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View Full Version : PA - Groups Want New Laws For Stun Guns


Steven Mace
02-18-2002, 05:14 PM
Want Stun Guns Safety Issue Raised

Sat Feb 16, 7:23 AM ET

By JOANN LOVIGLIO, Associated Press Writer

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The death of a man shot by police with a Taser stun gun highlights the potential dangers of weapons that are considered nonlethal, civil liberties groups say.

"Our understanding is that the reason for using these kinds of weapons is that a person can be (subdued) but not killed," said Larry Frankel, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (news - web sites) of Pennsylvania. "The safety issue needs to be closely looked at, and if there is a growing body of facts that this is a more dangerous weapon than was first thought, then it's time for reconsideration."

Many police departments nationwide have added weapons like pepper spray, electronic shockers, rubber bullets and net guns to their arsenals in recent years, in an effort to subdue suspects without firing a gun.

Now, groups such as the ACLU and Amnesty International are calling for closer scrutiny of such weapons. Amnesty International has urged law enforcement and correctional agencies to suspend use of the weapons until an independent inquiry is conducted, spokeswoman Gwen Fitzgerald said.

In the Philadelphia incident, Anthony Spencer, 35, was standing outside his home naked and brandishing a 7-inch knife when police arrived Wednesday. Officers used pepper spray in an effort to subdue him but it didn't work, so they used the Taser 50,000-volt stun gun, police said.

The Taser fires two projectile darts, connected to the weapon by wires, that can reach a subject up to 21 feet away. An electrical charge temporarily overrides the central nervous system; if the suspect continues to resist, the officer can deliver a second charge by pulling the trigger.

After the 6-foot-tall, 280-pound man was dropped by the current, he was handcuffed and placed in a patrol wagon for the ride to the hospital. He was conscious at the time of his arrest but died on the way to the hospital.

Preliminary tests showed he had cocaine in his system, police said. No cause of death has been determined, and whether the drug played a part will not be known until autopsy reports and toxicological tests are analyzed.

The incident was the first such fatality in Philadelphia since police began using the Taser device last year, authorities said. Other fatalities have been reported in Taser-assisted arrests in Florida, California and other states, but none have been blamed on the Taser itself, said Steve Tuttle of Taser International, which sells the weapon to 1,200 police departments worldwide.

"The Taser is an alternative to a firearm that has saved thousands of lives," he said. "Our biggest problem is a lack of knowledge about how it works."

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020216/ap_on_re_us/taser_death_2

Steve Mace