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Policeman Taser Thyself

by "Thomas Paine" <anon@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sep 22, 2007 at 05:54 PM

50,000 Volts for Your Thoughts By Shawn Macomber Published 12/23/2004 
12:08:07 AM http://www.spectator.org


           While I was waiting in line to be processed after my arrest at 
the Republican National Convention, a NYPD officer walking alongside
sneered 
at an obnoxious, verbally abusive protester, "Remember, we're the heroes."

It does nothing to denigrate the very real risks these officers take to
say 
there was nothing heroic about arresting hundreds of people for standing 
more than four abreast on the sidewalk.

            In other words, heroism one day does nothing to dismiss a 
misdeed the next. There are no little yellow "get out of jail free" cards 
outside of Monopoly. The power that comes with a badge demands respect,
but 
it also requires responsibility. It is useful to remind ourselves as we 
honor the selfless sacrifice of those who enforce our laws that it also is

imperative that someone watch the watchers. And now is as good a time as
any 
to say plainly that it is high time Florida police answer for their 
gleefully excessive misuse of Taser stun guns these last few months.

            A Taser looks something like a gun, but is in reality a 
non-lethal weapon that delivers 50,000 volts of electricity, which 
completely incapacitates suspects. Certainly, it cannot be suggested that 
police are misusing these weapons in every instance, or that Florida
police 
are the only offenders, but since the introduction of Tasers barely a year

ago use-of-force reports have gone through the roof in the Sunshine State.

Reports show Tasers being routinely and, often dubiously, used on
children, 
the mentally ill, fleeing suspects, as well as cuffed suspects and -- yes,

further -- cuffed suspects locked in the back of police cruisers.

            This week Florida police continued this stellar record by 
plugging 50,000 volts into a wheelchair-bound man brandishing a pair of 
scissors.

            "Even if you're wheelchair-bound, it doesn't make you less of
a 
threat," Miami Police spokesman Willie Moreno said. "If you want to fight,

there are ways you can hurt an officer."

            I'm sorry, Mr. Moreno, and apologies to our paralyzed brothers

and sisters, but any rational person will concede that being in a
wheelchair 
makes one significantly less of a threat. It would certainly be a
different 
story if the suspect were wielding a gun. But scissors in the hands of a
man 
who cannot walk warrants not physical violence, but rather some sort of 
obstacle and a patient police force.

            It may be uncouth to say it, but is not very comforting when
the 
police officers we expect to protect us from the worst of the worst in our

society are willing to announce publicly that they so tremble before a 
wheelchair-bound man that they feel there is no choice but to resort to 
high-tech weaponry.

            At the same time, what else can you expect from a force that
has 
excused the zapping of a six-year-old boy who threatened police with a
thin 
shard of glass? A generation ago, a school custodian would have put on
some 
work gloves and taken care of that business. Today a police officer stands

six feet away and pumps a young body full of electricity, because the boy 
had given himself two very minor cuts. And yet, no one has even bothered
to 
figure out exactly what damage such a blast of electricity does to such a 
small body.

            A few days before Florida police tagged a fleeing 12-year-old 
girl with the magic electric wand. She was suspected of skipping school
and 
trespassing. Lying on the ground twitching and drooling, she had I'm sure 
plenty of time to think about her offense. Not long after, Pinellas County

police zapped a 14-year-old girl in the back seat of a cruiser whose crime

was disrupting class and throwing a fit in the back of the police car. Not

content to let the girl tire herself, police hit her with 50,000 volts.


            SO WHY DOES THIS keep happening? First of all, few seem
willing 
to take any sort of stand on the issue. I saw a Miami "community activist"

on CNN shortly after the incident, arguing not for the cessation of this 
violence, especially against non-violent children, but rather the typical 
modern armchair activism. "I think there needs to be more in depth studies

on using Tasers on children," she said. Yes, by all means, let's bring 
together a Blue Ribbon Panel to figure out if shocking a young girl with
an 
obscene amount of electricity for skipping school is warranted or not.

            And, pray tell, what demented parent is going to sign their
kid 
up for that study? (Picture it: "Well, the good news, Mrs. Smith, is your 
son helped us determine the exact moment when the voltage causes soiling
of 
the pants. He's in the bathroom right now vomiting blood. Thanks for 
participating in our study!") I don't know what's worse: the fact that
Miami 
police are attempting to defend something so deplorable or that Florida's 
so-called activists are so morally ambiguous.

            "At the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office, Tampa Police 
Department and Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office, an officer can use
the 
Taser if the suspect is offering 'passive physical resistance,'" Stephen 
Thompson writes in the Tampa Tribune. "The suspect does not have to pose a

threat to anyone; he may be making an officer's job more difficult by 
staying put when he is asked to move or bracing his arms when officers are

trying to handcuff him."

            Further, Thompson reports, Tasers have been used at least
twice 
when suspects looked as if they might be about to run, even though
official 
police reports say suspects had not moved at all beforehand. Apparently, 
police officers just somehow read these men's minds and took action. I 
believe that's what they call in literary circles a Thought Crime.

            Since Pinellas County police have gotten Tasers their 
use-of-force reports have jumped 34 percent. In at least 14 of the 121 
reported episodes, suspects were already handcuffed when they were zapped.

Likewise, the Clearwater Police Department's use-of-force has increased 58

percent, with 49 handcuffed suspects getting the electric treatment.

            "In only one case among the 164 had an armed suspect
approached 
a Clearwater police officer, and in that case the weapon was a beer
bottle," 
Thompson writes.

            That's what's passing for protecting and serving these days in

Florida. Unsurprisingly, the police who are indulging themselves so 
frequently in their newest toy are telling us all this is for our own
good. 
Police constantly defend the use of Tasers as a good alternative to a shot

from a 9mm, as if they would shoot someone for being drunk and disorderly
or 
skipping school.

            "Would you rather be hit by a piece of pipe or a Taser?"
Florida 
Sheriff David Gee said. "The Taser only lasts a few seconds. The pipe can 
break your arm."

            Well, by all means, give us the Taser, O Benevolent Ones. And 
thanks for not breaking our arms. I knew there was a benefit to living in
a 
free society.


            Shawn Macomber is a reporter for The American Spectator. He
runs 
the website Return of the Primitive.




It's TASER Tuesday! http://laist.com/2007/09/18/taser_tuesday.php

TASER-Happy Cops http://www.rabble.ca/in_his_own_words.shtml?x=62592

"U Can't TASE This" http://laist.com/2007/09/22/u_cant_tase_this.php




 1 Posts in Topic:
Policeman Taser Thyself
"Thomas Paine"   2007-09-22 17:54:31 

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