Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 2004 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Authors: Laura Bauer, and Jessie Halladay Cited: www.taser.com Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/louis+coleman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/michael+newby TASERS PROPOSED FOR METRO POLICE Mayor, Chief Pitch Plan Metro Mayor Jerry Abramson announced plans yesterday to equip all Louisville police officers with Tasers, weapons designed to subdue suspects with a nonlethal shock. Abramson said he wants to spend more than $1 million on the state-of-the-art weapons and plans to present the proposal to the Metro Council at the end of the month. Police Chief Robert White joined Abramson in the announcement yesterday, saying he hopes to have half of his force armed with Tasers by October. "This will give officers another weapon," White said. "This will put us in the position to apprehend suspects. ... This will totally immobilize you. As soon as you are hit, you feel the impact of it." Shaped like a gun, the Taser would be carried on an officer's belt on the opposite side of the firearm. Using a laser beam to aim, it acts like a stun gun, shooting two probes attached to 21-foot wires that send 50,000 volts of electricity into the suspect. Each Taser would cost $935 and the department plans to purchase 1,100 so each patrol officer and sergeant has one. Federal grants and money from drug seizures would cover more than 90 percent of the cost, with metro government having to come up with an additional $60,000. In the past, officers have had only less potent alternatives to using a firearm, such as pepper spray and collapsible batons. Civil-rights activists in Louisville have complained for several years that police officers have used lethal force when less-lethal weapons, such as Tasers, would have been enough. Since 1998, 11 men have been fatally shot by police in Jefferson County. Seven were black. In the most recent case, Louisville Metro Police Detective McKenzie Mattingly was indicted on charges of murder and wanton endangerment in the death of 19-year-old Michael Newby, who was shot in the back three times in January in what police described as an undercover drug deal gone bad. Abramson and White said the decision to pursue the use of Tasers is not a direct result of the fatal shootings, although the incidents pointed to a need for additional less-lethal options. Activists contacted yesterday said they hope that White now will implement a use-of-force policy that will help decrease the number of injuries. "In some locations, police have used Tasers more frequently than they would have used guns," said Beth Wilson, director of the local American Civil Liberties Union chapter. "The bottom line is we certainly support any effort by the Louisville police department to minimize risk to human life, but what's important here is that the use-of-force policy doesn't increase the injuries to the citizens of this community." The Rev. Louis Coleman, who has often led protests over police shootings, said he favors police using Tasers, but also said the community will be at "square one" if the department does not change officers' mind-sets about the use of force. White said he has not written a policy for the Tasers but foresees the weapons being placed just before or after pepper spray in the recommended order of use. According to the standard operating procedures that officers must follow, verbal commands and hand contact are used at the start of a confrontation, with shooting firearms at the end. In Kentucky, 50 law-enforcement, security or military agencies are using or testing Taser technology, according to Taser International, the company that supplies the equipment. Of those, 26 agencies have deployed the equipment into daily operations. The Jeffersontown police force, second in size in Jefferson County only to Louisville's department, became the first in the county to use Tasers -- starting with testing last May. All 46 patrol officers in Jeffersontown now carry Tasers on their belts. Officer Mike Holston said he's glad to have another choice on his belt, along with his Mace, baton and gun. "It's gotten to be the best option," he said. "It's a lot easier than to go to hand-to-hand combat with someone." At least one Metro Council member, Madonna Flood, D-24th District, said yesterday that she is in favor of acquiring the new weapons. "I think that anything we can do to make this community safer and to make police officers safer so they go home to their families at the end of the day is a positive step," Flood said. Shortly after White became chief in January 2003, he and his command staff reviewed the use-of-force policy, along with the "less lethal" weapons available to officers and past incidents. "When the mayor and I walked in the door, we made a commitment to look at use of force," White said yesterday. "We needed to have a clear understanding of use of force, when we are doing it and what's a better way of doing it." He said the department waited to pursue Tasers "so technology could catch up with the need to some extent." Since 1999, Taser units have become smaller and better able to handle suspects who are using drugs, said Steve Tuttle, spokesman for Taser International. The Tasers designed for law enforcement cannot be purchased by the public. There is another model, which delivers less voltage, available to the public for $600 through the company's Web site www.taser.com - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin