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You started off saying, "I don't understand where that claim comes from. The claim that the Taser is a weapon and therefore, because it's a weapon, it's not designed to be safe. I've never heard it marketed as a weapon in any sense a normal person would use.
If the Taser kills someone, it's a defect, not the intended design."
I responded to the first portion of your post, in particular the statement I've never heard it marketed as a weapon in any sense a normal person would use, by clarifying that Taser International's marketing material clearly identifies the taser as a weapon.
Your response to my reply was a query "Hmm. Did they always say this, or is this new?" and "Hey, if it's new, it was badly needed because of an absence of adequate warnings... and education to police..." From that response I took it that you were still asking about how it was marketed and I said you could probably find the earlier marketing info on their website.
Next you responded with statements like "The problem I have in how AX10's comment was written goes beyond not having been confident that the Taser was always marketed as a weapon." and "It's that just because we call something a weapon does not mean it is purposefully designed to be unsafe" to which I responded with information about its past, how it was patented and to whom it was originally marketed. My intention in my reply to you was to highlight that the taser is a weapon that is inherently unsafe to at least one of the parties involved, hence the use of the words "subdue, injure or otherwise cause (them) harm". If it was unsafe to the user it wouldn't be a weapon, instead it would be an instrument likely to cause personal harm to the user. Personally I don't think it would have much of a market if it was likely that each time it was used it would cause the user to be injured or otherwise harmed. Call me silly but I just don't think there is much of a market for a product whose outcome for the user would end in the likely infliction of personal harm. In other words, whose safety are we talking about, the user of the product or the target? I think a reasonable person would conclude that the product has to be safe for the user or it wouldn't be on the market and that the talk about the safety of tasers concerns the likely effects of the taser's target and whether or not it is likely or unlikely to result in the death or serious bodily injury of that target.
This brings me to the difference between the terms "non-lethal force" and "lethal force". There is a big difference and it rests primarily with the likely result of the force utilized. Non-lethal force is generally recognized as using a method of force that is unlikely to result in death while lethal force is likely to result in death or serious bodily injury. For example a gun used by someone for the purpose of killing a rabid animal is using a weapon in such a way that the likely result is the death of the animal. If they are using a tranquilizer gun for the purpose of subduing an animal for removal from one area to another it is non-lethal force because they are 1) not intending to kill the animal but instead are using a non-lethal method and 2) that the method used is unlikely to cause either death or serious bodily injury to the animal. In other words, when a person uses lethal force it is likely that the result is death, when they use non-lethal force it means the likely result is submission or incapacitation of the target.
If I look at your new point, that tasers shouldn't be used because they are likely to cause death then that's a whole new kettle of fish. That's where the studies come in. I don't know what the studies say, who conducted the studies or what their cut-off is for the difference between "likely" or "unlikely" to cause death. But, if the taser is tested on people and the majority of them die then it is inherently unsafe. But if the taser is tested on people and a small percentage have adverse reactions that result in death should the taser be recognized as something "likely" to cause death? It depends. Do the studies show that particular ethnic populations are more likely to die if tasers are used on them? If so, then should people who use tasers against those person that are clearly identified as members of that ethnic population? I'd hope not. What if death is more likely to result if the target has been drinking? Should people, in a confrontational situation, have to stop and start asking questions of an intended target as to their alcohol consumption if there are no obvious signs that the person has been drinking? I also don't know how easy it is to ascertain from just looking at a person how vulnerable they are to adverse effects from something like a taser. So, the bottom line is that the makers of the taser are playing the odds the same way the pharmaceutical companies do. Pharmaceutical companies are allowed to market drugs although the consumption of their drug has been fatal or has caused serious injury to some people who have taken it. They play the percentages to make money.
The question for the company is, "what is our liability?", which is the same question any company looks at when it markets something like the taser. Taser's first defense will always be that they've provided adequate warnings and that the ultimate responsibility for any adverse outcome of the use of their product is the individual that used it. The company has "covered" themselves by the disclaimer I posted earlier which clearly says "TASER® electronic control devices are weapons designed to incapacitate a person from a safe distance while reducing the likelihood of serious injuries or death." They use the legalese to say that they intend their product to be used as a non-lethal force. The disclaimer continues "Though they have been found to be a safer and more effective alternative when used as directed to other traditional use of force tools and techniques, it is important to remember that the very nature of use of force and physical incapacitation involves a degree of risk that someone will get hurt or may even be killed due to physical exertion, unforeseen circumstances, and individual susceptibilities." This is their CYA. They are indicating that their product is not perfect and that there are times when their intended non-lethal product will result in death or serious injury.
This brings me back to the last sentence you wrote "It's whether the damned thing should be used or not." In my opinion it comes down to this, is it a reasonable alternative for someone to use under those particular circumstances? If it the choice between using a taser or a sawed-off shotgun to subdue an unarmed, peaceful protester then I don't see why it should be used. If it the choice between using a taser or a sawed-off shotgun to subdue a fleeing, violent offender than I would choose the taser. The real question is "what are the reasonable alternatives under the circumstances that are available?". Frankly, in this era where the RW has pushed fear so much there's not a lot that is going to happen in regards to this subject. The media and the entertainment industries don't help. They make a lot of money pushing fear and morality tales (where the the adversary gets their just rewards).
The conditions under which non-lethal force (things like tasers, bean bag guns and pepper spray) are used are intense ones where the person who uses the non-lethal force does so because they don't have other alternatives at their disposal. Unfortunately people have died because of non-lethal methods like tasers, bean bag guns and pepper spray. We live in a society where the alternatives and options are limited and each of the non-lethal methods can cause death in some circumstances.
Before I went to law school I worked for an attorney whose first case after I started working for him involved the issue of lethal force. The case involved a young man who was contemplating suicide. He was depressed so he went on a drinking binge, took a knife from the kitchen and locked himself in his bedroom. His parents called the police and told them they thought their son was going to commit suicide. The police went to the house and ordered him to unlock his door. When he refused they picked the lock and opened the door themselves. The officers thought he made a threatening gesture with the knife and they shot him six times - twice through the heart - and killed him. What are the chances he would be alive today if the officers had used a taser instead of their Sig Sauers to subdue him? I'd venture to guess the chances he would be alive to day are a lot better if they had used a taser instead of their guns. Additionally, from what I saw of the local PD's training records for the officers involved for the previous five years, there were few opportunities for my local PD to get training on subduing a suspect with a knife. In fact, the training materials said something like "a suspect can travel over twenty feet before an officer can remove his gun from his holster" type of stuff. There also was, if I recall correctly, just two classes in five years that taught officers how do respond to suicide calls (and they fell under the heading of domestic violence) and neither of the officers involved took that class. In fact, classes were concentrated on subjects concerning organized gangs (mostly to fulfill requirements for federal funding) and what circumstances would trigger "search and seizure" questions & how to protect yourself from legal liabilities. My "favorite" seminar was the one about Jamacian gangs and satanism. To my knowledge, here in Kansas, the training must have worked because I don't think we have a lot of problems with drive-by hexes being performed by Jamacian gangs even today some ten years later.
fwiw, I don't think tasers are as safe as the manufacturer would like us to believe. I also think the bigger problem lies with our police departments and how they are trained. Today, training seems to be geared more for continuing the so-called war on drugs (probable cause during traffic stops, looking for it during domestic cases or as motivations for other crimes) so they can qualify for state/federal grant money and less geared to investigating and solving crimes like burglary, murder, rape, bad checks, consumer fraud and property crimes.
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