Police and Tasers: Hooked on Shock

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Police and Tasers: Hooked on Shock

Postby nomo » Mon Feb 11, 2008 4:59 pm

http://www.naomiklein.org/articles/2008 ... and-tasers

Police and Tasers: Hooked on Shock

By Naomi Klein - February 11th, 2008

The past couple of weeks have been rocky on the stock market, but one company that hasn’t been suffering too much is Taser International. At the end of January, its stock jumped by an impressive 8 per cent, and it’s even higher today.

Matthew McKay, a stock analyst at Jeffries & Co. in San Francisco, cites a simple cause: news that the Toronto Police Services Board plans to buy 3,000 new Taser electroshock weapons, at a cost of $8.6 million for gear and training. If the deal goes ahead, tasers would become standard issue weaponry for all of Toronto’s frontline officers, right next to their handcuffs and batons.

On Wednesday night, I participated in a public forum about the prospect of a fully taser-armed police force, organized by the Toronto Police Accountability Coalition. One speaker, who had a history of psychiatric illness, told the room: “We’re worried because we’re the people who are going to get shocked.”

It’s a concern grounded in experience. According to Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair’s own analysis, in 2006, city cops deployed the devices in 156 incidents. In all but nine, the subject appeared “to have a mental disorder” or was in some sort of “crisis.”

Several speakers at the forum pointed out that $8.6 million would be better spent keeping people out of crisis – by opening more beds and providing better mental health and addiction services. Instead, four homeless shelters were closed last year, at a loss of 258 beds.

But the most troubling remark of the evening was this: “Why is this happening now?” The timing is indeed baffling. It was only three months ago that video of the death of Robert Dziekanski at the Vancouver International Airport caused an international furor. The tragedy exposed the most prevalent misconception about tasers: that they are used primarily as an alternative to guns. As former Toronto mayor John Sewell told me, “the taser is not the thing that replaces the gun, it’s what replaces all the other things that police might do other than use a gun, like talk to you.”

That certainly appears to have been the case with Mr. Dziekanski. When the RCMP approached him, they made no attempt to calm the unarmed Polish man, or to discover the source of his extreme agitation. Within 25 seconds, he was getting zapped.

Mr. Dziekanski’s death also put a spotlight on the other post-taser deaths, the ones not caught on film. According to Amnesty International, 310 people in North America have died after being shocked with a taser since 2001.

Were these deaths caused by the device or by something else? Taser’s aggressive lawyers make it tough to know. The company has been hit with roughly a hundred wrongful death and injury lawsuits and claims it hasn’t lost one yet. But in August, Bloomberg News reported on “several mysterious dismissals” – instances where the plaintiffs asked for the cases to be thrown out. Though Taser denies paying off all its accusers, it admits to paying in some, “where the settlement economics … were significantly less than the cost of litigation.”

Taser has consistently claimed that something else is causing the deaths. The company points to a report saying that that death by electrocution happens within seconds. Yet in many cases, subjects have died minutes, even days, after being shocked.

A recent study may explain the discrepancy. Trauma researchers at Chicago’s Cook County Hospital conducted an experiment on 11 pigs, zapping each for 40 seconds; then zapping them again 10 or 15 seconds later. (This mimics how tasers are actually used, since Amnesty reports that those who have died after being Tasered were frequently “subjected to multiple or prolonged shocks.”) The study found that all the pigs exhibited heart problems after the shocks and two of them died of cardiac arrest, one three minutes later.

Taser CEO Rick Smith has brushed off the study, saying human research is more relevant. However, according to Bob Walker, one of the lead researchers, it shows “that the effect of the taser shot can last beyond the time when it’s being delivered.”

So back to that question: Why now? In addition to the troubling new scientific evidence and the disconcerting lawsuits, there are several public investigations in Canada that are still ongoing. In addition to those sparked by the Dziekanski death, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia are all conducting taser reviews.

Surely it would be wise for Toronto’s police chief to wait for those findings before ordering a seven-fold taser increase. But something more powerful than reason appears to be at play here, and I believe it has to do with the seductive promise of no-touch policing.

No other method of controlling unruly suspects offers police the same kind of all-encompassing, instant effect. Talking, calming, negotiating are all messier and take time. Other physical techniques put officers’ own bodies at risk.

Then there is the taser. The company boasts that its technology, which allows electrified darts to be fired from more than 10 meters away, “temporarily overrides the command and control systems of the body.” At the push of a button, even the strongest, angriest subject drops to the floor. In a way, firing a taser is the maximum power one person can exert over another. As an Ottawa Police officer reportedly said after tasering protesters at the ministry of immigration back in 2003: “Less mess, more fun.”


Few would argue with an officer’s right to use an electroshock weapon when lives are in danger and the only alternative is a gun. Many Toronto police officers, particularly those on the Emergency Task Force, clearly use them with restraint.

Yet there is also plenty of evidence that some officers get hooked on shock. In Edmonton, in 2001, reports of taserings averaged less than once a week. Three years later, they were coming in daily. In another part of the country, a mother in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia called police when she and her 17-year-old daughter were having an argument. Three officers showed up and tasered the teen in her own bed. In a recent court ruling, the judge called these actions “very disturbing and disconcerting.”

