3. Re:Tasers kill people aka lethal weapon. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      but with proper oversight and training,

      And that, ultimately, is the crux of the matter. They aren't getting either, and that is resulting in unnecessary deaths. That's the reality of it. Consequently, questioning the continued of Tasers by law enforcement is entirely legitimate. If they don't know how to handle a dangerous device such as a Taser, they shouldn't be allowed to use them. We don't let just anyone carry a badge and a gun, and since the manufacturer's claim of non-lethality for Tasers is demonstrably false we shouldn't let just anybody carry one of those either.

      The presumption seems to have been that since the police are trained in the use of firearms they are automatically qualified to be issued Tasers. The further assumption was that Tasers can't hurt their targets. Both assumptions have proven to be way off base, and until we have standards in place to keep the number of abuses and corresponding deaths to a minimum, Tasers should be out of the hands of cops.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  96. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by timmarhy · · Score: 1
    or allowing a violent suspect to continue in their rage could endanger everyone even further. that's a judgment call that's different in every situation. what i'm saying it that taking away tasers and denying officers the ability to make that call is a stupid thing to do.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  97. It Used to Be by Vengance+Daemon · · Score: 1
    I was a child in the 1950's, and at that time we looked at the police as our friends; someone to go to if we had trouble, and they would actually help. We even sought them out and liked to joke and talk with them; they were not intimidating at all. Somewhere between then and now the situation has changed. I have lately heard parents telling their children to basically avoid police, and how they are to oh-so-carefully behave if they encounter one.

    In part this may come from a change in the attitude of the police from one of "serve and protect," to one of "control and contain" the population. Things like the Taser make it easier for them to keep away from any sort of "social" or intellectual contact with the people; they can just quickly end any sort of situation without thought - they just blindly use their "training" for each and every situation and thus maintain the us-vs-them attitude. Of course, maybe kids have changed, and perhaps Tasers and intimidation are the only way to deal with them these days. Whatever the reason, it seems like a not so good situation for our country to get itself into.

    They are tasering 12 year olds. If a person cannot handle a pre-teen child's tantrum without a Taser, they should not be in the police force. While I'm at it, just why CAN'T SIX (count them, SIX) policemen handle a single "Don't tase me, bro." college student without a Taser or other tool beyond handcuffs?

    But of course, this is neoAmerica, and torture of non-citizens has been approved at the highest levels of our government; it is only a short matter of time before torture is approved for citizens as well.

  98. Placement on the use of force continuum by TheGoodSteven · · Score: 1

    There are more than a handful of videos and reports about officers using Tasers in situations that are not potentially dangerous. However, it is important to realize that individual departments decide when Taser use is appropriate, and the officers are held to this. The majority of police departments place the Taser at the same level as OC spray (Pepper spray) or above, which is logical because using OC spray is close quarters to other people means that everyone gets it, not just the suspect. Some departments state that it can only be used at the level where danger is imminent- a suspect is actively fighting an officer. This is the placement on the force continuum that I believe is the most proper. Finally, there are a handful of departments that have policies that place the Taser at the same level as using any sort of contact. This is where you get cases of people being Tased for non-compliance. Although I have not looked at the policies of the departments that these incidents come from, it is logical to believe that it is mostly from these departments. If any officer uses force contrary to department policy, serious reprimands follow, as they should.

  99. problem of perceptions and training by sentientbrendan · · Score: 1

    The problem is that police and security guards perceive tasers as harmless, and feel free to abuse the crap out of them. They show little hesitation in using them even on people who are not resisting arrest.

    I think that tasers are a good tool, but most police forces just don't seem to know how to use them properly.

    There's also the well known problem that police work attracts some people who just want to be in a position of authority in order to bully people. I like to think that this is the minority, but everyone knows that these guys cause big problems for everyone and generate a lot of hostility between the police force and the general public. I wish departments would do some psychological screening and background checks on candidates and reject those with abusive personalities. I think if you got those guys out of the picture, you'd run into a lot fewer of these "accidental" killings.

  100. The problem of Non Lethal Weapons by LordZardoz · · Score: 1

    Tazers as a means to take someone down without putting bullets into them are a good thing. However, like any tool, once it is proven useful for one thing, its not long until you start looking for other uses. And that is the danger. If a Tazer is a safe way to take down a drunken and violent man easily, what about someone who is resisting, but not violently?

    If you see an armed man about to harm someone, you shoot him. But what if he is not armed? You wont use a gun because you probably do not want to kill someone. So maybe a baton / club is justified, so you thump his skull a bit. But what about a retreating shoplifter? Beating a thief might be a bit of a stretch. But what if you do not want to cause injury like a broken arm or a concussion? Ok, go for the Tazer. How about some guy who is causing a public disturbance? Umm, why not use the tazer there too? Unruly protester? Tazer. A protester engaged in civil disobedience? Tazer again. Someone just being generally uncooperative? Tazer.

    A tazer is essentially a means to apply force with what amounts to mimimal or no consequences. In 99.9% of the time it resolves the situation in the favor of the police with minimal effort and no harm to anyone. Once in a while, you get the guy with the bad heart, which sucks, but as they say, 'shit happens'. Tragedies of that sort aren't what you should worry about. What you should worry about are those cops who are just a bit too eager to resort to force. A thug cop who would not dream of pulling his gun in a given situation will be all to happy to get you to shut up and do as your told by zapping the crap out of you a whole bunch of times.

    The use of Force is most likely to be abused when the consequences for it are minimal.

    END COMMUNICATION

  101. go figure by luther349 · · Score: 0

    tazers are not even ment to be used more then once. that can kill you. so its the cops misuseing them not the company. if a tazer failes you have to eyther call for backup or move to more effectiv means.

  102. Very simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Policemen who shoot the taser should give the same explanations as if they'd shoot with a firegun. So simple. Every time that a police shoots the taser in a non-justified case, they should become a sanction.

  103. Handcuffs and batons are torture, too by michaelmalak · · Score: 1

    Handcuffs and batons are torture, too. Tasers don't torture people, police do.

  104. I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there any such defense against tasers? I'd think that it's at least reasonable to suppose that something like that might short the taser, possibly even damaging it.

    But, ummm, I admit to lacking the means to test that theory.

  105. it's still a reality check by m2943 · · Score: 2, Informative

    If the US and Western Europe aren't making the rules, somebody else is.

    I didn't say that the US or Western Europe shouldn't make the rules. I'm simply pointing out that nobody in the US or Europe should live under the illusion that the rest of the world likes us a whole lot. You should realize that the UN criticism, rather than being "corrupt", is likely rather weak in comparison to what the world population as a whole actually thinks. Despite our noble self image, to most of the rest of the world, we are likely spoiled, arrogant, and imperialistic (which is not at odds either with people wanting to come to the US or Europe in droves).

    not all governments derive their power by the consent of their people

    Sure, but so what? Do you seriously believe that if you ask the citizens of North Korea or Iran, they are going to be any happier with US government policies than their repressive governments? In fact, we support repressive governments in Saudi Arabia and other parts of the world because we know that the citizens of those nations would be even less friendly towards us than their current repressive governments if given the chance for self-determination. We have, at times, quite democratically decided that our governments should screw other people, and they often aren't happy about that, and why shouldn't they be?

    Yes, we can make the rules. I also think we could do a better job making the rules.

    1. Re:it's still a reality check by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Do you seriously believe that if you ask the citizens of North Korea or Iran, they are going to be any happier with US government policies than their repressive governments?

      Yeah, I'm kinda thinking so.

      It doesn't do your cause any good to engage in that sort of ridiculous hyperbole, you know.

    2. Re:it's still a reality check by otiina · · Score: 1

      Do you seriously believe that if you ask the citizens of North Korea or Iran, they are going to be any happier with US government policies than their repressive governments? Yeah, I'm kinda thinking so. Sounds like Iraq to me.
    3. Re:it's still a reality check by m2943 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm kinda thinking so.

      I think you misunderstood. I'm not asking whether people living under repressive regimes would like to live in a US-style democracy--of course they would. I'm asking whether people currently living under repressive regimes would vote to support current US policies if given a chance to voice their opinion; as a rule, they would not, among other things, because many people blame their political misfortunes on the US.

      It doesn't do your cause any good to engage in that sort of ridiculous hyperbole, you know.

      I don't have a cause; I'm simply pointing out that people like you are out of touch with reality if you think that the rest of the world likes the US or US policies because the US happens to be a democracy. Democracies often quite democratically decide to screw other nations, and the citizens of those other nations dislike them for that.

    4. Re:it's still a reality check by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstood. I'm not asking whether people living under repressive regimes would like to live in a US-style democracy--of course they would. I'm asking whether people currently living under repressive regimes would vote to support current US policies if given a chance to voice their opinion; as a rule, they would not, among other things, because many people blame their political misfortunes on the US.

      Ah, I see what you mean. You're right; sorry for the confusion on my part.

