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.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Double-parked senior says RCMP officer to be disciplined for using taser on him

December 14, 2007
CBC News

An RCMP officer in Kelowna, B.C., will be disciplined for using a Taser on a 68-year-old stroke victim over a parking violation, CBC News has learned. John Peters admitted he first drove away when a police officer tried to give him a ticket for double parking. John Peters, 68, says he raised his arm trying to protect himself before the RCMP officer shot him with the Taser. (CBC) Peters told CBC News he then stopped a short distance away and was stunned twice with a Taser by the RCMP officer while still sitting in his car.

The man suffers from a neurological disorder that makes it difficult for him to speak when he is stressed.

RCMP Supt. Bill McKinnon apologized Thursday and said the officer will be disciplined, Peter's told CBC News on Friday morning.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The entire story posted on CBC

The wife of a Kelowna, B.C., man says an RCMP officer who shot her husband with a Taser acted like a "kid with a new toy."

John Peters, 68, says he raised his arm trying to protect himself before the RCMP officer shot him with the Taser. John Peters, 68, says he raised his arm trying to protect himself before the RCMP officer shot him with the Taser.
(CBC)

John Peters, 68, and his wife Anne were delivering a free newspaper on Monday morning when they double-parked along a downtown Kelowna street, prompting a police car to pull up beside them.

The officer tried to write a ticket, but John Peters objected and drove off, his wife said.

Peters realized this was a bad idea, so he pulled over a block away and got out of the vehicle, she said.

After the officer arrived he jolted him two times with a Taser, John Peters said, adding that he had raised his arm to defend himself.

"I was protecting myself, because I'm blind in this eye," Peters told CBC News on Thursday. "I was protecting myself from his vicious advance."

Anne Peters said she had tried to tell the officer her husband suffers a neurological disorder and was unable to comprehend language when he's flustered.

Kelowna RCMP spokesman Sgt. Terry McLachlan says an administrative review of the incident has been ordered. Kelowna RCMP spokesman Sgt. Terry McLachlan says an administrative review of the incident has been ordered.
(CBC)

The officer didn't listen, she said, and shocked her husband with the Taser.

"The police officer was like a kid with a new toy. He couldn't wait to use it."

"Well, I was so shocked I couldn't believe it. He tried to fight him off, right? But he Tasered him anyways — twice."

Kelowna RCMP spokesman Sgt. Terry McLachlan said the Peters have not filed a formal complaint, but the superintendent has ordered a review of the incident.

"It's prudent on his part to order an administrative review to make sure the policy was conformed with, and there was proper usage," McLachlan said on Thursday.

John Peters is facing three charges, including resisting arrest and obstructing and assaulting a police officer.