Naked Wizard Tased By Reality

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Sun Apr 26, 2009 9:59 pm

From a comment over at the Huffpo thread found here:

Madbunny wrote:I used to work security at the Coachella Events for several years. I can tell you first hand that Shorgan is right about it being very difficult to control a large person who is on substances, not to mention completely unpredictable. NOT harming people is a lot harder than you think it is if you're trying to control their movements.

What you saw in the video:

1) the police tried to get him to return to normal behavior on his own "put on your clothes and enjoy the concert"
2) lead him away under his own power
3) lead him away escorted by them.
4) leave with them, in handcuffs.
5) takedown and restraint when he tried to flee
6) handcuffing an obviously struggling adult male.

What you didn't see was the regular concert security attempting to handle the situation before the police arrived, the police being called over, or what the man was doing, or even what substances he was on (if any).

Could they have done it differently? Sure, there are always a million things you can do differently, but holding hands and sharing good will isn't one of them. The police were there to restore order to the event. YOU might be fine with a naked guy running around, or YOU might be fine if he's hanging his (admittedly miniscule) willie in the faces of teenagers all day long. I assure you though, that the concert promoters that push this event as a family event are not.
User avatar
Cosmic Cowbell
 
Posts: 1774
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 5:20 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby kool maudit » Sun Apr 26, 2009 10:12 pm

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:
barracuda wrote:Don't taze me, bro.


Keep your cock to yourself and you'll have nothing to worry about from me. Expose it to my kids and you'll wish you got tazed.


if someone leers at your kid and then exposes himself in a sexual way, the above is warranted.

if some guy is walking naked through a public park and your kid sees his cock and you flip out in the manner you are hinting towards, i hope you are then harmed severely.
kool maudit
 
Posts: 608
Joined: Sat Jan 20, 2007 4:48 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby chiggerbit » Sun Apr 26, 2009 10:41 pm

Watching the video again, it looks pretty clear to me that the reason the cops failed to get control of the guy the way they should have in the first place is that they were delicately avoiding making any contact with the genital area, my guess is due to homophobia. Copping is a contact sport. Those three need to be reassigned to desk jobs ASAP. For Pete's sake, what did they do before tasers?
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Sun Apr 26, 2009 10:45 pm

kool maudit wrote:
Cosmic Cowbell wrote:
barracuda wrote:Don't taze me, bro.


Keep your cock to yourself and you'll have nothing to worry about from me. Expose it to my kids and you'll wish you got tazed.


if someone leers at your kid and then exposes himself in a sexual way, the above is warranted.

if some guy is walking naked through a public park and your kid sees his cock and you flip out in the manner you are hinting towards, i hope you are then harmed severely.


There are many pedophiles I'm sure who expose themselves to kids that don't do it in overtly sexual ways. I'm not inclined to psychoanalyze whether or not that may be the case in the heat of the moment. And hey, if my park becomes known as the park whereby you get your ass kicked when you choose to roam naked while children are at play for whatever reason, I'm alright with that. I do appreciate your thoughts however because it serves to remind me that people like you exist. As I'm sure mine do to you. Again, I'm alright with that.

:cheers:

Note to chigs: What do you think the baton was for?
User avatar
Cosmic Cowbell
 
Posts: 1774
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 5:20 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby compared2what? » Sun Apr 26, 2009 10:58 pm

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:
marmot wrote:however, i don't feel the wizard had the right ('the freedom of speech' as one spectator yelled it) to get naked in public as he was. i'm a real libertarian in the sense that we should be as free as we should be as long as we don't infringe upon the rights of others. the wizard-clown was infringing.

imho, it was unacceptable behavior!


Agreed (obviously)


I respectfully submit that it's neither necessary nor desirable to reach a uniform agreement on whether or not his behavior was "acceptable." Because as I understand it, the police are charged with enforcing the law, as opposed to, say, the etiquette, the custom, or the conventionally preferred mode of personal conduct. And as I further understand it, the 14th amendment actually has something to say about whether or not the acceptability of someone's behavior is, per se, any of the government's business, and (very reductively stated) that something is: Hell, no, not under our constitution and not at any level, whether federal, state or local.

From the perspective of anything that could be generally construed as an issue affecting the common good, general welfare, or public interest, the first relevant question is therefore whether or not it was reasonable for those cops to regard the naked wizard's behavior as sufficiently in violation of any of the various codes or statutes that they are charged with upholding and/or enforcing to justify or mandate police intervention of some kind.

And if so, the second relevant question is: Well, okay then. What kind?

And I'd say that the answer to the first question is pretty unambiguously: Yes. It was. Specifically, it was reasonable for them to regard his behavior as a misdemeanor under Sec. 314-318.6 of California state law, as follows:

    Every person who willfully and lewdly, either: 1. Exposes his person, or the private parts thereof, in any public place, or in any place where there are present other persons to be offended or annoyed thereby; or, 2. Procures, counsels, or assists any person so to expose himself or take part in any model artist exhibition, or to make any other exhibition of himself to public view, or the view of any number of persons, such as is offensive to decency, or is adapted to excite to or thoughts or acts, is guilty of a misdemeanor.

Which leaves us with only one relevant question wrt which there's a whole lot of room for debate. ("If so, what kind?") -- ie, the question asked and answered here by marmot....

was it all so worthy of a tasering? that's another issue. if you want a clear-cut Yes or No from me - i'd say No.


....except asked with a clear understanding of why both the question and the answer touch on issues of profound public importance to everyone that has absolutely fuck-all to do with such season-to-taste matters as anybody's individual personal preferences or opinions on the subject of public nudity. Which is not to say that any threat to someone's individual right to form, hold and express those opinions isn't also an issue of profound public importance. Because it absolutely is. It just strikes me as a little off-topic to focus on it on a thread that doesn't involve any threat to it.

Indeed, I'd say that given that: (a) the social and/or moral acceptability of public nudity varies significantly both on an individual level and according to the context in which it occurs; (b) the nakedness of the wizard indisputably constitutes legitimate grounds for police intervention of some kind under the law as it presently stands; and the emphasis placed by both the video and the thread title on the use of tasers, there's much to recommend the view that it's the use of tasers rather than the nakedness of the wizard that's the primary if not the only subject the propriety of which is under fucking consideration here.

And quite apart from the question of whether any intervention was necessary and not just legitimate, I really don't see a single fucking thing that justifies it.

Or, for that matter, a single fucking thing that would have prevented three huge, armed and physically imposing cops from picking up one definitively unarmed medium-sized naked man of lesser physical strength than any one of them from just putting him in the standard face-down hold on the ground that they do put him in without using any more force than they need to in order to do that, cuffing him, and carting him off into custody.

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:Again, agreed as to the nudity aspect of the case.


Again, respectfully submitted that the acceptability of the nudity aspect of the case is not, per se, an issue regarding which agreement is necessary, given its unambiguous status as a misdeamenor in the state of California.

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:But it should be clear to all that public nudity is absolutely NOT the reason he got tased. Only after he became violent (resisting arrest) did he get the jolt.


Could you point me to the part of the video at which he became violent? Because I neither see him acting violently nor threatening anyone with violence at any point. In fact, if you pay attention to the sequence of events, I think you'll at least grant the possibility that he resisted arrest because he was getting tased, not the reverse.


As to the implicit preemptive defense raised here:

I'll assume I've taken the politically incorrect position here on this matter. At least as far as the membership here at RI goes.


I would further respectfully submit that any time you hear people invoking the evil specter of political correctness, you try taking a moment to ask yourself whether those invoking it are raising a legitimate objection to something that constitutes such a genuine and severe offense against the common good, general welfare or public interest of some, any, or every part of the community that whatever it is, the 14th amendment either doesn't or shouldn't cover it, or whether they're just grousing because their lives would be much more congenial if everyone was required to exercise one or more of the numerous personal rights and freedoms that aren't specifically protected by the text of the Constitution, but rather by the doctrine of substantive due process under the 14th amendment -- for example, the right to raise your children in accordance with your own beliefs regarding the absolute and unalloyed unacceptability of children being exposed to the sight of a naked man in public -- in the same way that they themselves do.

Oh, come on. Go back and read it again. I asked you to try asking yourself, I didn't fucking dictate the answer. And that was because I am actually already fully and consciously aware that (a) it's none of my fucking business what the answer is; and (b) nothing entitles me to tell other people what questions they should or shouldn't ask themselves. Which is why I only asked you to try asking. You're perfectly free to skip the whole exercise if it doesn't interest you. It's not like three large armed men are twisting your arm behind your back, forcing you to the ground and repeatedly using a high-powered stun-gun on you.

Which is how I, for one, would like to see things stay. And also why I'd argue as strongly as I just did against the acceptability of any representative of the government using high-powered stun-guns on anyone for any reason or in any circumstance other than those few in which it's arguably a safer method of immobilizing someone who urgently needs to be stopped before he or she harms self or others than shooting them might be.

Because once you start making exceptions to that, the only relevant question becomes whether taser use will become as widely tolerated a police tactic as non-violent restraint now is in your lifetime or in your children's. And please forgive me for putting it so forcefully. But that's a future I want to avoid passionately enough to take the position that anyone who can't see that is just asleep at the wheel, and it's by far the lesser of two evils to say that flat out than it is to prevaricate out of a misplaced sense of civility.

Not that I don't feel guilty about saying it. Please don't yell at me. I respect and like you. I just think you're making a dangerous mistake.
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby compared2what? » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:11 pm

btw, as far as can be inferred from his behavior, the guy's on X or something very close to it. Which is not very far, I admit. But there's absolutely no sign of PCP or any other mind-altering substance including alcohol in play, that I can see.

So unless you feel that whenever there's no particular evidence one way or the other, cops are justified in using tasers on the grounds that they have no way of knowing whether the person they're dealing with is about to fly into a frothing scare-tactic educational-video state of crazed rage -- because after all, anything's possible -- I'd say that argument doesn't fly either.
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby compared2what? » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:29 pm

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:From a comment over at the Huffpo thread found here:

Madbunny wrote:I used to work security at the Coachella Events for several years. I can tell you first hand that Shorgan is right about it being very difficult to control a large person who is on substances, not to mention completely unpredictable. NOT harming people is a lot harder than you think it is if you're trying to control their movements.

What you saw in the video:

1) the police tried to get him to return to normal behavior on his own "put on your clothes and enjoy the concert"
2) lead him away under his own power
3) lead him away escorted by them.
4) leave with them, in handcuffs.
5) takedown and restraint when he tried to flee
6) handcuffing an obviously struggling adult male.

What you didn't see was the regular concert security attempting to handle the situation before the police arrived, the police being called over, or what the man was doing, or even what substances he was on (if any).

Could they have done it differently? Sure, there are always a million things you can do differently, but holding hands and sharing good will isn't one of them. The police were there to restore order to the event. YOU might be fine with a naked guy running around, or YOU might be fine if he's hanging his (admittedly miniscule) willie in the faces of teenagers all day long. I assure you though, that the concert promoters that push this event as a family event are not.


Good to know what this commenter imagines we didn't see. Also, although it's strictly anecdotal, in my experience and observation of concert security guards, it's not typically a job that attracts people with a strong natural inclination to maintain serenity and order in the nursery as much as it is an excuse for people who have as little power over anything or anyone on a day to day basis as most minimum-wage workers do to put on a shirt that puts them in a position of authority over purchasers of expensive concert tickets. To which I'm very sympathetic, actually, as long as it's not abusive.

I'm also glad that finally someone had identified the real victims here. Poor concert promoters. They just give and give and give, without expecting anything in the way of major profits in return, and does anyone ever thank them for it? No.

Let's start a charitable fund for them.
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby chiggerbit » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:33 pm

The cops should have been conducting an on-going assessment in their heads as this situation went down. Obviously, as c2w said, they had grounds for intervention because he was breaking the law. But what level of intervention? The situation needed the least restrictive PROFESSIONAL intervention that would meet the needs for protecting the immediate security needs of the public and the cops, and then those of the law. Baton???? Was he brandishing a gun or knife? Was he physically threatening anyone, including the cops? It looks pretty clear to me that the answer to both is no. His resistance was passive, and he obviously ~ahem~ had no weapons. Christ, this happened in California, didn't it. I forgot to check. I'd be a hell of a lot more worried about my granddaughter seeing this kind of violent intervention than I would about her seeing a male pee-pee. What would you expect from the cops if that had been a woman?
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:43 pm

compared2what? wrote:I respect and like you.


First and foremost, that pleases me very much. As you already know, I respect and like you too.

I'll restate my position as clearly and succinctly as possible. First, I am against indiscriminate tasing as a means to subdue an individual for any reason other than to prevent the possibility of physical harm to any individual, including those representing law enforcement and the suspected offender.

In this case, IMO, the officers did everything that a member of society would consider reasonable to enforce the law of the land prior to attempting to arrest the individual for non-compliance with said law. Only after the individual refused to comply peacefully with the officers attempts to arrest him, did the use of the tasers become necessary. Part of the necessity for doing this involves the fact that the found themselves in the middle of a potential hostile crowd. Of course, had Barracuda been there, they would have found themselves subject to heavily weighted projectiles aimed at there heads. The longer the altercation persisted at that point, the greater the risk to both officers, the subject and the public at large that such an attempt would be made. The taser was used to force compliance with arrest in a timely manner. Any other opinion is purely subjective and not based in fact. Period. End of story.

My use of the term political correctness was made half-heartedly and with sarcasm. One only has to look early on in the thread to recognize that anyone entering this thread with a opinion that varied from the popular notion that all cops are nothing but evil clowns in disguise was entering hostile territory. I did so anyway and would do it again because I do not feel this to be the reality - a term which is included in the headline of the thread and so on topic. I consider myself a liberal. Very liberal. And I take some solace in the fact the the thread on Huffpo, running some 12 pages or more of comments, is split about 50/50 as to whether the Wizard deserved it or not. In this thread, it's myself and Marmot Vs....implying that the politically correctness found it RI is not the political correctness exhibited in the real world, hence the sarcasm.

