Mounties Zap Details From Taser Reports As Firings Soar Across Canada
OTTAWA - The RCMP is stripping crucial details about Taser firings from public reports as use of the controversial stun guns skyrockets across the country.
A joint investigation by The Canadian Press and CBC found the Mounties are now refusing to divulge key information that must be recorded each time they draw their electronic weapons.
As a result, Canadians will know much less about who is being hit with the 50,000-volt guns, whether they were armed, why they were fired on and whether they were injured.
Taser report forms obtained under the Access to Information Act show the Mounties have used the powerful weapons more than 4,000 times since introducing them seven years ago.
Incidents have increased dramatically, topping 1,000 annually in each of the last two years compared with about 600 in 2005. The overwhelming majority of firings took place in Western Canada, where the national force often leads front-line policing.
As Taser use escalates, however, the RCMP has tightened the lid of secrecy.
Information stripped from the forms includes details of several Taser cases the Mounties previously made public under the access law. In effect, the RCMP is reclassifying details of Taser use - including some telling facts that raised pointed questions about how often the stun guns are fired and why.
A Canadian Press analysis last November of 563 incidents between 2002 and 2005 found three in four suspects Tasered by the RCMP were unarmed. Several of those reports suggested a pattern of stun-gun use as a handy tool to keep drunk or rowdy suspects in line, rather than to defuse major threats.
But the Mounties are now censoring Taser report forms to conceal related injuries, duration of shocks, whether the individual was armed, what police tried before resorting to the stun gun, and precise dates of firings.
In fact, Canadians now know more about the Tasering of dogs than humans. One of the most detailed new reports describes how a pooch named Princess was zapped with a stun gun in Maple Ridge, B.C., as five officers carried out a search warrant.
Princess was not given the standard warning: "Police! Stop or you will be hit with 50,000 volts of electricity!"
There was little point, the report goes on to note: "Subject would not have understood the command, as subject was a dog."
The RCMP cites the need to protect privacy and continuing investigations to justify why it removed such basic details from other reports.
Liberal public safety critic Ujjal Dosanjh scoffed at the explanation.
"That's hogwash. That's absolute nonsense," the former attorney general for British Columbia said in an interview. "Whether or not someone was armed ... how does that violate privacy?"
Dosanjh noted that names and addresses are already removed from the forms.
"The RCMP is a public police force. They are accountable to Canadians.
"They have to provide that information so that people can judge for themselves whether or not their police force is acting appropriately."
Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day was travelling Monday and was not immediately available for comment.
Insp. Troy Lightfoot, who helps oversee RCMP Taser use, would not speculate on why the reporting changes were made. But he stressed there are still ways to monitor stun guns and other uses of force.
"I can tell you that there are many accountability systems in place with regards to police actions. You have the courts, you have coroners' inquests, you have a multitude of oversight bodies," he said. "There is a complaints process that can be followed."
Paul Kennedy, head of the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, said the decision to withhold details of Taser firings amounts to a self-defeating lack of transparency that bucks widespread calls for more - not less - public reporting.
"There seems to be something that is touching a chord with Canadians when they see the Taser.
"Now, it may be because the person is just reduced to a squirming ball of flesh on the ground, that it seems to be used against men and women, it is used against young people, it is used against old people. There is the issue as to whether or not deaths are associated with it."
The RCMP should be making public as much Taser data as possible, Kennedy said.
"There is nothing more important to the police than maintaining and restoring public confidence. How do you do that? You do that by getting your story out."
Stun guns have swiftly become the go-to weapon for scores of police and correctional officers across Canada. The RCMP has more than 2,800 Tasers and some 9,100 Mounties are trained to use them.
They can be fired from a distance, laying suspects low with high-voltage bursts that override the central nervous system. They can also be used up close in touch-stun mode, which has been likened to leaning on a hot stove.
The potent devices are hugely popular with officers who say they're a safer, more efficient option than pepper spray or batons. But a rash of recent headlines has raised questions about the extent to which painful Taser jolts are used much like cattle prods on unarmed, non-violent suspects.
RCMP reports previously released to The Canadian Press also detailed several head injuries when suspects struck the floor, along with burns caused by stuns and lacerations from sharp Taser probes.
Public wariness about the weapons turned to full-blown anger last fall when amateur video showing the death of Robert Dziekanski was released. RCMP were called last October when the Polish immigrant became agitated at Vancouver International Airport after spending hours in a secure section while his mother tried in vain to contact him from the public side.
