afm199
Well-known member
All good points. And there is not really an answer. Just a policy. In this case my primary problem with the technique was not the USE of the taser, it was the repeated use. Taser pain is not extreme, but the infliction of that much discomfort is pretty much the definition of torture, if done over and over.
If policy says that inflicting pain is allowable to gain control, then the issue becomes the definition of control. Another slippery sidewalk. For one person, control means there is no threat of violence. For another control means the prisoner must do exactly as ordered when ordered. For person one, no need to tase or implement pain control. For person two, every need. Those are two extremes.
So how do you get the guy in the car and to jail? Pick him up and carry him? That's how people incur permanent injuries, carrying a heavy person. It is a problem. Infliction of pain is a technique of persusasion. Using it in excess is a technique of torture. If it does not work when tried, you may have to pick him up and carry him. And charge him accordingly.
What are social obligations to a passive prisoner? Wait a half hour and then force? Implement force immediately? No answers there. Unfortunately the LEO plays the role of janitor of human debris.
As far as whether fist strikes, tasing or pepper spraying a passive prisoner are legitimate means of control, the answer is pretty much going to be a matter of degree. And that is going to be determined in the courts and public opinion, with the LEO leading the battle as the test case.
I don't have any answers. I do have huge problems with an LEO who thinks his office allows him to tase a passive prisoner over and over and over. And that's the way it is supposed to be. If people who think my way "win", then that LEO will lose his job. If people who think that level of pain is appropriate and correct "win", then he will keep it.
As with anything, it's not the practice itself, it is the degree of implementation. One beer is fun. One case is trouble.
If policy says that inflicting pain is allowable to gain control, then the issue becomes the definition of control. Another slippery sidewalk. For one person, control means there is no threat of violence. For another control means the prisoner must do exactly as ordered when ordered. For person one, no need to tase or implement pain control. For person two, every need. Those are two extremes.
So how do you get the guy in the car and to jail? Pick him up and carry him? That's how people incur permanent injuries, carrying a heavy person. It is a problem. Infliction of pain is a technique of persusasion. Using it in excess is a technique of torture. If it does not work when tried, you may have to pick him up and carry him. And charge him accordingly.
What are social obligations to a passive prisoner? Wait a half hour and then force? Implement force immediately? No answers there. Unfortunately the LEO plays the role of janitor of human debris.
As far as whether fist strikes, tasing or pepper spraying a passive prisoner are legitimate means of control, the answer is pretty much going to be a matter of degree. And that is going to be determined in the courts and public opinion, with the LEO leading the battle as the test case.
I don't have any answers. I do have huge problems with an LEO who thinks his office allows him to tase a passive prisoner over and over and over. And that's the way it is supposed to be. If people who think my way "win", then that LEO will lose his job. If people who think that level of pain is appropriate and correct "win", then he will keep it.
As with anything, it's not the practice itself, it is the degree of implementation. One beer is fun. One case is trouble.