    5. Re:it's still a reality check by oatworm · · Score: 1

      That's true, which is why, as has been noted previously, the US frequently supports non-democratic regimes in places where we're certain the people would elect someone that would happily screw us or our interests over. Unfortunately, it doesn't help that a lot of regimes use us as a very useful scapegoat (see: Saddam Hussein, Kim Jong Il), sometimes telling their citizens that we're devils that will eat their babies or something. Other times, it doesn't help when we're supporting despots instead of those with similar governmental philosophies to our own.

      Look, I'm not saying US or Western European domination is great and good. What I am saying is that, especially as a US citizen, I'd rather have that than any of the other alternatives... and that, compared to having China run things, the world is probably a better place than it would be if it were run by a country that openly supported and loved imperialism and the like. Put another way, ask China who they would rather have run their country - us or 1930's Japan. Yeah, they wouldn't want us in charge of China, either, but I guarantee you they'd hate us slightly less than a government that openly raped and enslaved their women, y'know?

    6. Re:it's still a reality check by m2943 · · Score: 1

      Look, I'm not saying US or Western European domination is great and good.

      And why are you saying that? What does that have to do with what we're discussing?

      My point--relevant to this discussion--is that the UN isn't "corrupt" or "anti-American", it is, if anything, quite friendly towards US interests compared to world attitudes as a whole.

      What I am saying is that, especially as a US citizen, I'd rather have that than any of the other alternatives...

      Well, duh! The US is using its international power primarily for its own economic and security interests. Of course, US voters like that. However, it's not prudent long-term policy ("why do they hate us?"), and it's also not ethical.

  106. UN. Putting the UN in UNintelligent..... by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    "Acute pain" constitutes a form of torture?

    So, does this mean that the girl who pinched me in the 2nd grade (and I have several witnesses) can be brought before the Hague Tribunal and charged with torture?

    How about the "mathematically masochistic" math teachers whose endless sermons gave me brain-wrenching migranes?

    How about the next baseball pitcher who accidentally nails a batter with a fastball? Is EVERY SINGLE PERSON WHO CAUSES the sensation of pain in another individual now a TORTURER? Interestingly enough, the UN also considers pepper spray and Mace (50% CS + 50% CN) to be illegal chemical weapons, even if used by civilians.

    Would the UN like it better if we just shot criminals as a means of obtaining compliance whenever they are violent towards law-abiding citizens?

    How can such "noble" organizations throw away the rights of law-abiding citizens, especially in terms of self defense, and support the rights of the criminals over the rights of those actually respecting the rule of law?
    The UN is just like California: The criminals are better off that law-abiding citizens.

    --
    Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
    1. Re:UN. Putting the UN in UNintelligent..... by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      "Acute pain" constitutes a form of torture?

      So, does this mean that the girl who pinched me in the 2nd grade (and I have several witnesses) can be brought before the Hague Tribunal and charged with torture?

      Don't be so fucking stupid. If she were to repeatedly cause you pain (e.g., pinch you), so as to compel a behavourial change in you, then yes, this is torture. If she were to do so as an agent of the State, then hell yes, it is torture.

      And as for throwing away the rights of law-abiding citizens, that is the whole idea of limiting State use of force against people: you never know when you are going to be the one on the receiving end of the force being used. Remember: as long as your guilt is not proven in a court of law, you are to be assumed a law-abiding citizen. Now here's a little thought experiment: do cops get to taser you before or after you have been in court?

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    2. Re:UN. Putting the UN in UNintelligent..... by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 1
      It did compel a behavioral change in me: I smacked her, and the urge to smack her more and more never went away.

      As to limiting the State use of power against criminals, are you saying that limiting the State's use of power against criminals is more important than law-abiding citizens using power against criminals?



      "And as for throwing away the rights of law-abiding citizens, that is the whole idea of limiting State use of force against people: you never know when you are going to be the one on the receiving end of the force being used."

      -----So the whole idea of limiting State use of power is to take rights away from law-abiding citizens? You *DO* know when you will be the one on the receiving end of the force being used: Be compliant with the law, compliant with officers if you break the law, and do not threaten or pose a danger to other citizens or officers. If an investigation is unlawful, then raise the issue in court. Therefore, they have no lawful reason to use force against me, you, or anyone.

      How does taking away power from citizens to use against criminals limit the State's use of power against criminals? (What are you smoking??)



      As for your "Thought experiment": You get tasered BEFORE you go to court, ONLY if you A) Assualt an officer during an investigation, B) Refuse to comply with lawful commands issued by an officer (stop, put your hands up, get on the ground) during a lawful investigation, C) Resist a lawful arrest, D) Become combative during lawful detention during a lawful investigation, or E) Threaten the safety of another citizen or officer.

      Avoiding getting tasered isn't rocket science: Comply with the law. If you fail that, then comply with the officers. Do not assault/rob/beat/mug/rape/threaten people.

      --
      Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
    3. Re:UN. Putting the UN in UNintelligent..... by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      taking away power from citizens to use against criminals

      Quote me where I advocated that, and then we may have a civilised discussion. If you're going to persist in strawmen, sod off back under your rock.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  107. Re:Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heck yeah don't act suspiciously on the bus. That kind of shit drives people away from public transportation and into cars.

    You do believe in Global Warming, right?

  108. The UN is a big multi-headed beast... by WoTG · · Score: 1

    The UN is not a single room of the worlds leaders debating every topic. Most people know this in theory, but don't think about it much. It's a huge bureaucracy with hundreds of "committees" such as the "UN's Committee Against Torture".

    Some things coming out of this beast are more much more important and meaningful than others. This particular note is, IMHO, pretty low on the tree. It certainly isn't coming from the Security Council.

    Can a Taser be used for torture? Yep. So can just about everything else in the room I'm in. Electricity, water, ceramics, keys, phone book, pens, electrical cords... I'm sure if Jack Bauer were around, he'd find some way to use the fern in the corner to extract the secret location of the nuke from the bad guys this season.

  109. Physics... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Okay... Tasers good OR bad one thing no one here should be able to dispute is the physics behind the damn things... two prongs either pushed out by a compressed gas or held against a persons skin... two points of contact which an electrical charge is put through. Most people who say they are safe and get tasered to prove it are usually ONLY in a very mildly agitated state (they are bracing a little for the effect, its not a fun time) now a person in that state has a great deal of electrical resistance (in Ohms, not political resistance) which means at 50,000 volts, its not going to be a huge amount of current (or Amps) going through that person, and they will only experience Tetanus (the state of the muscles being forced to contract due to the electrical being passed through the body) and while painful and not a fun time, its relatively harmless. Now protestor, really freaking amped up on Adrenaline probably sweating like the dickens, seeing a whole whack of police officers coming towards him, maybe theres a scuffle, police pull out the taser, the amount of electrical resistance this person has is a great deal lower, so 50,000 volts, and a great deal LESS electrical resistance according to Ohms law says... more current, aka more amps... while I haven't actually seen/experienced it, most sources I have come across say that about 1amp can kill you, the less electrical resistance the more chance a taser can kill you. Its simple physics... and being Nerds we should know that you really can't get around them.

    1. Re:Physics... by Kattspya · · Score: 1

      I find it really hard to believe that tasers don't have either active or passive current limiting. Designing an entire weapon system and not taking the changing resistance of the human body into account would be idiotic. Any fool who has played with an ohmmeter knows that the resistance in the human body is highly variable.

      You need about 45mA across the heart to die. Something around 30mA to lose consciousness.

  110. Of course by HBI · · Score: 1

    Paperwork is the cure for all abuse. At least when you talk to any government dweeb.

    --
    HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  111. Re:It's called "less lethal force" for a reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look again at the video.

    It wasn't the Taser that killed Robert Dziekanski in the Vancouver Airport. It was the knee applied to his throat with the weight of a +190 lb police officer behind it. That happened after the Taser was fired. Pretty clear that it was murder.

  112. Rubbish by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't advocate the censure of Canada; but the issue seemed to have been Canada's treatment of natives and immigrants.... That such a motion 'nearly passed' says more about the decline of the status of Canada than about the UN.

    As an immigrant to Canada I can definitely say that it is an extremely welcoming country in both its government and its people. Look at the outcry here that has resulted from the tasering incident in Vancouver. This was clearly not government instigated and it has shocked the Canadian public. To accuse Canada of human rights abuse because of this incident is simply insane.

    It certainly does not show that Canada is in decline - it was simply a stunt by Iran to distract from its real human rights and nuclear issues! All it shows that the UN has a bureaucracy that allows stupid things to happen from time to time, like every other government in existence....but just because something can be abused does not mean that we'd be better off without it.

  113. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Yeah, they needed to wipe out that nasty Pole. I mean, he threw a computer on the ground. Clearly a dangerous individual. Besides, he couldn't speak English.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  114. The word "torture" has lost all meaning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. Once upon a time, torture was clearly understood to involve things like the broken ends of one's phalanges (finger bones) being ground together, vivisection, etc. Now we use it to describe things like sleep deprivation. Well done, hippies.

