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WeAreLove
03-29-2010, 06:41 PM
A federal appeals court says three Seattle police officers did not employ excessive force when they repeatedly tasered a visibly pregnant woman for refusing to sign a speeding ticket.

The lawyer representing Malaika Brooks said Monday that the court’s 2-1 decision sanctioned “pain compliance” tactics through a modern-day version of the cattle prod.

“To inflict pain on a person if that person is not doing what the police want that person to do is simply outrageous,” said Eric Zubel, the woman’s attorney. “I cannot say that loud enough.”

Zubel said he would ask the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rehear Friday’s 2-1 decision that drew a sharp dissent from Judge Marsha Berzon:

“Refusing to sign a speeding ticket was at the time a nonarrestable misdemeanor; now, in Washington, it is not even that. Brooks had no weapons and had not harmed or threatened to harm a soul,” (.pdf) Berzon wrote. “Although she had told the officers she was seven months pregnant, they proceeded to use a Taser on her, not once but three times, causing her to scream with pain and leaving burn marks and permanent scars.”


The majority noted that the M26 Taser was set in “stun mode” and did not cause as much pain as when set on “dart mode.” The majority noted that the circuit’s recent and leading decision on the issue concerned excessive force in the context of a Taser being set on Dart mode, which causes “neuro-muscular incapacitation.”

Stun mode, the court noted, didn’t rise to the level of excessive force because it imposes “temporary, localized pain only.”

The majority reversed a lower court judge who said the woman’s rights were violated. The lower court’s failure to distinguish between the two levels of pain modes “led the court to err in finding excessive force.”

The woman was driving her 12-year-old to the African American Academy in Seattle when she was pulled over on suspicion of speeding in 2004. The child left the car for school and a verbal spat with the police resulted in the woman receiving three, 50,000-volt shocks, first to her thigh, then shoulder and neck while she was in her vehicle. An officer was holding Brooks’ arm behind Brooks’ back while she was being shocked.

Brooks gave the officer her driver’s license, but Brooks refused to sign the ticket — believing it was akin to signing a confession. She was ultimately arrested for refusing to sign and to comply with officers asking her to exit the vehicle.

“A suspect who repeatedly refuses to comply with instructions or leave her car escalates the risk involved for officers unable to predict what type of noncompliance might come next,” Judge Cynthia Holcomb Hall wrote for the majority. She was joined by Judge Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain.

“Therefore, while using the Taser three times makes this a closer case, we find that it does not show excessive force in light of the corresponding escalation of Brooks’ resistance and the fact that it was the third tasing that appeared to dislodge her such that the officers could finally extract her from her car and gain control over her,” Hall wrote.



Read More Court OKs Repeated Tasering of Pregnant Woman | Threat Level | Wired.com (https://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/03/pregnant_woman_tasered/#ixzz0jcV3x5hV)

beshiva
03-30-2010, 08:06 PM
A federal appeals court says three Seattle police officers did not employ excessive force when they repeatedly tasered a visibly pregnant woman for refusing to sign a speeding ticket.

The lawyer representing Malaika Brooks said Monday that the court’s 2-1 decision sanctioned “pain compliance” tactics through a modern-day version of the cattle prod.

“To inflict pain on a person if that person is not doing what the police want that person to do is simply outrageous,” said Eric Zubel, the woman’s attorney. “I cannot say that loud enough.”

Zubel said he would ask the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rehear Friday’s 2-1 decision that drew a sharp dissent from Judge Marsha Berzon:

“Refusing to sign a speeding ticket was at the time a nonarrestable misdemeanor; now, in Washington, it is not even that. Brooks had no weapons and had not harmed or threatened to harm a soul,” (.pdf) Berzon wrote. “Although she had told the officers she was seven months pregnant, they proceeded to use a Taser on her, not once but three times, causing her to scream with pain and leaving burn marks and permanent scars.”


