The data says what the data says: tasers appear to have zero impact on police custody fatalities. I'm actually a little shocked by this, as I expected it to decrease with the introduction of tasers, but I have to accept the fact, as do you, that on the whole there doesn't appear to be any connection between tasers and police custody fatalities. Not one study seems to point to this as a long-term problem.
You're a little "shocked", no pun intended?

Anyways, it is important to point out that were are talking about no impact on
non-firearms related police custody fatalities. TASERS have surely saved numerous lives 1) when they are actually occasionally used sucessfully in deadly force situations where the officer would have been justified in shooting and, 2) when they have quickly de-escalated a situation that would have escalated to a shooting had the TASER not been available.
The second circumstance, particularly, is really hard to quantify, since it is really hard for anyone to know which situations could have escalated to a police shooting, but did not due to the TASER.
This does not even get into how many thousands of suspects and LEOs that have avoided serious injuries due to the TASER being sucessfully deployed.
Why do you keep on with the argument that the electrical current itself will not kill? The targets reaction to being tasered can be fatal.
Also, I'd like you to reread my previous posts and point out where I have asserted that the amperage of a taser shock can be fatal.
Ok, good, we are both in agreement that the TASER's amperage is not fatal. We also agree that the suspect's reaction to being TASERED
can be fatal.....I would add in a very small percentage of situations.
Edit It is also those same reactions that account for other in custody fatalities. TASERs only account for 2% of all non-firearm police custody fatalities.
It is the "person's reactions" that I have been arguing. Just the same as their reaction to most, if not all, other non-firearm police custody fatalities. It is called
excited delirium. Cases of excited delirium have been around a LOT longer than TASERS and have been blamed on use of the hobble leg restraint and termed "positional asphyxia". Positional asphyxia has been recanted as descibed by the link below from The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology. Read the conclusion and it describes "excited delirium". I have also included the Wikipedia definition of excited delirium, however, I believe they make it sound more controversial than it is.
Edit: forgot to add the links. Here they are. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excited_delirium http://www.charlydmiller.com/LIB/1998chan.html
A quote from the Journal: "Yet, no clear data support many of the conclusions drawn in the case report literature regarding positional asphyxia and the hogtie restraint position. Many have argued that factors unrelated to the restraint position may play a greater role in causing these deaths.
Most reported cases involve young men in an "excited" state or one of "agitated delirium" as a result of psychiatric illness or intoxication from illegal drugs. These individuals were combative, violent, and often struggled or suffered traumatic injuries as a result of confrontation with law enforcement before their placement in the restraint position." - sounds like the same conditions in which the police are often forced to deploy the TASER, no?
Damn...you're good.
And, you've restored my mistrust of the media. Thank you for that.
Spin doctor at work?