    1. Re:The word "torture" has lost all meaning by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

      No, torture means "Hurting someone physically or mentally until they will do anything to make the torture stop." So, Mr. Tough Guy, how long could YOU stand being tied up with loudspeakers blasting a neverending variety of sound at you at just under the pain threshold? How many times could I rub a q-tip with concentrated hydrofluoric acid over YOUR toe until you broke? How long could I lock YOU up in a sensory deprivation chamber until you begged to tell me everything if you could just see light again?

      Of course, this is all moot; After the evil enemy had tortured you for weeks and weeks on end (lol), you'd break down in tears and tell them whatever you thought they wanted to hear regardless of truth which is why torture does not help to learn the truth and is therefore useless as a tool for gaining intel. Or do you think that all those people the Spanish Inquisition killed for confessing to witchcraft were actually witches?

    2. Re:The word "torture" has lost all meaning by tsotha · · Score: 1

      This is wrong. The sad fact of the matter is torture works, and it works well. That's why it's still used. The belief that it doesn't work allows you to square the intellectual circle, I suppose, allowing you to claim torture is wrong even in the "ticking bomb" scenario. But you're wrong.

    3. Re:The word "torture" has lost all meaning by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

      Torture is still used because it works, and it works because it's still used? That's some nice circular logic there, Lou.

      The only reason it's still used because some people are sociopaths who enjoy hurting others (or they are in search of "revenge"). This is why it's generally associated with Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany, and North Korea. It's a verifiable fact
      that
      torture
      does
      not
      work
      for
      the
      reasons
      I
      explained
      previously.

      There Are Four Lights!

    4. Re:The word "torture" has lost all meaning by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Torture is still used because it works, and it works because it's still used? That's some nice circular logic there, Lou.

      You must be projecting. Where did I say the second half of that statement?

      Gee, you managed to find a list of biased articles quoting people who claim to 1) know that torture doesn't work, and 2) never have engaged in it themselves. So either they're lying, or they don't have firsthand knowledge. Which is it? Your "verifiable fact" looks a lot more like working backwards from the "right" answer.

      Of course people will say anything to make the torture stop. But that in itself is no obstacle to gathering information. When you put the thumbscrews to someone you make sure you have a way to check out the story, and you make sure the subject knows falsehood will bring back the pain. Verification can be done by obtaining corroborating physical evidence, but if you have a group of people, especially if they were taken unawares and separated immediately, you can keep at it until the stories agree. If you have one guy and no way to verify the story then, yeah, torture doesn't work in that case.

      Oh, and one other thing... I don't have to rely on speculation to know it works. Khalid Sheik Mohamed was waterboarded for two and a half minutes before he sang like a canary. And everything he said was verified through physical evidence or financial records.

      Whether or not it's always unethical to engage in torture is a pretty tricky question - there's no getting around the "ticking time bomb" scenario. But don't pretend your wishful thinking regarding the efficacy of torture allows us as a society to avoid asking the question.

      For me, if someone has information that will save the lives of my friends and family, he better give it up.

    5. Re:The word "torture" has lost all meaning by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

      The other thing the public has missed in this story is that there's a huge body of literature showing not only that torture doesn't work, but that it's counterproductive. Torture radicalizes people. In fact, the Israeli torture of Palestinians was actually seen by some as redemptive, in terms of validating the evil of the Israeli side and the rightness of the Palestinian cause. It validated their own importance as torture survivors, and it validated their membership in the group. The CIA did about 200 studies of torture from 1953 to 1974, under two successive projects, one called MK Ultra and one called MK Search. That collective body of work found that torture didn't work. The Brits found the same thing when they were using interrogational torture on the IRA.
      - http://citypages.com/databank/26/1305/article13927.asp

      And why are you holding up a sample of one out of the hundreds (most likely thousands) of people held in total at Gitmo, "extraordinary rendition" sites, and those formerly held in abu Gharib as an example of how torture works? If anything, he was a unique case. Khalid isn't/wasn't the stereotypical jihadist or suicide bomber (a young man with raging hormones who can't get laid (a fact for many men in polyandrous societies) and was told he'd get all the sex he wanted if he'd blow himself up for God), he's smart enough to be upper management in a major organization. As such, he posessed both facts (being upper management) and the smarts to know when the game was over. He'd have talked to the "nice guy" who brought food and chatted with him for a while every day too.

      At any rate, this all boils down to who is willing to commit evil in the name of expediency.
  115. Better than being shot by sycomonkey · · Score: 1

    As always, force should be a last resort, but honestly being tased is very unlikely to do any permanent damage, and gets the point across amazingly effectively. I'd rather police carry them, as it would probably reduce the number of total injuries or deaths caused by the police, assuming they are properly educated in proper use and dangers inherent in their use. Torture implies causing pain for pain's sake. No particular method of force can be called inherently torturous unless there is no obvious way that it could be used as a legitimate means of force. Tasering isn't inherently torturous (though it can, of course, be used to torture in the wrong hands). We have enough trouble with actual, real torture by our government. Let's try to avoid making it up where it doesn't exist.

    --
    --The universe will not be altered by forum threads, even those which are very wry. --Tycho Brahe (Penny Arcade)
  116. This is stupid. by __aasyaa1156 · · Score: 1

    Violent? Yes. Torture? Hardly. Law enforcement personnel use these weapons as a means of subduing potentially dangerous criminals. They're not strapping people down and prodding them. It is unfortunate that some people die as a result, but they really shouldn't be breaking the law in the first place. According to this Wikipedia article, 245 people died between June 2001 and June 2007 as a result of these weapons. Compare that with the 423 gun-related homicides in my home state of Michigan alone in 2005. Here is the thing that really pisses me off about the laws surrounding these weapons: I live in the Detroit, MI area. Tasers and stun guns (electroshock weaponry in general) are illegal for anyone to buy or own here (except for police). Of course, we can still all buy handguns at our leisure. I don't own a gun or an electroshock weapon. I do, however, know several individuals who own handguns. Many of these are people who live and/or work in dangerous areas, so I really don't blame them. Wouldn't it make sense to legalize these non-lethal (most of the time anyways) weapons? Isn't it safer and less likely to result in death if you taser someone trying to harm you instead of shoot them with a handgun? This has never made sense to me and I doub it ever will.

  117. TASER cam by Gage+With+Union · · Score: 1

    One partial solution would be to incorporate video and audio recording technology into the TASER. An ambient light sensor turns recording on when TASER is withdrawn from holster. When a TASER is fired, the last 30 seconds of activity are recorded. Though there are limits to the effectiveness of this approach (quality of camera, light, lens covered, etc.), it provides documented evidence of appropriate use or abuse.

  118. Woo...since tasing is "torture" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They won't have any problem with more gunshots...since they aren't torture.

    Awesome.

  119. Watch this video if you want to see what the... by nexeruza · · Score: 1

    Watch this video if you want to see what the real issue is... http://youtube.com/watch?v=IMaMYL_shxc Enough said.

  120. more by incripshin · · Score: 1

    Also tear gas, rubber bullets, flash bangs, and other forms of crowd control. Riot cops are the real terrorists and menace to our way of life. Please....

  121. Real Taser Stories by SoyChemist · · Score: 1

    I wrote a blog post that asked the question: Can Tasers Kill People? From that point on, scientific literature did the talking for me. http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2007/11/scientists-tase.html Shortly after that Taser International sent sixty demand letters to different news agencies that had run stories slamming their product. Luckily, we did not get one. http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/Canada/2007/11/21/4674977.html They appear to be more litigious than the Church of Scientology. Xenu be praised.

  122. They've got a quota to make... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so they haven't got time for your shit. It's about more tickets, arrests, and busts per man hour. Talking would take to long, tazering allows you to drag the victim^H^H^H^H^H^Hperpetrator in and get back to work. It's all about money/productivity. Just ask any friends you have that are cops in a major city, they'll tell you it's simply they're all too busy to wait for you to calm down.

    Get your ass in line or get your ass tazered. They haven't got time for your shit, citizen.

  123. false logic by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
    I'm sorry, but your post contains a number of logical fallacies. I've counted several false dichotomies, appeal to emotion, and enough strawmen for a Wizard of Oz convention. As you admitted, Officer Tunahill wouldn't have been saved by a taser, so what does her death really have to do with this argument aside from your short rant about the "question authority" crowd? Furthermore, if a cop can't control the situation enough to keep someone from taking their gun, how does a taser change this situation?

    A taser is less-deadly than a gun, but it's not a safe weapon and cops need to be trained on the use of "non-lethal" weapons just as they're trained to use their clubs, cars, and radios. It's a tool and one obviously capable of taking a life.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  124. Example of trivial taser use by darkonc · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Wreck beach is a popular clothing optional ("nude") beach near Vancouver (and almost within sight of the airport where Dziekanski was tasered to death. It's also a beach where the RCMP tend to be very pedantic about the law -- one of which is that the beach closes at sunset... So, as they're often want to do, they started clearing the beach mere minutes after the sun had set.

    One of the people they came across was someone who had fallen asleep. When they woke him up and told him to leave the beach, he was a bit groggy, and slow to gather his stuff, get dressed and leave. ... so they tasered him.

