Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TASERS CAN fail, Little Rock review fi nds.

In LR review, gun didn’t stun 24% of time

- SCOTT CARROLL

Little Rock police rely on Tasers more than any other weapon, but an Arkansas DemocratGa­zette review of Taser deployment­s from 2010 to 2016 found that the device was ineffectiv­e nearly 1 in 4 times.

In 33 of the 137 deployment­s examined, or more than 24 percent, an officer fired a Taser with no effect and then resorted to other tactics to subdue that person.

Officers reported that their Taser, a nonlethal weapon that can deliver a painful and incapacita­ting electrical shock when its electrode darts penetrate a target, malfunctio­ned on three occasions.

Most commonly, the Taser was ineffectiv­e when people physically resisted. Many removed the Taser darts from their bodies. Some pulled them out by hand, and others by spinning around and disconnect­ing the wires.

Others were simply unaffected by the weapon.

In one such encounter, in May 2015, police tried to stun a 63- year- old man accused of trespassin­g at a McDonald’s restaurant. But the man kept standing as the Taser pumped electricit­y into his body. He yelled that he was a Marine and he would continue to resist.

In another instance, in November 2013, police reported that three Taser deployment­s and pepper spray had no effect on a 27- year- old man who had “super- human strength due to him being on narcotics.”

The weapon manufactur­er, Axon, warns that it may be ineffectiv­e against people who have a “mind- body disconnect.”

Clothing rendered the Taser ineffectiv­e in other instances. Coats and other heavy garments stopped the darts from penetratin­g a person’s skin on at least 10 occasions.

James Golden, University of Arkansas at Little Rock professor of criminal justice, said the Taser is known to be less effective when people wear thick or layered clothing.

Axon spokesman Steve Tuttle said Taser electrodes are designed to penetrate most clothes but sometimes get caught in loose, thick or layered clothing. He said the projectile­s, which travel at 140 feet per second, can still shock a person if they’re caught in clothing. Electricit­y can arc through the air and into a person’s body.

Little Rock police use half- inch Taser dart tips, the longest length available. The department trains officers to aim for a person’s legs if the person is wearing a coat or other heavy clothing on their upper body.

The newspaper review found that most instances of Taser ineffectiv­eness led to physical struggles that caused minor injuries — cuts, sprains and the occasional broken bone.

In one instance, the confrontat­ion ended with a man dead.

In 2007, Little Rock police fatally shot Antonio Alvarez, 23, after first firing a Taser with no effect in an armed standoff. Alvarez, who appeared to be intoxicate­d, reportedly threw a knife at an officer before police shot him.

Police Chief Kenton Buckner said the department still views the Taser as a reliable weapon.

“The one thing with the Taser, nothing is going to be 100 percent effective,” he said. “When you look at the distance, when you look at individual­s that are under the influence of something, when you look at clothing — there are a number of things that can impact the effectiven­ess or ineffectiv­eness of that Taser.

“But we see it as an effective tool, and we see it as best practices.”

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