Formaldehyde
Both Fair And Balanced
It seems that misuse of tasers continue to occur with great regularity in this country. While few of the stories are worthy of their own thread, I think collectively they are very worthy of discussion.
Here are a few of the recent ones:
Don't tase the guy trying to save his home from fire, bro.
As is frequently the case, The Daily Fail has the best photos and even a video.
Don't tase the 10-year-old for refusing to clean your police cruiser, bro.
Being a cop is a blue collar profession. They have numerous ways of exercising their authority to get unwilling people to comply with their lawful orders that don't involve essentially electrocuting someone in a way which is eerily similar to forms of torture.
Your thoughts and other examples?
Here are a few of the recent ones:
Don't tase the guy trying to save his home from fire, bro.
As is frequently the case, The Daily Fail has the best photos and even a video.


When Daniel saw the fire jump onto his roof, that is when he grabbed the hose again. That is when the police officer grabbed the taser.
I was laying in a puddle of water being electrocuted.
Don't tase the 10-year-old for refusing to clean your police cruiser, bro.
I have been an opponent of the overuse of tasers for years now. While I do think they are useful in certain limited situations, such as when the person is threatening cops or civilians with a knife or other similar weapon, they have frequently become a way for cops to punish those who do not immediately comply with their every whim. It is used to subdue others so they don't have to mess up their uniforms and possibly suffer a minor scrape or abrasion.A New Mexico police officer used a Taser gun on a 10-year-old boy to demonstrate what cops do to people who don’t follow orders, according to a complaint heard by a Sante Fe court Tuesday.
Officer Chris Webb was attending “career day” at Tularosa New Mexico Intermediate School when he sent 50,000 volts of electricity into the child’s chest on the playground. The young boy blacked out and has, according to his legal representative, been suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder ever since; the officer faces a civil suit.
According to the complaint, Webb shot his Taser at the child (referred to only as “R.D.”after he said he did not want to join fellow classmates in cleaning the officer’s patrol car. Courthouse News reported:
“Defendant Webb responded by pointing his Taser at R.D. and saying, ‘Let me show you what happens to people who do not listen to the police.’”
Webb then shot “two barbs into R.D.’s chest,” the complaint states. “Both barbs penetrated the boy’s shirt, causing the device to deliver 50,000 volts into the boy’s body. “Defendant Webb pulled the barbs out [of] the boy’s chest, causing scarring where the barbs had entered the boy’s skin that look like cigarette burns on the boy’s chest.
“The boy, who weighed less than 100 lbs., blacked out.”Instead of calling emergency medical personnel, Officer Webb pulled out the barbs and took the boy to the school principal’s office,” the complaint states.
Following the May 4 incident, Webb, who claims he accidentally discharged the Taser, was given only a three-day suspension.
Being a cop is a blue collar profession. They have numerous ways of exercising their authority to get unwilling people to comply with their lawful orders that don't involve essentially electrocuting someone in a way which is eerily similar to forms of torture.
Your thoughts and other examples?