    Now, I don't think that a groggy (nearly) naked guy is the kind of situation where use of a baton would be considered reasonable force. I don't even think it would be considered reasonable to use a half-nelson on the guy. Hell, the only thing that they could do for him being too late on the beach was to give him a ticket.

    | But he was tasered.

    My only explanation is that they intended the tasering exactly as torture -- and an exemplary action to other beach users that you quickly comply with orders to get off the beach at the stroke of sunset or else!

    --
    Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
    1. Re:Example of trivial taser use by MoonBuggy · · Score: 5, Informative

      To offer another, similar example: police in England tasered a man in a diabetic coma because they thought he was a security threat and he wasn't responding to them. They shocked him because he wasn't responding - he was unconscious - how could that possibly be use of the taser in order protect the officers?

    2. Re:Example of trivial taser use by Jarjarthejedi · · Score: 1

      And this is the main problem I have with the anti-Taser crowd. I have no problem with your ideals, or with the concept of banning Tasers, but all too often it seems like the main argument against Tasers is that a few (the number of misuses vs. the number of normal uses isn't a very large ratio) cops have misused them, and so no cop should have them. Were that argument used fairly cops would be forced to try and subdue subjects with words alone, because their guns would be banned, hitting people would be banned, and tackling would be banned...and come to think of it words might be banned also, especially if some cop verbally assaulted a little kid.

      The point is, you can't argue against a weapon by saying that some have misused it. If you accept that argument as valid then you can't condone cops having ANY weapons, because they can be (and have all been) misused.

      --
      There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
    3. Re:Example of trivial taser use by adamruck · · Score: 1

      The problem is that tazers have no feedback. You can standback, shoot, and simply watch as you inflict pain on someone. With a batton you feel the shock as you hit someone, with pepper spray you feel the burn if you miss, etc etc.

      Combining that weapon, with whatever percentage of cops that love to go on power trips, is not a good combo.

      "Set tazers to torture."
      "Yes Captain!"

      --
      Selling software wont make you money, selling a service will.
    4. Re:Example of trivial taser use by tommyatomic · · Score: 2, Informative

      I live in BC not but perhaps 10 miles from the airport where the polish man was tased to death. An the thing about what happened to him was that they tased him between 3 and 5 times while standing on his neck and chest(RCMP refuses to release exact information about the number of taser hits he took) and after he clearly had no life signs they didnt bother to recessatate him. And they did this because he was holding a stapler and looked agitatied(red swingline anyone?). Tasers incapasitate by administering high voltage with little or low amperage. When you use two the amperage doubles. High voltage is dangerous but if you give it a little more amperage it kills. A single taser hit is safe. Multiple parallel hits kill. Either the RCMP were incompetent and poorly trained or they were trying to kill the polish man. Idiots or Murderers; Take your pick.

    5. Re:Example of trivial taser use by Buran · · Score: 1

      Tell the anti-gun wackos that, like the ones in DC. Apparently, the government you're so blindly supporting does the very thing you think they're too perfect to never, ever do. And that hypocrisy is a major problem I have with the yes-man crowd you're a part of.

    6. Re:Example of trivial taser use by darkonc · · Score: 1
      He was hit by two tasers, but he took multiple jolts from the tasers. (at least four, as far as people can tell, possibly more).

      Also, if you watch the video of the killing, you'll notice that he had his hands in the air in the international 'surrender' pose for a couple of seconds before he got tasered.

      --
      Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
  125. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by anagama · · Score: 1

    so what your saying is instead of the easy way out of hostile situations, we should take the hard and long way out and let the situation drag on... fuck i'm glad you aren't a cop.

    Man -- I hope you aren't a cop because with attitudes like that, you'd be a danger to your brothers. See, if everyone starts to think that cops are macho egomaniac shoot first types, well, real criminals will take the same attitude and get a bit pre-emptive.
    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  126. My experience by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Ages ago I tempted for a cleaning company, except I didn't do windows, we cleared out houses where people had died and other disgusting stuff like that. It was intresting work, although pretty shocking the first time when you realize that this kinda job is not a one off but that you are actually facing overtime to deal with all the incidents.

    We usually worked on the order of the local health department or the police although we also did things like cleaning out meatlockers that had broken down during a holiday (you think the myth busters had it bad with the pig?) so basically disgusting work that didn't pay that well but you had a lot of freedom. The boss wasn't likely to show up until it was cleared. And the health workers and cops didn't really care if you took long breaks, if you didn't do the job, they had too.

    One of the jobs was clearing out houses of people who were still alive, mental/drug cases who were going to be taken to a mental ward. These weren't evictions, just forced cleanings so that their neighbours didn't have to life next to a rubbish dump while the owner was away.

    Occasionally we also helped out with other jobs like clearing the staircases in apartment blocks.

    The point is that we were doing a dirty job for not that much pay and sometimes we encountered people that didn't want to cooperate. We had methods for that. We often needed tools, like brooms and shovels and sometimes a crowbar. On a new job, were we knew we had a live occupant, we carried the crowbars in first. You never know if a person is coming out swinging. We were just the cleaners so 99% of the time there was either a health care worker, a cop, or fireman or something similar there to do the talking, but our clear orders were to be visibly there to provide backup. These jobs NEVER went wrong oddly enough, everyone was PREPARED and READY so we knew what to do. We were just there as backup, in sight but not in a threathening way.

    The entire trick was that NONE of us was willing to take a risk. IF a person was to attack, hit them, hit hard and don't stop until you are certain they are down. If that means beating them across the head with a crowbar, well, we will understand. Because YOU will NOT want to die for a salary.

    A lot of people who never have to deal with anything more dangerous then a papercut will say,"well that is what you are payed for", no it isn't. My salary, a cops salary is/was NOT nearly enough to risk my life for thank you very much and some of these nutters don't care if they loose their lifes, they will do stuff that is insane because they are insane.

    People loose it and until you have had to deal with such a thing you are in no position to critize. It only went wrong once, we were asked to clear an apartment but found some stuff in the hallway and didn't know who it belonged too. So we asked the neighbours and at one doorbell it went wrong. A woman opened the door and we heard someone started cussing and screaming and all of sudden a young male rushed out and started attacking us. I and another guy were on the landing, the other guy was extremly large and I am reasonably build and this guy was skinny, the rest (three more) were busy in the apartment. It was all we could do to restrain him. In a normal fight between two agressors ANYONE of us could have beaten this kid senseless BUT we weren't there for that. We just wanted to do our job (it is illegal to keep stuff in apartment hallways, fire regulations) but were nice enough not just to junk the crap and we get attacked for it? It took all five of us to restrain him. What if he had attacked with a knife or had some muscle? I am not going to walk even the slightest risk. You attack me, you die. I am no hero. If we had a taser on us, he would have had so much juice pumped into him they could hook him up to the grid.

    As it was I just delivered a few very hard punches to his stomach until he stopped struggling and we could turn him over to the police. He was puking on the ground but if he had tried to get up he

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  127. Just how much do you think a cop can carry? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    That is one of the problems, there is only so much space on a cops belt, even a US cop. Those net guns (I know them from a girlfriend who works for an animal shelter) are not exactly small or that cheap. To big to carry around and to expensive to put in every squad car.

    As for getting a pair. Okay, lets. You and me, YOU have to follow the rules, I don't and can carry a knife and if you happen to die... well though, but if I get the slightest bruise, you loose your current career.

    Tell me, what is your current job. Have you EVER been in such a situation? Or is the biggest problem you got to deal with that deadly risk of a papercut when you sort out the printer?

    Grow a pair, become a cop. I posted my own experiences somewhere else and frankly those who claims cops should just fight the criminal one on one are full of it.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Just how much do you think a cop can carry? by DigitAl56K · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't sort out the printer, my hands are far too delicate for that ;)

      Nobody is going to complain about a cop using a taser to defend themselves against someone wielding a knife. The problem is that the use of the taser often seems unnecessary.

      You can't make the argument that you need tasers to defend yourselves against knives, for instance, and then have your buddies go and tase people for being hysterical, or to "calm them down", or even, in my opinion, for attempting to flee unless you would otherwise have used deadly force to stop them.

      If you want to claim that you need the taser to defend yourself against deadly assault that's fine. In return, we will expect you to use the taser mainly in this circumstance and consider other uses abuse and/or torture.

    2. Re:Just how much do you think a cop can carry? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I think you happened directly on the crux of the problem. It isn't tasers in itself but but their use and intent of the use that is the problem.

      I would argue that this is proof that we shouldn't be taking cues from an entirely useless United Nations. But besides that, I agree that cops are dishing out their own Dirty Harry justice with these things and getting away with it. The Cop isn't the judge or jury and they aren't supposed to be punishing the suspect. They are supposed to be apprehending them and protecting their and the publics safety in the process.

      Calling them means of torture without examining the application is the reason why the US ignores what the UN thinks half the time. They can be used as torture or they can be used to save lives- specifically the suspect's life.

    3. Re:Just how much do you think a cop can carry? by atamido · · Score: 1

      People get tasered while trying to flee? I've never heard of that, but is it better or worse than being tackled and thrown the the ground?

