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TUSTIN, Calif. -
Sheriff's
officials defended their use of a Taser stun gun to subdue an autistic
teenager who left a social services center where he was being treated.
"It
was necessary," sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said in defense of the
use of a Taser stun gun to subdue 15-year-old Taylor Karras.
He said the teen was running in and out of traffic and is lucky to be alive.
"If that were your son, would you want him Tased or hit by a car?" Amormino asked.
The
teenager bolted from a social services center in Westminster on Monday
and had walked 15 miles when sheriff's deputies received a call of
someone running in and out of traffic on busy Newport Avenue. Sheriff's
Lt. Larry Jones said a deputy fired the Taser after a second car had to
swerve.
The teen was home with his parents Tuesday, uninjured and
no charges were filed. But his parents said they believed deputies
overreacted.
"They should have been on alert that there was a missing autistic teenager in the area," William Karras said.
Taser
use by police drew national attention this week after video surfaced on
the Internet of police shocking a university student in Florida who questioned Sen. John Kerry during a forum . The incident generated a fierce debate
about free speech, use of force.
University of Florida President Bernie Machen said the
use of the Taser, with the student yelling, "Don't Tase me, bro!" was
"regretful." He requested a state probe of campus police actions and
placed two officers on leave.
In Warren, Ohio, a police officer
was shown Thursday on his cruiser's video jolting a woman with a Taser
gun both before and after she was handcuffed. The woman was arrested
Sept. 2, and the officer was placed on paid leave last week.
Patrolman
Richard Kovach's report said the 38-year-old woman, who had been
ordered out of a bar, kicked at a rear window and tried to climb into
the front seat once she was inside the cruiser.
"I deployed a
second Taser cartridge into her and the violent turbulent action
stopped immediately," the report said. "I then requested a car with a
cage for transport."
She was again Tasered during the transfer to
the second car when she fell and was knocked unconscious by the impact,
Kovach's report said. An ambulance took her to a hospital. The woman
has pleaded not guilty to resisting arrest and other charges.
Simply
because someone is hit with a Taser while handcuffed may not be against
policy, said Warren Law Director Greg Hicks, citing the example of
someone kicking out windows of a cruiser.
Taser stun guns fire
electrically charged darts that carry 50,000 volts for several seconds,
temporarily immobilizing their targets. According to Taser International Inc., about 11,000 U.S. law enforcement agencies use Taser technology.
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