Shocked to death: Tasers under fire.

AuthorDoherty, Brian
PositionCitings

TASERS, "NONLETHAL" dart guns with a range of about 15 feet that deliver 50,000-volt electric shocks for five seconds at a time, are under fire for their roles in several civilian deaths and police injuries.

About 6,000 law enforcement agencies, including officers at nine public schools in Tempe, Arizona, have Tasers in their arsenals. A November report from Amnesty International on Taser use in the U.S. found that the weapons "are used on unarmed suspects in 80 percent of the cases, for verbal non-compliance in 36 percent, and for cases involving 'deadly assault' only 3 percent of the time."

Tasers have become especially controversial in Florida, where police recently have zapped a 6-year-old boy, a fleeing 12-year-old girl (allegedly drunk), a 14-year-old girl in the back of a squad car, and a wheelchair-bound man brandishing scissors. It's policy in at least three Florida police departments that Tasers are appropriate for suspects merely offering "passive physical resistance" without posing any threat to officers or the public.

In December 2004 alone, three Florida suspects died after being tasered. The Arizona Republic reported in January that it had discovered 84...

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