  128. Entrapment by Koookiemonster · · Score: 1

    Have you noticed how the officers often shout like this:
    "CALM DOWN!! CALM DOWN **IMMEDIATELY** OR YOU WILL BE TASED!!!"

    That instead of something in the sense of:
    "Please calm down, Sir. Just relaaax.... take it eeeeaaassyyyyy...."

    The first alternative will clearly trigger a high stress response, such as people shouting back. They are then tased, using the aggressive behaviour as a justification. In the cases of resisting arrest charges, this seems like entrapment to me.

  129. I understand by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    And I firmly support coming down like a ton of bricks on any officers that abuse their authority, especially when it comes to causing harm. However that's not what this is about. People want tasers banned outright. They think they are bad, because they have bad uses. This is pretty stupid if you asked me. I personally think a lot of it comes from this misguided mentality that police are evil and the only people they go after are innocent. While there certainly are bad cops and innocent people get hurt by them, by and large the people the police are arresting are guilty. Also by and large those that have a taser or something like that used on them do so because they are resisting arrest.

    In our society we have decided it isn't ok to resist arrest. This is the case in almost any society, free or oppressive. It doesn't work to have rule of law if you are allowed to resist the law and get away with it. So when someone does resist arrest, the police need the authority and the tools to bring them in to compliance.

    I have very little sympathy for people who get tased when they are struggling with police. That creates a danger to you and them, they are perfectly justified in making you stop. If you feel the arrest is illegitimate that's great, doesn't give you the right to fight back. You still need to go with them, then fight it in court. Similar thing to if you get fired and feel it was on illegal grounds. That doesn't give you the right to deck your boss, you need to go settle it in court.

    The problem of police crossing the line isn't related to a specific tool and you don't solve anything by taking the tool away. The cop who's taser happy will just become baton or choke hold happy if you restrict them to using physical force. The answer is holding bad cops accountable for their actions. The only way the taser should be banned is if it is more dangerous than the alternatives. The less lethal means used to subdue people should be the ones that we can find that are the least harmful. That means causing the least deaths and serious injuries. If the taser is worse than batons and submission holds, then ok let's go back to that, but if it isn't then we should stick with it.

  130. Eh bullshit by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    I am from holland and we got the SAME crime rate as the US when you stop and think. You got to look at the crimes that are crimes in BOTH countries, murder rate, same. Petty crimes, same. No we don't have the same number of drug cases or prostitution cases as the US. Our crime rate has shot up. The idea that Holland is some kinda safe haven is based on stats from the seventies and everyone in goverment is very carefull in launching any real probes into how a low crime country has things like Holleerder.

    This country has really gone downhill. Ask yourselve, if this country is such a nice place, why were two people killed for speaking their mind and just who fired those grenades at the bunker in Osdorp?

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Eh bullshit by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I've looked into the crime rate and indeed, it seems we are not that different from other countries. Which, imho, is still an accomplishment because other countries are always lamenting our not so harsh justice system. Anyway, I do still think that introducing the taser won't help much. The criminal network around Amsterdam has always been there of course, Holleeder (without the additional r) just caries on the tradition, in a rather violent way.

    2. Re:Eh bullshit by McDutchie · · Score: 1

      I am from holland and we got the SAME crime rate as the US when you stop and think. You got to look at the crimes that are crimes in BOTH countries, murder rate, same.
      You're kidding, right? The US murder rate is four times as high as the Holland (i.e. Netherlands) one. See http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_mur_percap-crime-murders-per-capita.

      Petty crimes, same.
      Source?
  131. ALMOST, you keep using that word by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Do you know what the word ALMOST means? Tasers are ALMOST never deadly. The police ALMOST never uses tasers. The police ALMOST never acts wrong.

    So what is all the fuss about, about something that ALMOST never happens.

    Really, ALMOST is a weasel word.

    I want to hear numbers and I think that you will find that you then find that your definition of ALMOST is very different from that guy who runs the local loony bin. I would also very much like to see how many times it goes deadly wrong or how many patients he has released that were not cured at all.

    In holland we have something called TBS (Ter beschikking stelling) which is a sentence given to people who are insane and basically forced them to undergo mental treatment. The problem? Well, for reasons of idiocy the mental wards have been made private so that now they get payed according to the number of cures, cue endless stories about people released who commit the same crimes or even being let out on leave (with a guard who is not allowed to use force or restraints) and commit crimes and go right back in. Oh and in holland, escaping is not a crime.

    Frankly a lot of these crazies the police have to deal with are the result of incompetent doctors. If the shrinks did their job better the police wouldn't have to deal with that many crazed out idiots.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  132. Nations by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

    Need to keep their noses out of sovereign individuals' businesses. This history of illiberal governance is really scary, and offensive.

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  133. The difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the primary problem is that, unlike you, the cops generally tend to have other methods available. First off, they travel in packs so it's never quite one to one, secondly, they are *trained* in fighting skills and thirdly, most of them pack other entertainment like sticks and pepper spray.

    We have to be careful here not to make a black-and-white statement. In many threatening situations a taser can indeed resolve the situation, the problem is *appropriate* use. You have just stated yourself that a zap from a taser is a pretty serious thing, which makes repeated use in my opinion even more questionable. A person who's been tasered should be sufficiently affected to allow one or more cops to subdue him/her in more traditional ways, yet, instead we see plenty of coverage where repeat tasering is used as punishment rather than as method to subdue. The Kerry student video was a classic example. This guy was NOT violent, but resisted arrest - there is a huge difference of personal risk levels between the two sitations.

    THAT is what any sane person objects to, because it's like using the baton after the person falls down, with the difference that a taser conveniently doesn't leave any marks - unless, of course, the person dies as a result of the shock to their system. That is not "the job", that is simply malice.

    There are plenty situations in which a taser is probably the safest way for those people to reduce the risk, but there is zero excuse for abuse. Zero.

  134. Accidents do happen, but... by Amigori · · Score: 1

    If you don't do anything to provoke the officer(s) to use the taser, then you won't be tasered. If you do get tasered and are innocent, then I guess you'll be getting an apology and probably some money. But if you're resisting arrest, or breaking some other law and not cooperating, you deserve to be tasered, billy clubed, shot, etc. Police should err on the side of public safety and they need the proper tools for enforcement. When you scale statistics to country populations, 1 in 1,000,000 odds start appearing more, especially with today's media. The UN is good for a number of functions, but policing and enforcement has never been a strong suit.

    Now that jackass in Utah probably didn't deserve to be tasered for speeding, but he brought it on himself by getting out of his truck, challenging an officer, waving his arms, and having an attitude. Dude, it was a construction zone and you got busted. You're 28; I'm sure you've driven through one construction zone and seen the signs since you got your drivers license. Pay the ticket.

    --
    "The quality of life is determined by its activites."--Aristotle
    1. Re:Accidents do happen, but... by Alioth · · Score: 1

      The officer ordered him out of the vehicle; he complied. He wasn't being threatening at all.

      While he was a jackass, I don't think there was a case for a tasing there.

  135. Two types of people by Danathar · · Score: 1


    - Those that believe ANY sort of coercive interrogation is torture

    - Those who believe that the ends justify the means

    Why don't people who exist in between ever speak up?!

    1. Re:Two types of people by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Well, when I do speak up, and in that ONE instance where the ends DO justify the means, I'm forever labelled as someone who believes that the ends justify the means.

  136. Who's the cause ?!? by freaker_TuC · · Score: 1

    If I am living my life further for 30 years longer with a heartproblem or it ends now because I got in touch with a Taser;

    I'd say the cause is the Taser which has for sure shortened my lifetime ...

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  137. And that makes is allright? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your chances of being killed in a terrorist activity is thousands of times higher in Israel than in the US, so why so much money and efford wasted on it? Because 3000 deaths to it is 3000 deaths too many. 275 deaths immediately after tasering is 275 too many.

  138. Proper use of force progression by Mad-cat · · Score: 3, Informative

    Tasers have their proper use and proper place. Calling them torture is alarmist and absurd. They don't really hurt. I've been shot by my own Taser (in training), and while I would call it very unpleasant, I would not call it painful. It's like being sat on by a very heavy person and having all the air forcefully expelled out of your lungs. The itching afterwards is also very unpleasant.

    First, a Taser is not a non-lethal weapon. It's a less-lethal weapon, and should be treated as such. It cannot kill a normal person under normal circumstances, but people under the extreme influence of drugs (a state of excited delerium) can have their status exacerbated into one known as "aggravated delerium", which is almost 100% fatal.

    Using Tasers for "acting suspicious" is also absurd. They are designed and should be used as a weapon to stop imminent violence or flight. I have used mine three times in the line of duty.

    The first was a fighting suspect who had jabbed another officer in the stomach, and only had one handcuff on and was about to break loose. In this case, the wires broke and I had to chase him four blocks.

    The second was a 6'4" tall, very well built person, who had already broken my hold when I tried a non-violent handcuffing technique and took a swing at me. He promptly surrendered afterwards.