Although Dziekanski appears more confused than threatening on the video, the officers waited less than 30 seconds before they zapped the 40-year-old with a Taser and pinned him to the floor as he wailed in pain. Within minutes, he was dead.
It took 15 months and an official complaint before the RCMP would release thousands of pages recording more than 4,000 Taser incidents.
There are stark differences between the newly released forms and earlier versions filed about the same confrontations.
For example, the original report on a March 7, 2004, case in northern Manitoba revealed that an unarmed detainee in a Pukatawagan RCMP cell was Tasered after only oral intervention. There was no attempt to subdue the inmate through physical force before the officer warned: "Let me introduce you to the Taser. It is able to produce 50,000 volts of electricity. Co-operate with us and you will not be stunned."
The new form says only that the confrontation occurred in 2004, with no precise date. The section entitled Weapons Carried or Immediately Available by Subject is blank.
And there is no longer any description of verbal commands or other police response before the Taser was fired.
"It certainly isn't helpful to be in the midst of greater debate with less and less information," says Hilary Homes of Amnesty International Canada. "In general, it's a problem across Canada that we don't have the same accountability system throughout the many forces that use the Taser."
Amnesty International wants the devices suspended pending an independent, comprehensive study of risks and benefits.
Dziekanski was recorded as the 18th person in Canada to die after being hit by a Taser since police started carrying them in 2001. The tally has since risen to 19. Amnesty says at least 280 people have died in the United States following a Taser zap in the last seven years.
Arizona-based manufacturer Taser International stresses the device has never been directly blamed for a death. It has, however, been cited repeatedly as a contributing factor.
Kennedy referred to "usage creep" in an interim report on Tasers last December that urged the Mounties to drastically restrict reliance on the stun guns. The weapons should only be used in touch-stun or full firing mode when suspects are "combative" or pose a risk of "death or grievous bodily harm," he said.
Lightfoot, however, said the cases he has recently analyzed indicate the Taser was used acceptably. "It is an appropriate device for law-enforcement use, and it does enhance police and public safety. And it is one of the least injurious means that we have available to take people into police custody."
Kennedy devoted a whole section of his report to the need for more and better documentation of Taser use. He recommended the RCMP produce quarterly and annual reports detailing the number and nature of firings, how often medical care was needed, and the number of Mounties and instructors who passed or failed related training.
Lightfoot said the force plans to produce regular reports on Taser use, but could not say whether they would be made public.
Britain's Home Office publishes statistics quarterly on Taser firings in England and Wales, citing a need for a "rigorous and measured approach" to introducing the weapons in the United Kingdom.
Dosanjh says revelations of an RCMP clampdown on Taser data is another blow to the national police force's battered reputation.
It comes as the federal government moves to overhaul an iconic institution that has seen more than its share of major gaffes in recent years - from the Maher Arar torture affair to claims by rank-and-file Mounties of high-level meddling in RCMP pension and insurance plans.
"I'm actually embarrassed," said Dosanjh. "I dealt with the RCMP ... in British Columbia when I was the attorney general. I was proud of that. But the more I look at how they function, the more I see the lack of transparency and accountability, I am flabbergasted.
"I don't know whether the red serge is any more a symbol that we should be so proud of."
The RCMP requires its officers to file a written report each time a Taser is fired, or even removed from its holster. The Canadian Press and CBC obtained more than 4,000 such reports for the period from 2001 to 2007. Some statistics on the number of reports filed, by year and by region:
2001: 2; 2002: 84; 2003: 559; 2004: 240; 2005: 597; 2006: 1,119; 2007: 1,414
(Note: The RCMP suspended mandatory reporting in 2004, reinstating the requirement in 2005.)
2007 reports
Newfoundland and Labrador: 24
Nova Scotia: 53
Prince Edward Island: 16
New Brunswick: 81
Quebec: 0
Ontario (including Ottawa HQ): 2
Manitoba: 129
Saskatchewan: 108
Alberta: 371
British Columbia: 496
Yukon: 36
Northwest Territories: 53
Nunavut: 45
(Note: The RCMP does minimal front-line policing in Ontario and Quebec.)
