District attorney's office plans to investigate Taser case
Deputy constable's use of force on 72-year-old woman could go to grand jury.
By Claire Osborn
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Friday, June 12, 2009
The Travis County district attorney's office will review an incident in which a deputy constable used a Taser on a 72-year-old woman during a May traffic stop.
"I have talked with Constable McCain, and he is completing his investigation and will present it to our office," Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg said, referring to Precinct 3 Constable Richard McCain. "We will review it, as we do other matters involving use of force, for possible presentation to the grand jury."
Lehmberg said she expects McCain's report in the next few days.
The video of the Tasering incident has been on Yahoo News, YouTube, Twitter, CBSNews.com, the Huffington Post and newspaper Web sites from San Francisco to Buffalo, N.Y. The comment board for the story on Statesman.com had more than 800 posts by Thursday evening.
Deputy Constable Christopher Bieze pulled over Kathryn Winkfein 's 2004 Toyota pickup on Texas 71 in western Travis County on May 11 for allegedly going 60 mph in a 45-mph construction zone. Winkfein, of Granite Shoals, a 4-foot-11 great-grandmother, told Bieze in the video that she wouldn't sign the citation. That led to a confrontation in which Bieze threatened to use his Taser stun gun on Winkfein unless she complied with his orders. She dared him to use it, and he eventually did.
Winkfein was later jailed and charged with resisting arrest. She has since been released.
Travis County Sheriff Greg Hamilton released a statement Wednesday after the phone lines at his office were flooded by callers who mistakenly thought the sheriff's office had jurisdiction over the actions of constables. Constables are independently elected and don't report to the sheriff's office, he said.
Hamilton also said he didn't agree with Bieze's actions as shown on the video.
Sgt. Maj. Gary Griffin of the constable's office said Thursday that Bieze did the right thing in dealing with a person who refused to be arrested and who put them both in harm's way.
Griffin said he is confident Lehmberg's office will come to the same conclusion that the constable's office has regarding the incident.
"She was affecting a lawful arrest and was physically noncompliant," Griffin said of Winkfein. "I don't see an offense."
McCain could not be reached by phone Thursday for a reaction to Hamilton's comments. In an e-mailed statement, McCain said that "Winkfein has had similar run-ins with police officers in Burnet County, where she has refused to take the ticket and just drove off." That information could not be confirmed Thursday.
Winkfein's son said she had no comment Thursday. Her lawyer did not return a phone call.
The constable's office has the same use-of-force policy as the Travis sheriff's office, Precinct 3 Deputy Constable Stacy Suits said.
There are no restrictions on the age of a person on whom the Taser can be used, according to policy documents.
Taser International recommends not using the weapon on people who are physically infirm or elderly.
cosborn@statesman.com; 445-3871