It may well be possible to prevent shock-happy policing with tighter controls. Yet, despite repeated calls for stricter regulations for police, Taser International is racing to get its devices in the hands of civilians, marketing the product as not just safe but fun. In the United States the company has been aggressively pushing its line of C2 “personal protectors” – available in pink, leopard print, and in holsters with built-in MP3 players. (The weapon is nicknamed the “iTaser.”) Tupperware-style taser parties are springing up in the suburbs of Arizona.

Taser International is a company whose executives present themselves as serious experts in public safety. Yet it has launched this foray into fashion at the very moment when the safety of its devices is being questioned on multiple fronts. Valentine’s Day is coming and Taser’s website is busily hawking the C2 in flaming red. “Love her? Protect her,” goes the slogan.

This is what corporations do: whatever they can get away with to sell more product. From Taser International, we should expect nothing less. From our police we have a right to expect much more.
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Re: Police and Tasers: Hooked on Shock

Postby identity » Sat Oct 08, 2016 5:16 am

Monty Robinson sues RCMP for breach of duty, alleged threats to legal funding
Former Mountie claims ordeal ruined his life


By Yvette Brend, CBC News Posted: Oct 07, 2016 7:13 PM PT

Former Mountie Monty Robinson is suing the RCMP for ruining his career and reputation, claiming his access to legal funds was restricted to stop him from going public.

Robinson claims that misinformation released by the RCMP after the death of Robert Dziekanski lead to a media storm that ruined his promising 16-year career and destroyed his reputation. Dziekanski, a Polish immigrant, was jolted with a Taser and died at the Vancouver airport in October 2007.
Robinson was one of four Mounties who raced to the airport after police received reports that a distraught man was causing a disturbance.

Robinson's lawsuit against the RCMP claims that there was a breach of statutory duty and abuse of office. None of the allegations has been proven in court.

Misinformation went uncorrected

The lawsuit argues that the RCMP's failure to "correct misinformation" ramped up public scrutiny and interest in the case, and created a perception of a "cover-up" by the four officers involved. Soon after the event, RCMP spokesperson Sgt. Pierre Lemaitre described Dziekanski as "combative" and said police used a Taser on him to "immobilize a violent man." Those initial reports were later proven untrue by a bystander's video. Lemaitre's widow is also suing the RCMP, in the wake of her husband's suicide. Robinson's lawsuit singles out former RCMP Commissioner William Elliot for also making allegedly "inaccurrate and misleading" statements about RCMP training policies around the use of a Taser and levels of force.

In 2010, Elliott agreed with the public inquiry findings on the death of Dziekanski, saying the officers "fell short" and did not properly "de-escalate" the situation.

Robinson claims the ordeal ruined his life.

As the Delta B.C. man struggled with PTSD and alcoholism, he claims he endured ongoing threats from his superiors that legal funding would be withheld if he went public with criticism. He left the force in 2012. "Various representatives of the RCMP provided repeated warnings to the Plaintiff throughout this period that any public comment by him would result in immediate withdrawal of public funding for independent legal counsel," says the suit.

Robinson was the duty supervisor the night Dziekanski died at the airport, Dziekanski was acting erratically when the four officers arrived and he was hit five times with a Taser before he died. Amateur video of the killing caused public outrage, and Robinson's lawsuit claims that the RCMP's refusal to correct misinformation initially released, made anger at the four officer's involved much worse. Robinson blames his superiors for the overwhelming public anger aimed at him and the other three officers — Constables Kwesi Millington, Bill Bentley and Gerry Rundel — involved the night of the death on Oct. 14, 2007.

The document filed in court on Friday said: "The RCMP's failure to correct the misinformation disclosed on the public record created an ever increased amount of public interest." Robinson and the three other members involved "were subject to public hostility, death threats, and contempt while their policing careers and professional reputations languished," the document says. Robinson said he struggled with undiagnosed PTSD, alcoholism and family strain, which affected his marriage and children. In January of 2008, he requested help paying his legal expenses and was told he would be jointly represented with the other RCMP officers involved. That led to a long dispute because he wanted to be independently represented. He won that right after it was determined no criminal charges would be laid against him. In the meantime, Robinson was also convicted of obstruction of justice in a fatal motorcycle accident.

Robinson alleged scapegoat

Legal documents say that days before the public inquiry into Dziekanski's death, the RCMP released a statement that "Tasers can kill agitated subjects," which led to the public to "reach the unfounded conclusion" that the RCMP members used "wrongful and excessive" force in the Polish man's death. Then in 2010, RCMP Commissioner William Elliott conducted a television interview providing "inaccurate and misleading statements" about RCMP use of force training policies. Another RCMP official publicly apologized to Dziekanski's mother later that year, "signaling" that the members involved in Dziekanski's death "had engaged in wrongful and blameworthy" conduct.

The four officers were eventually charged with perjury for their testimony during the Braidwood Inquiry. None of the officers ever faced criminal charges for their actions related to the death. Two of the officers were acquitted of perjury, despite the fact all four were repeatedly accused of colluding. Robinson is set to appear in court on Tuesday Oct. 11 for the appeal of his perjury conviction. If upheld, he could face jail time.

Const. Millington was sentenced to 30 months for his perjury conviction, but the judge said Robinson's case was more serious because of his higher rank.
We should never forget Galileo being put before the Inquisition.
It would be even worse if we allowed scientific orthodoxy to become the Inquisition.

Richard Smith, Editor in Chief of the British Medical Journal 1991-2004,
in a published letter to Nature
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