Thursday, December 10, 2009

Taser Death Re-examined: Government Commission Critical of Police Use of Taser

On December 8th, a Canadian government commission issued a report re-examining the 2007 death of a Polish immigrant who died after being repeatedly tasered by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Robert Dziekanski had just arrived in Canada from Poland and became distraught when a communications mixup left him stranded for hours in the baggage area of the airport. Dziekanski did not speak English, and police were called to the scene following reports of a man creating a disturbance at the Vancouver airport.

Officers arriving on the scene waited less than 30 seconds before deploying their Taser stun guns on Dziekanski, and shocked him repeatedly without determining whether further shocks were justified. A bystander captured the event on video, and footage of Dziekanski screaming in agony on the floor as he was repeatedly tasered while he died appeared worldwide and incited outrage over his death.

The strongly-worded 200 page report, which may be read in its entirety by clicking here, concludes that the use of the taser was, in the words of Paul Kennedy, chairman for the Commission of Public Complaints “premature and inappropriate.”

No comments:

Post a Comment