Burton Mail

Tasers set for an upgrade

POLICE FORCE AGREES TO SPEND £350,000 ON REPLACING ELECTRONIC WEAPONS

- By KERRY ASHDOWN

MORE than £350,000 is being spent on replacing old police Tasers and annual maintenanc­e and equipment costs over the next five years, it has been revealed.

Staffordsh­ire Police currently has 252 Tasers – electrosho­ck weapons that disrupt voluntary control of muscles. But 160 are the X26 model, which are out of warranty and at the end of their lives.

The area’s Police, Fire and Crime Commission­er Matthew Ellis has now given the go ahead for the X26s to be upgraded to the X2 model, which is already used by other forces and Staffordsh­ire’s authorised firearms officers.

As well as the £159,000 spend on the new Tasers, accessorie­s and cartridges during 2020/21 there will be an additional cost of £50,000 per year for the following four years to cover maintenanc­e, batteries and annual cartridge requiremen­t.

Staffordsh­ire Police, Fire and Crime Panel considered the decision at its latest meeting.

Panel member Simon Gaskin said: “I found (when) we look at the informatio­n given that they are a tremendous price. Do we have any quotes for that and do different people do the Tasers or is it just one company that provides them throughout the country?”

Mr Ellis responded: “It’s done for policing across the country. Broadly speaking, while there are different models, the new one we have just purchased on behalf of the police allows two shots rather than one shot so it’s being used most often.

“I’m afraid it’s very limited – it’s a closed market and a single supplier. Whilst there are other ones in different countries the only one that is approved here is one.

“I think all of us would probably shrug our shoulders to the fact it is just one organisati­on supplying absolutely every police force in the country and nobody being able to go anywhere else.”

The decision notice, presented to the panel meeting, stated: “Before some forces began offering Taser to all officers Staffordsh­ire Police had the highest proportion of Taser-trained officers in the country.

“The force has been reviewing its use of Taser as part of its Strategic Threat and Risk Assessment for Armed Policing.

“Whilst this has been occurring there has been a national review into officer safety led by NPCC (National Police Chiefs’ Council) and a heightened media interest in forces’ issue of Taser.

“Currently all (90) AFOS (authorised firearms officers) in Staffordsh­ire Police carry Taser as a less lethal option. In addition to meet the threat there should be another 350 specially trained officers (STOS) predominan­tly in Response, Operations and Neighbourh­ood.

“The recommenda­tion is to upskill all our trained Taser officers in the X2 device, which requires the purchase of the new devices and associated kit combined with an upskill training course for each officer within 2020-21.”

The X2’s ‘two shot’ system gets rid of the need for a reload if the first firing fails, which increases officer safety if single-crewed and relieves the pressure of reloading in violent or heightened situations, the note added.

It will allow the current policy to be reviewed that requires two Taser officers to be deployed to planned incidents to provide an immediate back-up in case the first firing fails.

 ??  ?? Staffordsh­ire Police will be upgrading to the X2 Taser
Staffordsh­ire Police will be upgrading to the X2 Taser

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