Source: RCMP
© 2008 The Canadian Press
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23 Comments so far
Show AllThat is documented in this movie:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0363089/
The Montreal police used taser guns back in october 2001 on at least one non-resisting squatter that were previously given town permission to squat in a city-owned building. After a series of firefighter harrassement issues (fire alarm kept going off for burned toasts, a little crack in walls that made the structure "not safe" which got the squatters to joke that if firefighters went to check poor neighboorhoods, theyd have to close down half the buildings), they served the squatters with an eviction notice. The police moved in, tasered this guy while he was in bed and not resisting, also kicking out some 50-ish squatters. I wonder if thats part of whats been hidden from view.
tj,
We still have outlets for our voices to be heard, particularly since her Majesty's loyal opposition holds considerable power in a minority parliament to question and influence government policy.
I've already written to the relevant MP, something I do regularly.
We definately need a system like the one above, because
air passengers are not treated as suspected terrorists
enough.
Air safety proposal: shock-bracelets controlled by flight attendants:-
http://www.boingboing.net/2008/03/20/air-safety-proposal.html
Lamperd, a Canadian "firearm training system" company, has patented a bracelet that delivers debilitating shocks when remotely triggered. Their killer app for this is aviation safety: they're proposing that the TSA could force everyone who flies to wear one of these and then flight-attendants could zap us into a stupor if we turn out to be Al Quaeda.
No government hides good news. The failure to report this information should be considered probable cause for an investigation. I suggest that any officer using a taser, gun or any technique that causes loss of consciousness or body control should be suspended pending investigation. IF PROPER REPORTS ARE NOT SUBMITTED PROMPTLY IT SHOULD BE WITHOUT PAY.
If it is clear the officer behaved correctly their would be no disgrace because the suspension is automatic - not implying guilt.
If I'm stopped by a cop for speeding and cooperate by handing over my ID, etc. it doesn't really matter to me whether I'm tasered, beat with a baton, or pummeled senseless to the ground. Any of the above would suck.
The problem (abuse of protocol) is almost totally unrelated to technology.
I don't like MOST of the stats provided at the end of the article and for 2007 reports, but it's definitely great that Quebec has ZERO and Ontario only 2 cases of police using these damn e-guns.
Quebec is not very surprising; it seems to have relatively decent, non-fanatical, ... police, although the article is about RCMP, which is federal. Otoh, maybe RCMP have to be extra-careful here.
However, it's sort of odd, in statistical terms, for Quebec and Ontario constitute around half of the total Canadian population.
It'd be good to get the same report as provided at the end of the article, except with additional information. It should state the number of victims of stun-gun use by the police forces, along with the number of residents in each province.
That might, should I think, provide a much better picture of this [abuse] by police. F.e., the Northwest Territories, which has very, very little population, might actually have a higher rate of stun-gun use than Manitoba and Saskatchewan; perhaps even some of the provinces with higher stun-gun use than those two provinces have.
Anyway, the combined information or data would provide a more accurate picture.
When the kid in Florida was trying to ask a question of Senator Kerry, he got tasered. The kid caught the true electric shock, but all Americans got the real intended shock - don't speak up. Just shut up. Resistance is futile.....Where was the outrage? At least in Canada the people still have inquiring minds. Enough to question the authorities and have it printed in their MSM. Here in the U.S. all we get is Greg Palast saying the kid should have known to wear a ground wire. But then I guess Greg is well beyond "The Shock Doctrine". Nothing shocks him. I assume he wears a ground wire as a precaution.
Quote: "The RCMP should be making public as much Taser data as possible, Kennedy said.
"There is nothing more important to the police than maintaining and restoring public confidence. How do you do that? You do that by getting your story out.""
DEFINITELY, but:
*) The RCMP has long been very much gangsterism-related, in the sense of committing it themselves; and,
*) The RCMP may possibly be endangering lives of member officers by treating the public in this way.
Why the latter? I'm speculating, but think that if they wish to gangsterishly act this way towards the public, then this might possibly cause some Canadians to become a "little" angry and figure that they won't use tasers, but will use guns loaded with bullets against members of such public police forces. Surely few officers would be such victims, but the RCMP gangsterishly being cause would not be a minor matter.
They are, iow, acting in a provocatory manner. Some people might even shoot or kill an officer for zapping 'pooch' with a 50,000-volt taser.
But the RCMP must not cover up in the criminal, despotic, ... way that it's now doing. There's no reason to do this unless there is real and serious guilt on the part of the RCMP officers.
They are very gangsterism-prone though, and that can be stated in a different way, which is that they are psychopathic. Power has "gotten to their puny minds".
Quoting again from the article:
"Dziekanski was recorded as the 18th person in Canada to die after being hit by a Taser since police started carrying them in 2001. The tally has since risen to 19. Amnesty says at least 280 people have died in the United States following a Taser zap in the last seven years."