    The third bit me, kicked another officer, and broke the nose of my sergeant, a 24-year-veteran who has seen more street fights in real life than I've seen in movies. We tried everything before the use of the Taser, because of fears that the Taser could react with the drugs in his system. The only reason I used the Taser in this case is because if I had not, I would have had to shoot him. He successfully fought of six officers at once and was *attacking*, not trying to escape.

    If misused, the Taser can be torture. Properly used, it is a life-saver.

    Pepper spray, on the other hand, *is* torture. I flatly refuse to use it for any reason. It hurts like hell for hours, continues to burn for days, and lacks the stopping power of a less-lethal weapons like punching, using a baton weapon, or using a Taser.

    1. Re:Proper use of force progression by hacker · · Score: 1

      "I have used mine three times in the line of duty."

      Let me ask you this: If tasers did not exist, would you have pulled your service firearm and fired in those same 3 instances?

    2. Re:Proper use of force progression by Abcd1234 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've been shot by my own Taser (in training), and while I would call it very unpleasant, I would not call it painful.

      So were you hit when you weren't expecting it? Was it prolonged contact? Did you receive multiple shocks?

      Because if none of those things is true, then you have very little perspective when it comes to the majority of taser abuse cases.

  139. don't overlook the fear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look to police becoming more brutal in the near future.

    Watch for the effect the fear of being tasered has on the populace.

    There are non-violent protesters getting tasered. Non-violent bystanders as well.

    Read into it what you will.

    Tasers aren't the solution. (although nobody seems to care about that as long as it's supposedly used on ^^evil baddies^^ such as citizens getting a speeding ticket)

  140. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

    The citations that can be made for improper use of tasers are many.

    Then your task is simple. Cite them from more than one fringe website.

  141. Maybe I missed it...? by sigzero · · Score: 1

    Is someone actually caring what the UN says? Really? That is sad.

  142. That does however raise a question by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    IF we got the same crime rate (in areas you can compare) as other countries, that have different legal systems, does it actually MATTER what legal system you have or does crime ALWAYS fill up to a certain point regardless of the consequences.

    This argument goes both ways, if a criminal is NOT less likely to commit a crime when faced with a harsh sentence, BUT if a criminal is ALSO NOT less likely to commit a crime with a lenient sentence and lots of rehab, then what system do you pick?

    The system that at least meets out a lot of punishement OR the system that gives criminals a second, third, fourth etc etc change. Both try to claim that they reduce crime but this just doesn't seem to be the case, so then you got to ask yourselve what kind of society you want.

    And this isn't as clear cut as you might think, a society with lenient punishment is NOT nicer, it might be that they just don't consider the victim that important. What is different after all between the dutch slap on the wrist for rape and countries where rapist get a slap on the wrist because women just have no rights?

    I still like Terry Pratchets answer on the death penalty, when questioned on its use to prevent crime an executioner answers, "well I never get them up here twice".

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:That does however raise a question by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Seems to me that most criminals cost more money in prison than without. No need to make everybody's life miserable. Furthermore, the possibility for someone to return to society in any meaningful way is hampered as well. As for the death penalty, it has been proven again and again that judges and juries can be wrong. The whole problem with the death penalty is its definiteness. And keeping someone 5 years in prison before killing the person is not the right way either.

      One thing: someone who is repeating the same mistake again should be locked up for longer and longer times. There is no reason to keep someone outside of prison if you know the person is going to mess it up again right after he/she is out of prison. Nowadays you will get the same punishment over and over again, since all punishments have upper bounds. That's just ridiculous.

      Anyway, the punishment for rape is imprisonment not exceeding 15 years or a fine. OK, not the toughest sentence you can get, but it ain't a slap on the wrist either.

  143. commonly? by NIckGorton · · Score: 1

    Excitation delerium is a very commonly used term that refers to anyone in such a state of excitement, usually due to stimulatns like cocaine or methamphetamine It is used commonly? I'm an ER physician and I have been in EMS or an ER for over a decade and I've not heard that before. I know what 'delerium' is, and what 'agitation' is, and what 'tweaking on meth' is, however 'excited delerium' sounds like something that non medical folks throw around when they want to sound medical-y.

    This is equally as bad as medical people trying to sound like they are lawyers... for example, I never write 'alleged assault' on a medical record. I write 'Patient states: I was just standing there and these three dudes came up to me and started whaling on me!' I don't have anything more than a layman's understanding of 'alleged' so I don't use it - with good reason. It would be nice if lawers and cops stopped doing the same with medical terms.
  144. Nothing to see here, move along. Really! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really, folks, where's the story? I would have like to have seen the full UN report instead of the emotional "tasers are bad" mantra. I would probably still have issues with it but at least there would be some explanation as to why the UN feels it has to say that tasers are a form of torture. Even water and oxygen (or lack thereof) can be forms of torture and can kill under certain circumstances.

    This "article" by Jeremiah Cornelius and the link to The Daily Telegraph by unnamed correspondents in Geneva aren't worth the electrons used.

  145. Cry me a river by stewbacca · · Score: 1
    Because I'd much rather be shot with a 9mm lead bullet than be hit with a jolt of electricity. Surviving a close range pistol blast is probably a lot less likely than dying from a taser.

    In EVERY case I've seen, the person getting tased could have prevented the tasing by just doing what the cop tells them. The newest one of the guy in Utah is typical of the anti-tasing crowd's fervor. Of course, the Utah guy goes around to all the TV shows displaying his video and "outrage" of being tased for no reason. Well, the news here played the video, but this time, YOU COULD HEAR THE AUDIO. The video goes from, "holy shit, that cop just tased a guy for no reason" to, "moooohahahahaha, that guy is resisting arrest so the cop tased his stupid ass." It's amazing what a little video out of context will do for your case.

  146. Why idiots are bad. by toddhisattva · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sleep deprivation is torture. Loud music for long periods of time is torture. Bullshit. Bullshit. Bullshit.

    Many unpleasant things are not torture.

    The United Nations is unpleasant. Does the UN's existence constitute torture?
    1. Re:Why idiots are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many unpleasant things are not torture.

      Sleep deprivation isn't just unpleasant. It causes insanity. This is a medical fact. The fact that you can justify causing someone to go insane as not torture is worse than bullshit.

    2. Re:Why idiots are bad. by snarkh · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Do you have any idea what you are talking about?


      Bright lights + white walls + a cell size of a small closet, where you cannot lie down, + night interrogations for 8 hours and after a few months strong people would sign confessions, which would be used to imprison their families and friends along with their own death warrants. That was widely practiced under Stalin.

      Sleep deprivation is often more effective then pulling your fingernails because it breaks your will to fight.

  147. Re:Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A guy _in a coma_ on a bus got tasered. How, exactly, can the bar _get_ any lower?

  148. Simple solution: add more paperwork by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    When the amount of paperwork a copy must fill out after using his Taser equals the amount of paperwork required after firing his handgun, Taser usage will plummet to acceptable levels.

    --
    I come here for the love
  149. if its been said once, its been said 1000 times by tacokill · · Score: 1

    Correlation does not equal causation.

    1. Re:if its been said once, its been said 1000 times by ScrewMaster · · Score: 0, Troll

      It does to some people. Oddly enough, most of them seem to be gun control advocates.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  150. He probably by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    deserved it. Were you there?

  151. Solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. A taser that also emits an annoying high pitch screech when used. (nail & chalkboard sfx)
    2. Instead of constant delivery of a shock, pulse it... or make the button analog to deliver a variable shock, and difficult to push that button hard.
    3. Create a whiffle bat + taser that shocks only briefly on impact. (yeah!)
    4. Recharge via hand crank, with only enough capacity to shock for a second.
    5. Make the button really small and hard to press.
    6. Make tasers shock both the recipient and user.

  152. The problem is Man, not his weapon. by Fox+Sterling · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The UN states that Tasering is a form of torture. Well and good. Does this mean that tasers cannot be used? I think not. Practically any weapon can be used as a form of torture, down to a billy-club. The problem is the people who wield the weapons, not the weapons themselves. This is the same issue encountered in gun-control. Some blame the guns and the gun-makers, but the problem is the humans wielding the guns. If guns didn't exist, if we lived in the Stone Age, it would be flint spears and wooden clubs. The problem is the sinful nature of Man, he will always find a way to inflict pain.

  153. Re:Alternative by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
    You can't torture someone in a coma by doing things that are not felt or perceived upon recovery from the coma.

    You're right; let's not charge them with assault and battery. Let's charge them with attempted murder and give them the rest of their lives by themselves to think about what they have done.

    -b.

  154. New taser death yesterday in British Columbia by roman_mir · · Score: 1
    Story.

    Nov 25, 2007 04:30 AM

    VANCOUVER-A B.C. man who was stunned with a Taser, doused with pepper spray and hit by batons during an altercation with RCMP officers has died, police said yesterday.

    Robert Knipstrom, 36, died early yesterday in hospital, four days after two officers called for backup saying the pepper spray, Taser and batons did not subdue the Chilliwack man, whom they said was acting agitated, aggressive and combative in a local rental store.

