I think that the Tazer has it's place but I agree that it's over used and the danger is under rated by some who use it.
A week ago I went to a funeral for a 20 year old man who's mother is a friend of my family. He was mentally ill, called the police because he wanted some help (details are scetchy but it's all over the news. Happened in Portsmouth, RI if you care to google it.) The police arrived to find this big guy flipping out. They restrained him until he was dead. According to his mother they held him down and he couldn't breath. I haven't spoken to her in any detail (I can't bring myself to ask any details) and the case is as yet still unfolding. The RI State Police haven't finished their investigation. Anyway, this whole incident is stunning to say the least. For me, seeing him in a casket and knowing he was the same age as my daughter was overwealming. Thinking about what happened leaves me wondering a lot of things, not the least of those being what could the police have done differently. Should they have used a Tazer? In what way did they restrain him? As yet there are no answers, just questions. The police aparently didn't try to resessitate when he went unconcous. No one has been charged, or even suspended. I'm sure the police didn't set out to kill him, but he was alive until they laid hands on him. In RI we have had an inordinate number of people die of police beatings in the last few years. Westerly police were recently cleared of wrong doing in the death of a guy who they arrested for drunk and disorderly and died of head trauma in their lockup. West Warwick police were cleared after beating a mentally ill man to death a couple years ago (4 cops beat a vagrant to death, aparently he was resisting arrest and none of the four could get a restraint on him) It's a small place but in the last few years we have had more blunt trauma death by police than seems fitting the number of people in the population. Those are only the ones I can think of without looking anything up, there are more. Would Tazering lead to less beating deaths? Or would it lead to more Tazer deaths? I can't help but think we have a systemic problem not a hardware problem.
The cop who used repeated Tazering to "Teach you to touch me!" should lose her job and be prosecuted. Charging the guy with assault is what "teaches a lesson", not having pain inflicted by the cop/judge/jury/executioner on the scene. that's a prime example of the authority intoxication that gives police a bad name. It's not her place to 'teach him a lesson' and her belief to the contrary is frightening. She'd fit right in around here.