I wonder what the stats were before the use of these taser guns; wondering if they were greater or less, or about the same. If they were less, then this'd say MUCH about the need to ban the use of these damn tasers, which I think should be banned anyway.
Also, and I don't know the technical differences between the two, that is, if there are any significant differences besides the amount of voltage, but around 25 years ago I worked for an electric or electronic signs maker and installer, and I worked on the road doing installations and repairs of signs. When we worked on signs with fluorescent light tubes they were safer than the others we worked on, though you had to make sure to be very careful when working with the balasts. The other signs were neon and these were fed from 220-volt power supplies, and these were said to be particularly dangerous; being warned to be always cautious with these.
It's amperage that is the really deadly danger, but voltage is power and a little too much and it'll throw you; you'll lift from the ground and be thrown some distance, varying depending on the voltage. 220-volt would throw you.
Some signs were very, very closer to city powerlines and I think the senior guy I worked with said that one we were working next to carried 10,000 volts, and warning me to not get closer than maybe 10ft from the line.
Why are they making taser stun-guns that throw 50,000 volts?! I wonder if it could throw a car. Definitely seem extremely exaggerated for voltage to be applied against people or any living organisms, imo. Wouldn't 5,000 volts be MORE than enough? What about 220 volts?
Another, though only ideal, alternative would be to totally ban the RCMP; obsolete this damn "police", really gangster, force.
The protocols are in place, the device has been issued and already deployed. Results; protocols circumvented, and some subjects harmed while their rights were breached.
The real issue here is should we be further arming badly paid, ill-trained and overworked police with technology of dubious intent and uncertain safety?
(Or equip officers of low integrity? Low enough that they reclassify and/or suppress inconvenient data.)
Ah Jeez:
I have this on-going fantasy of fleeing to a non-police state like Canada to spend my last years on this planet. Looks like the RCMP and the Tories are going to blow that fantasy up real soon, if they haven't already.
Anybody know of such a place? At least, I'd like to keep the fantasy alive. I mean I live in Texas where the governor's office has recently given up a 2-million name secret security list to the Deaprtment of Public Safety.
The claim was that DPS is less "poltical" than the guv's office. Yeh right. While there was debate over what the guv would do with the list (or already has), there was very little questioning over whether it should exist at all. Not mention what DPS would do with it.
By the way, we don't fool around with tasers that much here. We just shoot folks down, pretty much on site.
And in our joovie joints, spraying kids with pepper gas has become all the rage. The rates of increase are about the same as the RCMP's increased use of tasers.
Hope y'all enjoyed your Spring holidays.
If I were to write up police protocol, it would look like this:
No force may be applied to non-violent suspects. If the officer uses force regardless of technology -- baton, taser, mace, fist -- it shall be followed up with suspension and investigation. After a number of suspensions within a certain time period, discharge from the police force.
Tasers aren't really a taser issue, and I'm still a little unclear why we're supposed to fixate on technology -- when the crux of the problem is initially protocol.
A deliberate misframing meme?
Well people are stupid.
Shock collars and tasering of non humans as Ok makes tasering of humans ok.
You cant take humans out of Nature, so you cant say: well humans are better than non humans so we dont treat humans this way.
The more technology is put forward as a solution to problems, the more will will hang ourselves by it.
La Fontaine:
a bird shot by an arrow
Ah cruel men from our wings you drew
the plume that winged the shaft that slew
but mock us not you heartless race
for you too will sometime take our place
for half at least of japhet's brothers,
forge swords and knives to slay the others.
This is the life-story of Canada: any time the US does something really stupid, you can be sure that Canada will sooner or later ape the behaviour. We just cannot seem to exist without belonging to some idiot-empire--first the British, now the Yanks.
This was the leading story on The National last night (stays up until 8pm then changes):
http://www.cbc.ca/national/latestbroadcast.html
For more permanent stuff:
A Stunning Debate
Being Tasered
Your Turn - The Death of Robert Dziekanski
"Excited Delirium"
A Deadly Landing
http://www.cbc.ca/national/archive/category.html?crimejustice
RE: - A joint investigation by The Canadian Press and CBC found the Mounties are now refusing to divulge key information that must be recorded each time they draw their electronic weapons.
What was really surreal was when they showed reports that they had gotten previously and the same report that they had gotten this time around - all the blank spaces. It is not just the new reports that they have done this to - they have done this retrospectively to old reports.