The majority noted that the M26 Taser was set in “stun mode” and did not cause as much pain as when set on “dart mode.” The majority noted that the circuit’s recent and leading decision on the issue concerned excessive force in the context of a Taser being set on Dart mode, which causes “neuro-muscular incapacitation.”

Stun mode, the court noted, didn’t rise to the level of excessive force because it imposes “temporary, localized pain only.”

The majority reversed a lower court judge who said the woman’s rights were violated. The lower court’s failure to distinguish between the two levels of pain modes “led the court to err in finding excessive force.”

The woman was driving her 12-year-old to the African American Academy in Seattle when she was pulled over on suspicion of speeding in 2004. The child left the car for school and a verbal spat with the police resulted in the woman receiving three, 50,000-volt shocks, first to her thigh, then shoulder and neck while she was in her vehicle. An officer was holding Brooks’ arm behind Brooks’ back while she was being shocked.

Brooks gave the officer her driver’s license, but Brooks refused to sign the ticket — believing it was akin to signing a confession. She was ultimately arrested for refusing to sign and to comply with officers asking her to exit the vehicle.

“A suspect who repeatedly refuses to comply with instructions or leave her car escalates the risk involved for officers unable to predict what type of noncompliance might come next,” Judge Cynthia Holcomb Hall wrote for the majority. She was joined by Judge Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain.

“Therefore, while using the Taser three times makes this a closer case, we find that it does not show excessive force in light of the corresponding escalation of Brooks’ resistance and the fact that it was the third tasing that appeared to dislodge her such that the officers could finally extract her from her car and gain control over her,” Hall wrote.



Read More Court OKs Repeated Tasering of Pregnant Woman | Threat Level | Wired.com (https://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/03/pregnant_woman_tasered/#ixzz0jcV3x5hV)
I never seem to have or want to have the time to respond to so many posts on wacco....but THIS has made me REALLY pay attention.....these days the only few words I can seem to muster are "that sooooo many people have decided to get on the Crazy Train"....how could anyone, police officers obviously included, react to a seven month pregnant woman in such an insane way?? Can only be... they most certainly are out of touch with the public,and, with those people whom they really pose to be a threat, or have no communication skills... and so much more.....I am enraged, to say the least... but will the courts see fit to make a ruling that aligns itself with some rational thinking or logic?? who knows?? Probably not.....:hmmm:

WeAreLove
03-30-2010, 09:48 PM
I agree, it's shocking (please pardon the pun). The reality of this near psychotic nation is very scary indeed.

Although, I have to admit I'm preplexed that I'm still appalled by cops cattle prodding a pregnant woman. After all, we just invaded a country that posed no threat whatsoever to us, based on lies told by the highest office in the land, killing a million of their citizens in the process (according to the Red Cross), and, the perps are walking around scot free... cops tasering a pregnant woman seems tame by comparison.



I never seem to have or want to have the time to respond to so many posts on wacco....but THIS has made me REALLY pay attention.....these days the only few words I can seem to muster are "that sooooo many people have decided to get on the Crazy Train"....how could anyone, police officers obviously included, react to a seven month pregnant woman in such an insane way?? Can only be... they most certainly are out of touch with the public,and, with those people whom they really pose to be a threat, or have no communication skills... and so much more.....I am enraged, to say the least... but will the courts see fit to make a ruling that aligns itself with some rational thinking or logic?? who knows?? Probably not.....:hmmm:

LenInSebastopol
03-31-2010, 06:05 AM
The real scary issue is that the appeals court has now set a precedent of 'cruel & not unusual' pain levels, so for the most minor of issues..ZAP.

She's just another person! She happened to be pregnant.Not wishing to disparage apple pie, nor this country, but motherhood is...well just another person with a big belly. If she wanted to abort her fetus all here would support her! Keep your eye on the ball (and, yes, this is a troll post, and I didn't lie).

And for the record, what the cops did was beyond belief and should be taken into a back room and thrashed.