WELCOME to TRUTH ... not TASERS

You may have arrived here via a direct link to a specific post. To see the most recent posts, click HERE.

Monday, July 19, 2004

Stun-gun company planning to monitor autopsy

July 19, 2004
ERIN CONWAY-SMITH

An autopsy, scheduled for today, of a Brampton man who died after a weekend confrontation with Peel police will be closely monitored by the U.S. company that manufactures a controversial stun gun used in the melee.

Jerry Knight, 29, died early Saturday after police responded to a disturbance call from the owner of the White Knight Motel on Dixie Road in Mississauga.

Mr. Knight was said to be throwing and breaking things in the front office of the motel. When Peel Regional Police arrived on the scene, a violent confrontation broke out and a Taser was used to subdue the man.

Paramedics transported Mr. Knight, a former semi-professional boxer, to Peel Memorial Hospital in Brampton, where he was pronounced dead. His death is being probed by members of the provincial Special Investigations Unit.

SIU spokeswoman Rose Bliss said that one officer has been designated as a subject of the investigation.

An autopsy, scheduled to be performed yesterday at the Centre of Forensic Sciences, was postponed until today because family members wanted to hold a prayer service for Mr. Knight.

He used to box for a club in Brampton, Ont., but was said to be training with a newly formed club in Newmarket, Ont.

A spokesman for Tasers International Inc., the Arizona-based company that manufactures the device that fires electrical charges, said the company is aware of the incident involving Mr. Knight and will be closely watching media reports for autopsy results.

A front-page story in yesterday's New York Times investigated the safety record of Tasers, which are used by police across Canada and the United States. The lengthy story said that 50 people in the U.S. have died since 2001 after being shocked by a Taser.

"We will stand by, as we always have, behind the safety of the product," Taser spokesman Steve Tuttle said in an interview yesterday.

Mr. Tuttle said the company maintains that deaths which occur when Tasers are used are not the result of the device, but rather, because of other factors, such as drug overdoses.

No comments: