News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Man Dies Hours after Shot By Police Taser |
Title: | CN ON: Man Dies Hours after Shot By Police Taser |
Published On: | 2004-08-09 |
Source: | Kingston Whig-Standard (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 03:09:31 |
MAN DIES HOURS AFTER SHOT BY POLICE TASER
Local News - One man is dead after being shocked by a police Taser stun gun
and a woman is in custody after two separate drug-fuelled rampages in the
city early yesterday morning.
Police say they had to subdue the two violent individuals within an hour of
each other yesterday morning on opposite sides of the city.
The drug intoxication of the two was so complete that police fear a
powerful batch of cocaine or another drug could be making its rounds in the
city.
"We're going to have to watch for that," said Kingston Police Staff Sgt.
Brian Begbie yesterday. "We're very concerned about that possibility."
Four years ago, a batch of powerful heroin killed three convicts in 17 days
in Kingston.
In the first incident yesterday morning, emergency crews were called to
Portsmouth Avenue where a 43-year-old man was reported to have overdosed.
When police and paramedics arrived, they found the man was conscious and
had barricaded himself inside the house with a large knife and a baseball
bat and was threatening to harm himself.
Police initially tried to calm the man, who admitted to police he had taken
cocaine, but it quickly became apparent that would not work, so police hit
him with a blast of pepper spray.
The man was so strung out that he did not even blink at the spray, police
say, so officers on the scene used their newly issued Taser stun guns, and
that quickly brought the man to the ground.
It was the first time city police had taken down a suspect using the new
weapon -- Begbie said that alone proved its worth.
"If they hadn't had that weapon, there would only have been one alternative
left," he said, meaning the man probably would have been shot.
The effects of the shock appeared to wear off in a few seconds. The man was
lucid and well enough to walk into the hospital and speak to doctors.
However, 21/2 hours after he arrived at the hospital, the man had a seizure
and couldn't be revived.
The man's death comes in the middle of a high-profile debate about the
safety of the Taser, which fires an electrical current through two barbs
shot into a person's skin for about five seconds. The shock immobilizes the
victim but is supposed to wear off within seconds.
About 50 people have died after being shot with Tasers in North America,
most in the United States. Five have died in Canada, most recently two men
in British Columbia. Those deaths led Amnesty International to call for
Tasers to be banned in Canada until it's determined how safe it is.
The company that makes the Taser called Amnesty's statements "misleading
and defamatory" and countered that more than 115,000 people have been hit
with Tasers and no deaths can be directly attributed to the device.
The company says independent coroners have attributed each death to
underlying medical causes, drug toxicity or lethal overexertion while
resisting arrest.
The company further argues that Tasers save the lives of people who would
otherwise be the target of lethal force by police.
Because the man wasn't in police custody at the time, his death didn't
involve the Special Investigations Unit and the case has been turned over
to the coroner. The police are investigating.
Police weren't releasing the man's name last night.
Just an hour after that call, several 911 calls came in from Fraser Street,
where a woman was reported to be "flipping out" and smashing car and
vehicle windows.
Police say the 46-year-old woman was in a drug-induced rage and was
completely irrational, half-dressed and bleeding. They didn't know what
drugs she had taken.
It took three police officers to wrestle the woman to the ground and when
she was taken to hospital, a provision of the Mental Health Act was used to
have her temporarily held for a psychiatric assessment.
Police say besides smashing windows, the woman had tried to break into
several residences.
The incident is under investigation and police say the woman, who wasn't
identified, may face charges.
Local News - One man is dead after being shocked by a police Taser stun gun
and a woman is in custody after two separate drug-fuelled rampages in the
city early yesterday morning.
Police say they had to subdue the two violent individuals within an hour of
each other yesterday morning on opposite sides of the city.
The drug intoxication of the two was so complete that police fear a
powerful batch of cocaine or another drug could be making its rounds in the
city.
"We're going to have to watch for that," said Kingston Police Staff Sgt.
Brian Begbie yesterday. "We're very concerned about that possibility."
Four years ago, a batch of powerful heroin killed three convicts in 17 days
in Kingston.
In the first incident yesterday morning, emergency crews were called to
Portsmouth Avenue where a 43-year-old man was reported to have overdosed.
When police and paramedics arrived, they found the man was conscious and
had barricaded himself inside the house with a large knife and a baseball
bat and was threatening to harm himself.
Police initially tried to calm the man, who admitted to police he had taken
cocaine, but it quickly became apparent that would not work, so police hit
him with a blast of pepper spray.
The man was so strung out that he did not even blink at the spray, police
say, so officers on the scene used their newly issued Taser stun guns, and
that quickly brought the man to the ground.
It was the first time city police had taken down a suspect using the new
weapon -- Begbie said that alone proved its worth.
"If they hadn't had that weapon, there would only have been one alternative
left," he said, meaning the man probably would have been shot.
The effects of the shock appeared to wear off in a few seconds. The man was
lucid and well enough to walk into the hospital and speak to doctors.
However, 21/2 hours after he arrived at the hospital, the man had a seizure
and couldn't be revived.
The man's death comes in the middle of a high-profile debate about the
safety of the Taser, which fires an electrical current through two barbs
shot into a person's skin for about five seconds. The shock immobilizes the
victim but is supposed to wear off within seconds.
About 50 people have died after being shot with Tasers in North America,
most in the United States. Five have died in Canada, most recently two men
in British Columbia. Those deaths led Amnesty International to call for
Tasers to be banned in Canada until it's determined how safe it is.
The company that makes the Taser called Amnesty's statements "misleading
and defamatory" and countered that more than 115,000 people have been hit
with Tasers and no deaths can be directly attributed to the device.
The company says independent coroners have attributed each death to
underlying medical causes, drug toxicity or lethal overexertion while
resisting arrest.
The company further argues that Tasers save the lives of people who would
otherwise be the target of lethal force by police.
Because the man wasn't in police custody at the time, his death didn't
involve the Special Investigations Unit and the case has been turned over
to the coroner. The police are investigating.
Police weren't releasing the man's name last night.
Just an hour after that call, several 911 calls came in from Fraser Street,
where a woman was reported to be "flipping out" and smashing car and
vehicle windows.
Police say the 46-year-old woman was in a drug-induced rage and was
completely irrational, half-dressed and bleeding. They didn't know what
drugs she had taken.
It took three police officers to wrestle the woman to the ground and when
she was taken to hospital, a provision of the Mental Health Act was used to
have her temporarily held for a psychiatric assessment.
Police say besides smashing windows, the woman had tried to break into
several residences.
The incident is under investigation and police say the woman, who wasn't
identified, may face charges.
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