Thursday, November 02, 2006

Screaming for Jesus

In Jerseyville, Illinois, a disturbed 17-year-old was standing in the street with a Bible, screaming "I want Jesus". When the police showed up, he wouldn't do what they told him, even after he had been handcuffed - so they tasered him, and he died.

The death disturbs me, but what disturbs me more is the policing style that caused it. The victim was clearly mentally disturbed. He was not violent, or a threat to anyone (not even, apparently, himself). When faced with someone screaming for Jesus, but doing no harm, should the response of the police really be to electrocute him into submission?

The problem here is convenience policing. It's easier for the police to taser someone in this situation than to do the real work of, say, getting hold of a counsellor and paramedics and ensuring that the person gets the help they need. And tasers (and other "less-than-lethal" weapons) encourage this. It is so much easier to subdue than talk. It is so much more convenient. After all, what's 50,000 volts between friends? It's not as if it does any lasting harm...

This is why I don't want tasers in common use in New Zealand. The police attitudes they encourage are just to dangerous to us, the people the police are supposed to be protecting. And if you disagree, consider this for a moment: if it was you screaming for Jesus, would you rather be helped? Or would you rather be zapped so the cops could end their shift on time?

10 comments:

  1. I'm disgusted by this. It looks to me as though the taser was used as a quick way of dealing with him and was used without enough thought as to how it was going to effect him.

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  2. The most common cause of accidental deaths in fights is people hitting their heads as they fall. Tasers will kill people because they will hit their heads when they fall.

    When the police tested tasers on themselves, they put mats down to prevent this injury. Even so, sombody fell off the mat and got hurt.

    Maybe the benefits outweight the costs, but the cops should be honest about the risks.

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  3. That's not all. There appears to have been a Taser death of an Australian teenager too. More details as soon as I can locate them.

    Craig

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  4. He "became combatative" wearing handcuffs? Was he going to bite their legs off?

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  5. Neil:

    Either way, you don't deal with people who have a mental illness by tasering them unless there is immediate danger to life and limb and no other help available.

    The taser is a last resort, not the first one.

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  6. "Combative", eh...that would be an adjective describing the behaviour of a "combatant", or perhaps an "enemy combatant", even..

    And of course in the USA just about anyone can be an "enemy combatant" and being violent is no prerequisite for being labelled so...

    he probably just looked at the cop funny. Taser him!

    Lucky his chosen object of worship was Jesus rather than Muhammed or he would have been shot to little bits, no questions asked

    (I'm quite serious... can you imagine someone standing in the street yelling for Muhammed with Koran in hand, and NOT being treated like a suicide bomber?)

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  7. As someone who works in the mental health sector, this is exactly why we're concerned about the introduction of this law enforcement technology.

    I mean, do taser energy discharges interact with medication and produce toxic effects? Some antipsychotics can cause cardiovascular damage unless monitored closely and intake is regulated to optimal levels.

    Craig

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  8. i saw a documentary awhile back that explored the use of tasers in the US.

    apparently it's pretty common for them to whip them out and zap people.

    they had one guy zapped for standing too close to a crime scene. apparently the cops were jumpy and viewed him as a threat. let me reiterate he was an innocent bystander.

    another was a elderly woman who gave them too much lip.

    trigger. happy.

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  9. I sure would hate NZ to go the way of the US on this. You will get plenty of trigger happy cops who would much rather deal with a situation with the press of a button than with reason-- and it won't JUST be for people screaming off the top of their lungs or whatever.

    It doesn't matter to me whether tasers are fatal in some cases or not-- once you allow this brutality in, it will only get worse.

    Tasers are NOT a solution, just a quick fix.

    ~ Josh

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