RE: - But the Mounties are now censoring Taser report forms to conceal related injuries, duration of shocks, whether the individual was armed, what police tried before resorting to the stun gun, and precise dates of firings.
Liberal MP Ujjal Dosanjh is right that certain details, such as whether a person is armed or how long the received shock for are not private details. He went further
NOTE: The US President does not choose his secretary of State from the Congresspersons of his own party - which would make them all "backbenchers" in Parliamentary lingo (the German word for it is hinterbankler as in "hinterlands"). MPs from the governing party are either Ministers (like Stockwell "Doris" Day) or Backbenchers. All opposition parties have shadow cabinets where MPs from their parties are given critic portfolios (ie Ujjal Dosanjh).
Dosanjh has been a vocal critic of Air India which is the biggest terrorist attack in Canadian history and involved the blowing up of a plane. Dosanjh is also from BC, the province where Robert Dziekanski landed in Canada before being tasered to death.
Doris can best be described as Frank Burns from MASH in a wetsuit. Doris was just in Mexico trying to get a cook who worked for some crooked rich guy out of jail and now he is in Saudi Arabia trying to get some kid who was involved in a school yard fight off of death row. And this you should know about Doris:
Former adviser to Harper and Day lobbies for Taser
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20071214/taser_lobby_071214/20071214/
RE: - Arizona-based manufacturer Taser International stresses the device has never been directly blamed for a death. It has, however, been cited repeatedly as a contributing factor.
Strange how they tend to leave the "contributing factor" criteria out of it. "Contributing factor" means that Taser use only results in death if certain other preexisting factors co-exist or that it helped set events in motion which lead to death. For example, if the cause of death is a heart attack, taser helped induce it.
RE: - RCMP reports previously released to The Canadian Press also detailed several head injuries when suspects struck the floor, along with burns caused by stuns and lacerations from sharp Taser probes.
If a person hits their head the wrong way when one hits the ground, death can be instantaneous. This seems to be the result of the the school yard fight in Saudi Arabia.
If a person dies because they hit their head, technically it was not the taser that killed them even if it was the taser that caused them to fall in the first place.
I won't even bother trying to give a direct link to this story. I am confident the Minitrue will have it blocked.
http://www.google.com/search?q=Christopher+Bollyn+Taser
"The potent devices are hugely popular with officers who say they're a safer, more efficient option than pepper spray or batons. But a rash of recent headlines has raised questions about the extent to which painful Taser jolts are used much like cattle prods on unarmed, non-violent suspects."
Two issues:
(1) Proper protocol for the use of force in detaining suspects.
(2) The question of whether tasers are more dangerous, in this regard, than batons, mace, etc.
This ongoing run of articles doesn't properly separate out the two issues. The most important issue is protocol. That is independent of technology. Remember Rodney King.
If proper protocol isn't addressed, it simply doesn't matter technology we're talking about.
Sounds like the P.M. has learned well from his southern mentor. Secrecy. No accountability. No public disclosures. More police powers. No privacy for the electorate - total privacy for the system.
Better fight it now my northern friends - if you don't your struggle will be exponentionally greater than if you wait until it becomes unbearable.
Seems like Canada has learned from the US. It's worked for them so far hasn't it?
The Mounties in our region have always looked quite clean cut, with neat short hair. Since sometime last year, they've started a new look sporting shaved heads. Makes them look like the skin head thugs of Europe and the redneck rambos we're used to seeing in the US. This makes me wonder if we're looking at recent graduates of 'continuing training' offered by helpful colleagues across the border.
Both the Canadian military and the police are sent South regularly for just that purpose.
Wow! Nothing like having your nose rubbed into it, eh? No oversight, no accountability-complete secrecy. Looks like the RCMP could use a good, swift, boot in the arse. Canada better deliver one, too-or they'll be heading down the same road as the US-if they already haven't.
RE: - No government hides good news. The failure to report this information should be considered probable cause for an investigation.
So is evading a question - a probable cause for further investigation. I wonder if a question about this will be asked when Question Period resumes Monday (starts app 1:05-1:15 Texas time on cpac.ca). The RCMP is under Federal jurisdiction.
RE: - they're proposing that the TSA could force everyone who flies to wear one of these and then flight-attendants could zap us into a stupor if we turn out to be Al Quaeda.
And what if the flight-attendant is Al Quaeda! Think of it, the flight attendant has greater access to more areas of the plane.
Will take a look at the movie later - person in room sleeping.
The Taser Ad from This Hour has 22 Minutes:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=9ymMODRu_sI