    The case is being treated as an "in-custody" death and B.C.'s Coroner's Office has launched an investigation along with the RCMP.

    The Mounties are being aided by investigators from the Integrated Homicide Investigative Team, Abbotsford Police, and the Vancouver Island Integrated Major Crime Unit, police said at a news conference yesterday.

    The death comes as the Mounties face intense criticism over the death of Robert Dziekanski, the Polish immigrant who died at Vancouver airport last month after officers used a Taser.

    Police said last week that, when finally taken into custody, Knipstrom was conscious and still vocal en route to hospital.

    The investigation into his death will focus on the officers' use of force and whether or not their actions were in line with both RCMP policy and the Criminal Code, police said.

    The death follows on the heels of an incident in Halifax on Thursday. Howard Hyde, who was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, died in jail about 30 hours after he was shocked with a Taser.

    The Mounties released a statement from Knipstrom's father, Robert Thurston Knipstrom, asking reporters to respect the family's privacy and apologizing to staff at the rental shop for any distress caused by the incident.

    Meanwhile, the B.C. man who shot the video of Dziekanski being jolted with a Taser got a hero's welcome yesterday at a memorial rally in Vancouver.

    A crowd of more than 1,000 people chanted "Thank you, Paul," as Paul Pritchard spoke about how he missed a connecting flight from San Francisco before ending up at Vancouver International Airport on the evening of Oct. 13.

    Pritchard told the crowd that, despite any statements by the Mounties, he saw Dziekanski being jolted with a Taser and heard his blood-curdling screams in the early-morning hours of Oct. 14.

    He said the scenes that he recorded on a video that has been seen around the world are forever burned in his brain.

    Pritchard said he met Dziekanski's mother, Zofia Cisowski, before arriving at the rally and that there were few words and many tears.

    Speakers at the rally called for the suspension of police Taser use until investigations into Dziekanski's death have been concluded.
    1. Re:New taser death yesterday in British Columbia by Teunis · · Score: 1

      I suspect the Knistrom case is a "red herring"
      the whole cycle of police action was attempted in that case - from talking right up to tasers and billy clubs.
      Everything short of actually shooting him with a gun.

      IMHO - that one's going to come out as "proper procedure followed, subject was dangerous".
      I know that's not kind. But I do pay attention. The Chilliwack RCMP -did- follow procedure as I understand it.

      The Dziekanski case however is very much a tragedy and the RCMP involved did NOT follow procedure as I understand it. Neither did the airport authority - who I consider to bear the majority of the guilt here. How can a guy get lost and end up in a secure zone in a modern airport for 12 hours?

  155. it's not tasers that kill people by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Not tasers, it's the fucking police who kill people.

  156. Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We aren't arguing against their use exclusively because of the few misuses we hear about through the news. We're also arguing against them because, when compared to guns, tasers have far more misuses we don't hear about through the news.

    The correct use of tasers can decrease the number of times that guns get used, but unfortunately they greatly increase the use of unnecessary force because they have been deemed "safe".

  157. Re:The link isn't of consequence but the facts are by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    It's not my task.

    But since you insist: http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/11/25/canada.taser.ap/index.html

    from this very afternoon.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  158. Cops are openly torturing people with Tasers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    How many of you have seen the police and/or witness videos of Cops Tasering someone, then threatening to Taser them again if they don't comply. The problem is that to "comply" you have to overcome the effect of the Taser much faster than is possible.

    Of course the Cops know you cannot comply, and use it as justification to zap you with the Taser again (and again ...).

    IMHO that IS torture.

    There are also those cases where Cops have been caught using contact Tasers (more like a small cattle prod) to torture suspects into confessing - leaving the twin scorch marks as evidence.

    My Father and Grandfather were both Cops, so I've spent a bit of time around these guys. There have always been "Bad Apples" who abuse the power of the badge, but changes brought on by the "War on Drugs" and later 9-11 have given us a major increase the percentage of Cops who fall into this catagory.

    For some insight into this reality you might want to read "Bullets, Badges, and Bullshit" (http://www.amazon.com/Bullets-Badges-Bullshit-Phil-OBrien/dp/1424124255).

  159. Fear Factor by dbcad7 · · Score: 1
    The problem many police have, is they feel that it's compliance or pay the price. Your drunk cousin told off an officer, verbaly I take it... how dare someone speak to a cop like that ? Attacking him escalated the situation.. where talking him down a bit, and asking him to do things leading to hand cuffing might have worked.. but we'll never know.

    The problem is fear. I can guarantee you, the big guys will have a higher rate of tasering, and less chance of compliance than say a 90 lb 70 year old lady who calls the cops every name under the book.. and really they should have the same chance.

    --
    waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
  160. Simple thought experiment by khaaela · · Score: 0

    If you approached a cop in a hostile manner with a taser what would he do: A. Tell you to back off and get on the ground. B. Pull out his taser in equal response. C. Pull for his handgun and threaten to kill you. The answer will most likely always be C. The corrrect answer should be A, or even B. The real reason cops use tasers is because they go way beyond neccessary force. For no reason whatsoever they need to have control of the situation ten-fold. This is why cops taser people that are already handcuffed and being held down by 6 cops.

  161. Re:Alternative by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    No. It *is* assault and battery. Unless there is an attempt to cause death, it is not attempted murder. It is also a cruel and unnecessary trampling on human dignity. However, neither the battery itself, nor the trampling on dignity is sufficient to warrant calling it torture in the absence of inflicted pain or a sense of danger of which the individual can be aware.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  162. Free Speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tasers may be torture, but I think they should also be considered speech - after all what else says "STFU n00b" like 100000 volts?

  163. people by celle · · Score: 1
    comment: You know I read this entire thread and nobody and I mean nobody mentioned how the 50 or so people standing around watching people getting tasered multiple times did nothing about it. "America, home of the free and land of the brave". Ya, right. More like land of the self-serving and home of the gutless. Most of the people just watched or ignored it. How about standing up for principles, several of them should smart enough to have recognized this was wrong. The grab the cop and slam him up against the nearest wall asking what the hell he was doing. Get the victim to the hospital because by now he or she is a victim. Lock the cop in his own cuffs. Then march his ass to jail under public arrest for exceeding his authority if not for assault, terrorism, etc. If he's to lazy to do his job then he's little more than a publicly paid for thug and should be handled as such.

    rant: By the way, if the police station refuses to accept the cops arrest and you pressing charges, make sure your camera phones are recording the entire thing and sending it out to the internet, mainly national news and federal law enforcement. That way when the immediately upcoming war/atrocity begins everyone will know why. Also point out to the crowd and have the cops explain to the public they work for why this "officer" isn't being charged let alone fired. What use is a police force if they violate the law themselves? Remind them that their authority exists at the pleasure of the public not the other way around. Cops are not above the law and their authority is not inviolate as most people seem to think. If it's this bad be prepared to attack and take the local police force out first or they will do it to you, after all justice is meaningless if you're dead, legal or otherwise. This just reminds me why the general public should be carrying guns.
  164. Did you watch the fucking youtube video? by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    I don't think you actually did, because your post is utterly full of shit. You're a douchebag. I guess before tasers, they would have just shot him in the head. Asshole.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  165. he called it by LeeBarnes · · Score: 1

    John Titor, where are you now? :)

    --
    "Before humanity, the stars shone throughout the heavens. After humanity [has gone], the stars will continue to shine"
  166. Basic electronics by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    A Taser runs off a small battery. Let's assume that the battery is smaller than a car battery...

    W = V * A and in this case W is going to be constant. This means that if you can get 100A out of the battery at 10 volts (1000 Watts) you are only going to get 10A at 100 volts. At 50,000 volts you are going to get .02A. And that is assuming something a little smaller than a car battery.

    In reality, a ordinary 9V battery is capable of delivering 1A (or a little less). This is 9 watts. Assuming absolutely zero loss and 100% efficency of the conversion, 9 watts at 50,000 volts is 0.0002A. In reality, there are going to be severe losses and you aren't even going to get that much amperage. The function of a Taser isn't to deliver lots of amps to kill but lots of volts to immobilize.

  167. The UN? Bah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember, kids: The UN says it so it can't possibly be true because the rest of the world is just cheese-eating surrender monkeys who hate America.

  168. Re:Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here we go with the pseudo-tough "If you not doing anything wrong you have nothing to worry about" argument again. Dear Sir or Madam: try to keep your insecure authoritarian impulses to yourself.

    As thousands of court cases have demonstrated, police officials are human beings and make mistakes.

    Get some sleep and then try sticking to enabling your drunk-driving family member.

  169. Genocide? by Dobeln · · Score: 1

    Why not go with genocide right out of the gate? That should teach 'em!

    1. Re:Genocide? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      Why not go with genocide right out of the gate? That should teach 'em!

      Further injuring a man in a diabetic coma (who would look ill to any sane person) qualifies as attempted murder. Genocide is killing of multiple people. What kind of moron would first think that a person who doesn't respond to them is resisting them? Only someone with the mentality of an insecure little boy.

