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Arkansas Cop Tasers 10-Year-Old Girl


Jessica November 19, 2009 05:27 PM

Arkansas Cop Tasers 10-Year-Old Girl
 
Arkansas Police Use Taser on 10-Year-Old Girl :mad:


Arkansas Cop Tasers 10-Year-Old Girl

Read!!

Quote:

Ozark police were called to the home Nov. 11 after the girl's mother couldn't get the child to take a shower.

Quote:

Ark. cop suspended after using Taser on girl, 10
(AP) – 9 hours ago

OZARK, Ark. — A police officer who used a stun gun on an unruly 10-year-old girl after he said her mother gave him permission has been suspended — not for using the Taser but for not having a video camera attached when he used it.

Mayor Vernon McDaniel said officer Dustin Bradshaw was suspended Wednesday for seven days with pay. McDaniel said the suspension is for not following department procedures because he didn't have the camera on.

McDaniel wants Arkansas State Police or the FBI to look into whether the use of the Taser was proper. The girl, who hasn't been identified, wasn't injured and is now at the Western Arkansas Youth Shelter in Cecil.

Police were called to the home Nov. 11 after the girl's mother couldn't get her to take a shower.

Bradshaw's report says the girl was "violently kicking and verbally combative" when Bradshaw tried to take her into custody, and she kicked him in the groin. He said he delivered "a very brief drive stun to her back."

"Her mother told me to tase her if I needed to," Bradshaw wrote.

Kim Brunell, a spokeswoman with the FBI in Little Rock, said her office neither confirms nor denies when it's involved an investigation and declined to comment Wednesday. State police have declined McDaniel's request to investigate.

Police Chief Jim Noggle said Wednesday that Tasers are a safe way to subdue people who are a danger to themselves or others.

"We didn't use the Taser to punish the child — just to bring the child under control so she wouldn't hurt herself or somebody else," Noggle said.

If the officer tried to forcefully put the girl in handcuffs, he could have accidentally broken her arm or leg, Noggle said.

He said a touch of the stun gun — "less than a second" — stopped the girl from being unruly, and she was handcuffed.

"She got up immediately and they put her in the patrol car," McDaniel said.

Noggle said the girl will face disorderly conduct charges as a juvenile in the incident.

The girl's father, Anthony Medlock, told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that his daughter has emotional problems, but that she didn't have a weapon and shouldn't have been Tasered.

"My daughter does not deserve to be tased and be treated like an animal," said Medlock, who is divorced from the girl's mother and does not have custody.

Steve Tuttle, a spokesman for Taser International, said it's up to individual law enforcement agencies to decide when Taser use is appropriate.

In some cases, a Taser "presents the safer response to resistance compared with the alternatives such as fists, kicks, baton strikes, bean bag guns, chemical agents, or canine response," Tuttle said in a statement.

The police chief, who has been Tasered twice himself during training sessions, said his department has never had to use a stun gun on a child or elderly person before, but that in some instances, that could be necessary to ensure safety.

"We don't want to do things like this," Noggle said. "This is something we have to do. We're required to maintain order and keep the peace."


CrOtALiTo November 19, 2009 10:41 PM

It bad note a sad life.

You know each day people are more demented.

Jason. November 29, 2009 02:40 PM

that is just...not right

irmamar November 30, 2009 01:00 AM

I feel astonished when I see your way of life. Here it's inconceivable that a mother call to the police because her child doesn't want to take a shower :confused:. Police is here for important things, not for domestic matters. Furthermore, you can't touch a child, you can't even shake him/her because you can lose your legal authority over him/her.

CrOtALiTo December 27, 2009 11:36 AM

I have a questions.

What's taser?

irmamar December 27, 2009 11:40 AM

Una pistola eléctrica:

http://www.aurorawdc.com/ci/taser_stinger.jpg

chewy December 30, 2009 01:01 PM

Such news even can make it to headlines... let us focus on learning spanish, its is better :D we'll be happier and with less fine lines :D

Fazor December 30, 2009 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jason. (Post 63193)
that is just...not right

Don't let the media fool you. Using a taser on a kid in that situation isn't mean. A taser won't do any lasting damage. Sure, the officer is bigger and stronger. But grabbing her and forcing her to the ground so that she can be restrained will cause injuries that last much longer . . . bruises, cuts, broken bones, or worse.

Plus, getting into a physical altercation puts both the girl and the officer and anyone else in the vicinity at risk.

The officer should be disciplined for not following his department's procedures (failing to turn on his video camera), just the same way as I would be if I didn't follow my boss' rules. But the act of tasering a child isn't, in and of itself, bad.

Now, an officer shouldn't go around tasering whoever he wants. But once someone is being physically combative (she kicked and struck him), a taser is a wonderful tool. In fact, that's exactly what they were designed for.

Jessica January 02, 2010 12:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fazor (Post 66989)
Don't let the media fool you. Using a taser on a kid in that situation isn't mean. A taser won't do any lasting damage. Sure, the officer is bigger and stronger. But grabbing her and forcing her to the ground so that she can be restrained will cause injuries that last much longer . . . bruises, cuts, broken bones, or worse.

Plus, getting into a physical altercation puts both the girl and the officer and anyone else in the vicinity at risk.

The officer should be disciplined for not following his department's procedures (failing to turn on his video camera), just the same way as I would be if I didn't follow my boss' rules. But the act of tasering a child isn't, in and of itself, bad.

Now, an officer shouldn't go around tasering whoever he wants. But once someone is being physically combative (she kicked and struck him), a taser is a wonderful tool. In fact, that's exactly what they were designed for.

you're right

CrOtALiTo January 02, 2010 11:38 PM

Irmamar.

Thank you for the information.

irmamar January 05, 2010 12:47 PM

No he recibido nunca una descarga eléctrica de un taser de esos, pero no creo que haga precisamente cosquillas (en ese caso no lo llevarían). Y no me parece que atacar a una niña indefensa de apenas diez años, con su delicada piel (sin contar con que creo entender que estaba en el cuarto de baño y podía llevarse una descarga fuerte), sea lo más adecuado. No es bueno educar así a los niños, viven la violencia de pequeños, luego se vuelven violentos.

La violencia es el último recurso de los incompetentes. Isaac Asimov.

Haya paz. :rose:

Fazor January 05, 2010 01:21 PM

Lee el artículo un otro vez. La niña ya era violenta. Eso estuvo la problema.

irmamar January 05, 2010 02:55 PM

¿Por qué era violenta? Eso es lo que hay que averiguar. ;)

poli January 05, 2010 06:10 PM

Esa historia parece muy rara. ¿Qual madre llamaría a la policia para forzar a
su propia hija bañarse? Nada aquí parece normal.


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