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Re:Taser-happy? (Great article) (1 viewing) (1) Guest
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TOPIC: Re:Taser-happy? (Great article)
#53
Josh A (User)
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Gender: Male Pinellas County Copwatch Ant1joshua Location: pinellas county, FL Birthdate: 2007-06-27
Taser-happy? (Great article) 6 Months, 4 Weeks ago  
The problem is a mind-set that excuses stun-gun abuse

Police Tasers, or stun guns, are the common denominator in a growing list of questionable, sometimes outrageous, incidents of police violence on individuals who appear to pose little danger, and on whom, in the same situations, the police would never take out a gun.

The case of David Shea (see box at right), whom Volusia County Sheriff's deputies Tased repeatedly, in his home, is just one such incident. The case of the University of Florida student who was Tased during a town-hall meeting last month is another. The case of a Flagler County special education student Tased for refusing to leave a classroom last year is another. The list quickly grows long. So does the list of names of victims, now longer than 200, who died when electrocuted by Tasers. The company that makes the guns, and the police agencies that use them, insist the weapons are nonlethal, that the deaths are the result of other causes -- drugs in the victims' systems, for example.

The fact remains that the combination of factors makes Tasers the trigger of unnecessary deaths, just as it makes Tasers' selling point as "nonlethal" the excuse for unnecessary violence. A study of the Houston Police Department's use of the weapon over two years found that in 92 percent of the cases, the victim posed no danger to himself, to officers or to others, even though that's the only time the stun gun is supposed to be used. The victims aren't the problem. The stun gun and the police culture that justifies its use are.

In a remarkably candid paper, "Police Brutality: A Lifelong Learning Process," written for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Earl C. Johns lays out a grim picture of police brutality that goes beyond the proverbial few "bad apples," and analyzes what makes officers overreact. Johns, a graduate of the FBI National Academy who served in every division of the Kissimmee Police Department, reports that an us-vs.-them mentality teaches officers to see their role in the community as in a war zone, which Johns says is wrong and must be eliminated. And not enough emphasis is placed on police techniques as "strictly defensive in characteristic and not offensive," he wrote.

Tasers in police hands have exacerbated offensive techniques instead of tempering them.

The problem is in the mindset behind Taser use -- the mindset that excuses brutality as public protection. Johns recommends more police training, more community-oriented policing, more inclusiveness of community concerns in police work and transparency of police techniques. He also recommends civilian complaint review boards, which allow a community's residents to feel like they are "involved 'with' their department and not 'against' the department."

Above all, the us-versus-them mentality should be eliminated. Too often, the "them" are people like David Shea. If they need policing, they certainly don't need punishment, let alone Taser brutality.










FEB. 1, 2006: A 16-year-old special education student at Flagler Palm Coast High School was having difficulties doing his work. After his teacher corrected him, the student began to act out. Efforts to get the student to leave the room failed, and other students were evacuated. Later, the assistant principal, a counselor and a school resource officer (deputy sheriff) entered the room. As the student became more defiant, the deputy threatened to use his Taser. After the student refused to sprawl on the floor, as ordered, the deputy fired the Taser. The student was arrested for battery on an officer. Objections by the Flagler County School Board resulted in the sheriff deciding to no longer arm his school deputies with Tasers.

AUG. 31: Jeffrey Shields, mistaken by Ocala police officers for a man who reportedly had a gun, was ordered to take his hand off the bulky object tucked into his waistband. Shields refused, telling the four officers it was his Quran. He also refused, as ordered, to throw it on the ground, saying he didn't want to desecrate it. Then one officer Tasered him twice. Police found the Quran, wrapped in a blue cloth, tucked in his pants. Shields was arrested on a charge of resisting arrest without violence. The Ocala Police Department has launched an Internal Affairs investigation.

SEPT. 16: Andrew Meyer, approached an open microphone after U.S. Sen. John Kerry's speech at the University of Florida and demanded the senator answer a few questions. Meyer's microphone was turned off and officers began to remove him physically from the UF auditorium. He was then pushed to the ground by six officers. Police threatened to use a Taser on Meyer if he did not "comply," but he continued to resist, yelling, "Don't Tase me bro." Meyer was charged with disrupting a public event. An investigation is under way by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.


Tased at home


David and Irma Shea were having a rough patch in August 2006, and Irma was not living at their Deltona home. One evening Irma delivered David's laundry, but he didn't answer the door. The landlady told Irma that David was probably asleep. Irma called the Volusia County Sheriff's Office to request a well-being check anyway.