      -b.

  170. I agree 100% - guns and sticks are better by eagl · · Score: 1

    I agree 100%. We should go back to cops having no options to deal with non-compliance except beating people with sticks or shooting them with real firearms. That was way better.

  171. The problem by tommyatomic · · Score: 1

    Tasers dont kill people. Cops with tasers kill people.

  172. on VH1 by mathfeel · · Score: 1

    My roommie was just watching VH1's "top ## most outrageous reality TV moment"...and there was this celebrity lady who got taser-ed and was seemingly enjoying it while her friends(?) look amuzed...Sorry, I don't know how any of those "celebrities" are.

    --
    The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the 'social sciences' is: some do, some don't
    1. Re:on VH1 by mathfeel · · Score: 1

      sorry: I meant WHO any of those "celebrities" are.

      --
      The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the 'social sciences' is: some do, some don't
  173. Thinking like a cop by phunctor · · Score: 1

    As it happens I am 6'5" and built like an (out-of-condition) wrestler. Most cops, in ones, twos, and threes, would prefer not to grapple with me. During my 8 years studying ju jitsu I met and trained with many LEOs, and they shared with me that when they saw someone my size their favorite martial art instantly became ching-ching-pow, also known as glock-fu.

    I made a policy decision that if I was ever in a situation where a cop might perceive me as a threat I would without delay and without any quick moves put my hands on my head and sit down. I know with what intensity they intend to go home at the end of their shift.

    I for one am happy to hear that zap-fu is now more available.

    --
    phunctor

  174. Re:Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And don't question an officers actions, as seen on cops.

    And don't get angry/frustrated when you're being mistreated by an officer, as seen on a few episodes of cops.

    And don't run from the police, like the 'donttasemebro' kid tried.

    My favorite is the threats (empty or not) of sending a K9 unit to attack a 'hiding' but visible suspect. "He'll tear you up, don't make me let him after you."

    All of which further the goal of making sure you don't resist physically or mentally.

    Remember kids, if you're ever detained or arrested (code for held without arrest) Don't say anything, don't gesture, don't look at anything. Just say the peace officers favorite words: "I want to speak with an attorney."

    This causes the peace officer to make assumptions based on the provided evidence only and if (as is often the case with 99.99% of citizens) there isn't anything in front of them they have to let you go.

  175. So is detainment... by fitten · · Score: 1

    Detaining someone and depriving him of his freedom is also a form of torture... so I guess the solution is to just stop enforcing any laws.

  176. Problem is not the technology; but the Attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Police in America love shooting people. If they could get away with it more, they would do it more often. Why do American police love shooting people. Because they are control freaks. Whether they are standard officers, FBI, CIA, NSA, SWAT or some other name; the type of people who become the police are in attitude "control freaks". Please note that under the Patriot Act the American intelligence agency now have the authority to police. Every aspect of their lives and mindset are geared to controlling other people whether through subtle control or directed violence. That is why most people in these jobs are wife and children beaters. They enjoy the "high" of controlling others and enforcing that control through any means necessary. That is why there are so many deaths by Taser and this is just the beginning. Expect these numbers to rise until someone in the Justice department (yet another branch of control freaks) gets a lawsuit and is forced to address the issue. Of course by that time the number of deaths will be in the thousands. It is good that the U.N. sees this device as a "device of torture". As American police probably already do use this device in such manner to extract information from citizens or as a threat of inflicting pain from which there is a limited way of proving otherwise. A sort of physiological torture of the intended victim. It is easy to look back through American history and see this "mode of operation" by American police and government agencies towards the American people. Our history has millions of cases of abuse and torture by our "protectors". Yet we still allow them to torture us both physically and mentally. So it is through the action of lawyers that the police are subdued and their violent nature is suppressed.

  177. ... ooops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, this is a specious argument. Casulties in war are generally a function of time. The US military took Bahgdad in about 70 days, with about 35 KIA. This is a 1 KIA per 2 days. From that point, there have been ~3,874 US KIA in the subsequent 4.5 years (1642 days), which is 2.3 KIA per day. This of course does not taken into account the wounded, currently estimated at 28,451, which is ~17 per day.

    So while it's true that the force multipliers you talk about reduce the rate at which the stronger force takes casulties, the total casulties continues to be a function of time. Should the US decide to 'stay the course' in Iraq, I estimate that it will take at least another 5 years of futile ineptitude before you call in the UN to sort out your mess again, which at the current rate of attrition means another 4305 KIA and another 31025 WIA. Fortunately for the US tax payer and the imperial subjects of McIraq, the US economy probably cannot sustain another $463 Billion hit without some ROI on your jolly in the Middle East, so you may just have to cry 'Uncle' sooner than that.

  178. Ha! Thats nothing... by madbawa · · Score: 1

    ...Ever hear of the Afghan commander who was confined to a 4'x4' cell with only Windows ME and a keyboard missing the Ctrl, Alt and Del keys??
    My hair stands on end thinking about the poor man's ordeal. Last I heard he was being treated for massive depression...

  179. Re:Alternative by Brickwall · · Score: 1

    Cripes.. didn't Orwell say something like this over 50 years ago? I don't have a copy of Nineteeneightyfour available, but I'm pretty sure O'Brien says something like the purpose of laws are to make all people criminals, so they'll be scared and cowed by the state. Sounds to me exactly what's happening in Canada, the US, and Britain.

    --
    What was once true, is no longer so
  180. Hummmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Muy taz0rs g0ez pew pew!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  181. Since they can kill people... by master_p · · Score: 1

    ...why not rename them to phasers? and since they can also 'deactivate' a person, we can name the deactivation action 'stunning'...you know, the stun setting... :-)

  182. But remember... by Gonzodoggy · · Score: 1

    The U.N. also thinks genocide (when they actually get around to recognizing it) is a form of population control too.

  183. NOW tasers are bad Slashdotters? by jhRisk · · Score: 1

    It was only September 18th when the U of A student tasering incident article http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/09/18/1239237 went up and I recall how the posts supported the use of tasers and even at that particularly unwarranted situation. I remember it vividly as it prompted me to post http://politics.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=301041&threshold=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&cid=20656011 not only about the topic but my fellow Slashdotters belligerent responses. Now I'm seeing some dramatic changes from you folks with respect to the usage of tasers so I'm wondering what happened. Interesting which posts just 2 months ago were modded up there versus now in this thread.

    Seriously, though, I've never seen such a reversal here in such a short period of time without good reason so I'm stumped!

    --
    That's just my POV... no more, no less.
  184. Re: Why I like tasers over bullets by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

    "Alternative" and "replacement" mean two different things. You use the terms interchangably and that is improper. The idea of the taser is to allow a police officer the ability to control a situation without having to draw their firearm which, if used properly and within all applicable laws and regulations, is still going to kill someone.

    Yes, I agree there are some seemingly absurd circumstances where they should not have been used. However, if strapping a Taser to each LEO out there allows one less person to get his head blown off by a trigger happy rookie or one less innocent bystander to be hurt by a suspect because the cops don't want to pull their sidearm, I think they are worth it. The middleground between inaction and lethal force is where this thing lives and breathes.

    Seriously, just ask yourself: After a night of heavy drinking would you rather wake up in a detention cell with a couple of shockburns and a headache or, say, in the morgue with a Y shaped incision running from your clavicles to your pelvic bone listening to the morticians crack jokes about "nice groping?" Police are people too, and therefore subject to the same lapses in judgement you and I are. If an error is made by me or by a police officer that results in me getting shot, I'll take the voltage and not the lead.

    In fact, the device is under quite a bit of sceptical scrutiny because it is marketed as a personal defence accessory. Oddly enough, though not for being too heavy handed for civilian use. Quite the opposite actually. Many critics are concerned the device is not as effective as it needs to be to provide security. If even personal security is questionable with this device why-oh-why the hell would you "replace" police firearms with this thing?

    --
    When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
  185. Don't just wear a tin hat. by darkonc · · Score: 1
    I don't know if people want to completely ban tasers, but it's very clear that they're being misused, and overused. If that overuse can't be moderated, then -- yes I'd be inclined to ban them because it seems like (at least in Canada) that overuse is resulting in a good number of deaths in situations where guns would never have been considered, but it also seens rather rare that they're being used in situations where a gun would have been considered appropriate.

    About a week ago, a taser apologist was on the CBC, iterating all of the cases where a police officer was unexpectedly killed on duty where pre-emptively tasering the subject might have saved his life. The list of such examples included a couple of cases where the cop was gunned down on what appeared to be a standard traffic stop.
    In other words, if he gets his way, the next time you get pulled over for speeding, prepare to be 'preventively tasered' before the cop asks you for your license and registration.

    --
    Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
  186. Murder by Dobeln · · Score: 1

    "Further injuring a man in a diabetic coma (who would look ill to any sane person) qualifies as attempted murder."

    Murder usually requires an intent to kill. Genocide requires multiple (many, many multiples) people, and an intent to wipe out a population. None of these factors are likely to be present in the case you mention.