http://reason.com/blog/show/123388.html
I find that pretty appalling honestly. There used to be a time when Tasers were the alternative to pulling out the real deal and shooting someone. Now they're just a lazy way to get people on the ground without tiring oneself.
Earlier this year, North Braddock, Penn. resident Shawn Hicks came back from a night out and plopped down on his own couch in his own home. Unfortunately, he failed to deactivate the silent alarm on his home security system. According to Hicks, two police officers responded to the alarm, entered his home, and woke him with a taser between the shoulder blades. When Hicks tried to explain that the whole thing was a misunderstanding, and that the officers were in his own home, they tasered him again. They next checked his wallet and ID, which confirmed his name and address. Then they tasered him again. The police then removed the taser pellets from Hicks' bloody back, refused to get him medical treatment, and arrested him for "being belligerent." They threw him in a holding cell until 5 am the next morning, when they released him without filing any charges.
You know what happened next. The police department suspended the officers who tasered Hicks without pay while they conducted a thorough investigation. The chief then had them arrested for assaulting Hicks with their tasers, falsely arresting him, and violating his civil rights. The two officers were fired from the police force, then charged, convicted, and given lengthy prison terms.
Just kidding. They were cleared of any wrongdoing.
I find that pretty appalling honestly. There used to be a time when Tasers were the alternative to pulling out the real deal and shooting someone. Now they're just a lazy way to get people on the ground without tiring oneself.