Pubdate: Thu, 06 Apr 2006 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) Copyright: 2006 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) TBI TO REVIEW VIDEO IN INVESTIGATION OF JAILERS' USE OF TASER Hand-Held Camera Was Used, Family's Lawyer Says CLEVELAND, Tenn. -- The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation has a video to review as part of the investigation of jailers who used a Taser to restrain a prisoner who then lapsed into a coma, agency spokeswoman Jennifer Johnson said yesterday. Christopher McCargo, 42, remains in a coma at a Cleveland hospital, where he was taken by ambulance several hours after his Feb. 24 arrest on a public intoxication charge. Bradley County Sheriff Dan Gilley asked the TBI to investigate after McCargo's relatives complained when county officers initially said the jail's digital video surveillance equipment erased the segment that showed officers using the Taser to restrain McCargo. A lawyer for McCargo's family said the new video came from a hand-held camera used by a jailer.Johnson confirmed that agents had received a video. "We don't know what is on it at this point," Johnson said. Johnson said the investigation report would be turned over to District Attorney General Jerry Estes."He will make a decision on what kind of action is appropriate, if any," Johnson said. Sheriff's Department officials previously said McCargo had been shocked with a Taser at the jail when he became combative during booking, and that he suffered seizures and lost consciousness several hours later. Arrest reports show that he told Cleveland police he had been drinking and smoking crack and marijuana. The Taser manufacturer warned in June 2005 that use of its weapons should be kept to a minimum on people who may have a drug-induced condition known as excited delirium. A statement from Gilley after the arrest said an internal investigation found that officers had followed department policy. John Wolfe, a Chattanooga attorney for the McCargo family, said the sheriff had "denied any film existing of this incident" and that no one mentioned that a corrections officer used a hand-held video camera to record the events. "It became apparent eventually through Tennessee Bureau of Investigation sources that (there are) hours of film recording the many events that! occurre d during Chris' custody," Wolfe told the Cleveland Daily Banner. Bradley County Chief Deputy Bill Griffith said the department was "simply working and letting them (TBI) do their job." "At this point nothing has come forth in the investigation of any wrongdoing," he said. Wolfe said the McCargo family "is concerned with the investigation of the Taser assault, which has left their son in a coma for 40 days now. With the lack of a meaningful official investigation, the family had to do their own. "Wolfe said the family wanted to know why no law enforcement agency photographed "obvious Taser wounds" on McCargo's neck. He said the family also raised questions about why blood or urine samples were discarded by law enforcement and not kept for analysis. "Now law enforcement claims the Taser use to Chris' neck at close range has nothing to do with him being in a coma, but everything has to do with what he ingested," Wolfe said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman