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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: Taze Early, Taze Often The shocking truth about speeding busts: sometimes a ticket is not the worst part. The camera looks forward through the windshield of a police car in Austin, Texas, recording a traffic bust. We see the back of Cpl. Thomas OConnor as he strides forward on the driver side of the sedan he just stopped on South Mopac Expressway. OConnor speaks hurriedly. He sounds angry as he identifies himself by name and department and finishes the sentence with a demand for a drivers license and proof of insurance. Five seconds have elapsed since he left the patrol car. In the next nine seconds he tells the driver, Eugene Snelling, 32, that he was stopped for 70 in a 65 zone and for having no license plate on the rear of his car. In the next five seconds, OConnor demands drivers license and proof of insurance two more times. Whoa, whoa, whoa, the driver replies. His mother is in the carhes driving her to Thanksgiving dinnerand shes talking, too. The policeman demands drivers license and proof of insurance or get out of the vehicle. Twenty-four seconds have now elapsed. The drivers mother nags her son from the passenger seat. At 29 seconds, the policeman yanks open the drivers door and orders, Step out of the vehicle. As the driver fumbles with his seatbelt, the policeman draws a TASER from his belt holster. Were 33 seconds into the bust now, and the mother is still telling her son what to do. At 41 seconds, the drivers feet touch the pavement, and he stands up. The policeman shoves the door shut, hitting the driver in the shoulder and knocking him off balance. Thats followed by a hard push with an order to get to the back of the vehicle. I have no idea why Snelling begins, but the officer shouts him down: Get to the back of the vehicle, put your hands on the vehicle. The driver obviously doesnt understand why hes being treated so roughly when hes said nothing provocative. He hesitates, looks at the policeman in disbelief, and the policeman fires his weapon at him. Zero to TASER: 48 seconds from the time the officer stepped out of his patrol car. Another camera, this time in Utah. We follow as an SUV eases onto the shoulder. Trooper John Gardner walks forward on the driver side. His greeting is matter-of-fact. The driver, in a polite voice, asks how fast he was going, but the officer ignores the question and asks firmly for his license and registration. No, Im serious, Im just wondering, says Jared Massey, 28. We cant hear the conversation that follows, but 35 seconds after the officer first appeared at the window, we hear him ask, How fast do you think you were going? Theres a discussion about passing a sign. No raised voices. It all sounds like a well-modulated back-and-forth. After 73 seconds at the drivers door, the officer returns to his cruiser to write a ticket. When he returns to the SUV, we hear Massey say, Youre giving me a ticket, but you wont tell me why. The driver wants to go back with the trooper to see where the 40-mph sign is. Youre gonna sign this first. Massey refuses. Okay, hop outta the car. Nineteen seconds have elapsed since Trooper Gardner reappeared with the ticket. The driver complies quickly and walks back in the direction from which he had driven, pointing toward something. Hes not aggressive toward the trooper, is not even facing him but, rather, looks down the road pointing. The officer draws his TASER, points it at Massey, and says, Turn around and put your hands behind your back. The driver recoils. Whats wrong with you? he asks. He starts to walk the other way. Gardner fires at the drivers back. Zero to TASER: 32 seconds after the Troopers return. Tom Smith, co-founder and chairman of the board at TASER International, says 4000 law-enforcement agencies now equip all patrol officers with a TASER electronic control device, which he likens to a Star Trek phaser. It fires out two probes, like jumper cables, he says. They attach to an individual by wires up to 35 feet away. It sends an electrical signal into the body. The result is an immediate loss of the persons neuromuscular control. Statistics tossed about by TASER supporters proclaim it to be the most effective close-range neutralizer since Davy Crockett brought down a bear using only his grin: Officer injuries down 80 percent; suspect injuries down 67 percent; use of lethal force down by 78 percent, they say. Just one little problem. Law enforcement hasnt agreed on where TASER use is appropriate, where it should be placed on the use-of-force continuum. This is cop talk for how much force to use in a given situation. Every department has a standard, but theres no standard standard across the country. One approach divides officer response into six levels, with deadly force being Level Six. On this scale, pepper spray, baton blows, and the TASER are Level Four, appropriate when the suspect is violent or threatening. Some California agencies put the TASER at Level Five. Sheriffs officers in Orange County, Florida, use it against passive resistance (Level Three). In the videos described here, the drivers werent resistingat worst, they were less than instant in their compliance. That calls for Level Four force? Following the Austin incident, the departments Internal Affairs office saw no problem, but then acting Chief Cathy Ellison ordered Officer OConnor suspended for three days. In Utah, We have found Trooper Gardners actions were lawful and reasonable, said Highway Patrol Superintendent Lance Davenport. To your list of highway hazards, better add itchy TASER fingers.
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#1. To: Ada (#0)
I see the use of a Tazer as an assault with a deadly weapon, and would react to it as such.
I agree. Any cop tazing someone whose life is not in immediate danger is worthy of looking like one of those sand nigger dot heads. You know the red dots between the eyes.
ping
but the sheiks would shriek and the barons would bellow if hemp was made legal...and people became mellow
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