Resisting arrest could be shocking
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Marisa O’Neil
When police order someone to surrender, seeing the sparks from 50,000
volts of electricity can be persuasive.
Costa Mesa Police officers can deliver such a jolt from one of
their five new Taser stun guns, which can subdue a combative arrestee
when applied directly to the body or via two wires fired from up to
20 feet away.
Since the department got the devices about three months ago, no
officer has had to fire one yet, Cpl. Mark Manley said. Just seeing
the red dot of a laser aimed at their torsos and hearing the
threatening sparks go off is enough for most suspects.
“The laser goes on; they see the sparks; and they don’t want any
part of it,” Manley said.
Costa Mesa sergeants got the new Tasers as alternatives to batons
and .40-caliber firearms that shoot rubber bullets, Manley said. In
many cases, officers could use the Tasers to subdue dangerous
suspects instead of using their handguns, reducing officer and
suspect deaths, he said.
Police hope to get at least 10 more Tasers next year, Manley said.
The Taser launches two small barbs into a suspect’s clothing or
skin and then delivers a five-second jolt of 50,000 volts through the
barbs into his or her body. That interrupts impulses to the brain and
stops the ability to control any muscles, Manley said.
“Once it’s over, they think: ‘Wow, what was that? I don’t want to
get it a second time,’” Manley said.
If one shock isn’t enough to calm someone, an officer can pull the
trigger and deliver another five-second shock. That can give them
enough time for backup to arrive or for another officer to put
handcuffs on the suspect, he said.
After the shock is over, there aren’t any lasting effects, Manley
said. He volunteered for a direct Taser shock in his leg during
training.
“I don’t want to do it again,” he said. “It’s overwhelming, but as
soon as the charge stops, you’re up on your feet again.”
Unlike a baton, the Taser can be used if someone is hiding under a
piece of furniture, said Dave Kress, manager of the police firing
range. It may also be preferable in some cases to pepper spray, which
can also blow into officers’ faces and incapacitate them, Manley
said.
And sometimes neither baton strikes nor pepper spray work on a
suspect, especially one on certain types of drugs, Manley said.
Costa Mesa Police Chief John Hensley wanted to bring the Tasers to
the department after working with them in Cypress and Manhattan
Beach.
“The bottom line is that there comes a point when a baton and
pepper spray do not subdue a combative subject, and it’s not ethical
to keep whacking them with a stick until they submit,” Hensley said.
“But officers can shock someone with a Taser with minimal impact, and
[suspects] aren’t hospitalized with broken bones afterward.”
But the weapons aren’t without controversy.
The Las Vegas Police Department recently banned the use of Tasers
on handcuffed prisoners after two prisoner deaths were connected to
repeated Taser shocks.
Officers in Costa Mesa would not use the weapons in those types of
situations, Hensley said.
In a best case scenario, officers won’t have to use them at all,
Kress said.
“It’s a deterrent,” Kress said. “People see it, and a lot of
people know what it is and surrender.”
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