I'm tired and have really had enough for one day.

G'nite all.

~C
Last edited by Cosmic Cowbell on Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Cosmic Cowbell
 
Posts: 1774
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 5:20 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby lightningBugout » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:48 pm

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:anyone entering this thread with a opinion that varied from the popular notion that all cops are nothing but evil clowns in disguise was entering hostile territory.


I'd flesh that out to explain that he who wears the uniform of a cop may well be a fine soul, but that the uniform itself (and the larger social organism it signifies) is a facet of society's "evil clown" but I'd have to say, thank god there is still a place (RI) where the cops who taze a naked rock festival-goer are the bad guys.
"What's robbing a bank compared with founding a bank?" Bertolt Brecht
User avatar
lightningBugout
 
Posts: 2515
Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2008 3:34 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Cosmic Cowbell » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:53 pm

lightningBugout wrote:...but I'd have to say, thank god there is still a place (RI) where the cops who taze a naked rock festival-goer are the bad guys.


Feel free to circle jerk on about then...

ZZZzzzz
User avatar
Cosmic Cowbell
 
Posts: 1774
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 5:20 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby chiggerbit » Sun Apr 26, 2009 11:56 pm

Cosmic Cowbell said:
One only has to look early on in the thread to recognize that anyone entering this thread with a opinion that varied from the popular notion that all cops are nothing but evil clowns in disguise was entering hostile territory.


My husband was a cop who was proud of the job he performed. I'm quite familiar with what their professional standards should be--well, in most states except California. Was it California?. This situation was not handled professionally. These cops should have been able to put an effective hold on the perpetrator with little fuss... if they hadn't been so worried about making contact with his pee-pee.
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby lightningBugout » Mon Apr 27, 2009 12:40 am

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:
lightningBugout wrote:...but I'd have to say, thank god there is still a place (RI) where the cops who taze a naked rock festival-goer are the bad guys.


Feel free to circle jerk on about then...

ZZZzzzz


Good one.
"What's robbing a bank compared with founding a bank?" Bertolt Brecht
User avatar
lightningBugout
 
Posts: 2515
Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2008 3:34 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Avalon » Mon Apr 27, 2009 12:48 am

Had any of you been there in the crowd, what do you think you might have done?

It's being said that it was being marketed as a family event. While I'm going on just 2 viewings of the incident, I didn't notice much of anyone in the crowd who was middle-aged, or who even appeared to be over 30. Is that age stratification a factor in the crowd's response?

I didn't for example, hear any effort to note the cops' badge numbers. They were able to act in anonymity. Would having it known what the badge number of each of them was have helped? Would "Taser Cop 56288, Bald Cop 63009" have made a more useful chant than "The whole world is watching!"?

What would have been the effect of several people simultaneously taking off all their clothes, and standing there quietly with hand gestures that tried to get the crowd to quiet and do the same?
User avatar
Avalon
 
Posts: 1529
Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2005 2:53 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby nathan28 » Mon Apr 27, 2009 1:44 am

Cosmic Cowbell wrote:
kool maudit wrote:
Cosmic Cowbell wrote:
barracuda wrote:Don't taze me, bro.


Keep your cock to yourself and you'll have nothing to worry about from me. Expose it to my kids and you'll wish you got tazed.


if someone leers at your kid and then exposes himself in a sexual way, the above is warranted.

if some guy is walking naked through a public park and your kid sees his cock and you flip out in the manner you are hinting towards, i hope you are then harmed severely.


There are many pedophiles I'm sure who expose themselves to kids that don't do it in overtly sexual ways. I'm not inclined to psychoanalyze whether or not that may be the case in the heat of the moment. And hey, if my park becomes known as the park whereby you get your ass kicked when you choose to roam naked while children are at play for whatever reason, I'm alright with that. I do appreciate your thoughts however because it serves to remind me that people like you exist. As I'm sure mine do to you. Again, I'm alright with that.

:cheers:

Note to chigs: What do you think the baton was for?


Hey man, it's cool that you're okay with excessive force. You know, like if some dude is naked the first thing to do is use a weapon against him rather than, gee, apply a hold or takedown and handcuff the dude, then put a blanket on him. Because a tazer is non-lethal the way a takedown is non-lethal, right?

It's ridiculous. It's fine to arrest some dude for public nudity when he won't comply with a request to clothe himself. Last I checked it's okay to even grab and pin someone to do so, or use compliance holds, etc. But I mean a tazer is just like a wrist-lock, just 50,000 volts more, right? Small difference?
„MAN MUSS BEFUERCHTEN, DASS DAS GANZE IN GOTTES HAND IST"

THE JEERLEADER
User avatar
nathan28
 
Posts: 2957
Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2008 6:48 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 167 guests