k6gixx wrote:
The only problem with this argument, is that there is no reasoning with these people. Losing his composure is definitely not the best thing that could have happened, but honestly a 72 yr old anything should know better than to throw an infantile tantrum on the side of the road. If she had a problem, she could have fought the ticket using the court system. As has been said before this is Travis county. And no violence was not used to stop a hissy fit. It was used to effect the arrest.
I can't comment on the applicability of reasoning as I was not present. However, from what I have seen there was little effort made in doing so. In fact, the woman repeatedly said that she would sign the ticket but it seems the deputy had already made up his mind on the outcome of the stop. If one has to resort to the use of a Taser to effect the arrest of an obviously physically inferior person perhaps one should rethink their career path.
"Effect the arrest" is law enforcement legal semantics, Electro-Muscular Disruption was 100% unnecessary in this situation and many others which I have seen in the recent past. The seemingly standard issuance of orders and threat of further assault, oops I mean arrest effecting, while people are on the ground writhing in pain and possibly incapable of complying is over the top as well.
I just watched the video again several times, the whole thing stinks to high heaven. The encounter degraded when the deputy screamed at the woman Drill Instructor style, he then throws his own tantrum and throws his ticket book down (which is conveniently edited out of the MSM reports).
The problem with Tasers is that there are little to no residual effects, most of the time, thus they can be used indiscriminately. Or maybe I am wrong all together, perhaps we should issue them to supervisors in all businesses so they can Taser their employees when they act up or act defiantly. Heck, maybe we should start a program to hand them out at the hospital after you go home with a new baby so the parents can use them when they become unruly. We could call the program OTPC, "One Taser Per Child".