When the sheriff's deputies got to the Sheas' home at 9:30 p.m., David, groggy from sleep and medicine, asked the deputies to leave him alone. The deputies pushed their way in, "fearing for his safety," according to the sheriff's report. David got "agitated" and refused to comply with the deputies' orders to submit to a pat-down. He also resisted handcuffs. Then they Tased Shea until he lost consciousness. "I resisted," David told The News-Journal, "because I didn't do anything wrong. . . . There was two minutes of talking, three minutes of Tasing. . . . I mean, I'm sitting in my house."

Shea was charged with resisting an officer with violence. He wanted a trial but a judge told him if he lost he'd face five years in jail. "I gave up," he said. A plea agreement resulted in six months' probation. David and Irma (now reunited) are seeking redress but his plea means little can be done.

http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/Opinion/Editorials/opnOPN58101407.htm
 
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FACT- An average of five (5) police officers are arrested every day for committing crimes against the same people they\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'re paid to protect.

Fact- 40% of Law Enforcement personnel have had documented reports of Domestic Violence in the home.
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Re:Taser-happy? (Great article) 6 Months, 4 Weeks ago  
Nice find.
 
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Re:Taser-happy? (Great article) 6 Months, 2 Weeks ago  
All too common in these times. Seems the militarization of these brownshirt=like tactics is the MO anymore.


The tasers are dangerous and are being used beyond the manufacturers recommended usage...only when the option is pulling a gun. Seems more people are dying from so-called "non-lethal" weapons daily. They are being used on children as young as 5 and elderly up to their 90's. They have used them on special needs children, age 9, in handcuffs. They have used them on people going into diabetic comas. They have used them on pregnant women...on many grandmothers...they have even had officers injured with their tasers-one even quit the force due to his experience.

There was a college student in Boston when the Red Sox won the World Series that was shot with the "non-lethal" bullet and it went into her eye and KILLED HER>


How many have to die? How many innocent are being killed when they are still 'suspects' or in defending their rights before being charged-are assaulted and many killed and they are just being questioned or the police raid the wrong house killing grandma. It happened down south, the gal was 92 years old. They tried to claim she had shot them 3-5 times before they killed her when they rammed her door down, in the middle of the night,supposedly a drug house) and she is dead and they retracted some of their tall tale, post her death. Pleassssse...She was 92 years old and just happened to be sitting in her rocker with her 12 G sitting there and outshot 3-4 atfAGENTS? Sure...you bet

40 years ago I saw about 5-6 officers handcuff, billyclub, and sprayed mace at my Moms friend-for what I do not know...he was rolling around on the ground as they did this and they kicked him as well. The copos did not know they were being watched by me and my sibling...camcorders were not even made for public then...that was very telling to my young mind then and still 4 decades later leaves a searing impression.


As I aged I hoped it had been an anomaly, and I tried to convince myself of that but alas, it was all too common.

Through the years I have seen the abuse of their powers and acting as principalities in their own minds they make the law,their version of a street trial, even if it opposes common law, and they act more and more like viglantes, but crooked ones.

Sadly they have ruined their own credibility with me through numerous happenings I would rather not go into on this thread. Long ago, even after I had seen this abuse, I still tried to believe in the goodness of most of them. Working in the medical field I have treated many who accused them of lying and so on. I use to discount it until my eyes were further opened. Now I have seen groups of them planting evidence...and swearing to it...I now know them to be just as vile and corrupt as the people they pursue and much worst than many they arrest, persecute, or abuse. Once you have seen the corruption so thoroughly it is evidenciary.

Time for some accountability-they have the tasers, the tanks, the machine guns, and the ADS crap-They might as well be in Iraq-The over reaching most PD participate in is beyond the pale, way beyond anything legal. Most of the masses know it as well, they are just too scared to oppose it-with the current laws, it is a form a suicide.

Take care
 
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Last Edit: 2007/10/27 03:50 By ShadowDancer. Reason: spelling
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Re:Taser-happy? (Great article) 6 Months, 2 Weeks ago  
my name is david shea the guy in the taser happy story . this story will never cover all that has happened to me . it's a small bit and not close to the fact . if your asleep ,in your house , and you get woken by the police you don,t think that they will try to kill . it was vary close .now that i did'nt die i have a felony ,3800 $ bill at the hospital for that night, 900 $ 9 days latter , 300$ for this 300$ for that . my job was jeprdised ,chest pain that comes and go's numbness in my sholder my trust is gone david shea 1625 fentress av deltona florida 32738 phone 1-386-532-2467
 
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Re:Taser-happy? (Great article) 6 Months, 2 Weeks ago  
We have a spot on the site where anyone can create a BLOG. Perhaps you should do that and share your story with the rest of the world. Just a thought.
 
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Re:Taser-happy? (Great article) 6 Months, 2 Weeks ago  
they will never pay it it has to do with showing might
 
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