State Attorney Harry Shorstein said
today that excessive force may have been used by police officers who
used a stun gun on a 13-year-old girl who was being uncooperative after
they took her into custody for fighting with her mother. The 65-pound
girl was handcuffed in the back of a patrol car Feb. 7 when she was
shocked twice with a 50,000-volt Taser, according to a Sheriff's Office
report. Police departments in Florida and nationwide have been
criticized for their use of Taser guns, which some say have caused
deaths. Shorstein said he met with Sheriff John Rutherford and
Undersheriff Frank Mackesy, who assured him an internal investigation
was being conducted. "I expressed my concern. They were generally
defending the use of Tasers, even against smaller children," the
prosecutor said. "It's not the age, but the size of the child and the
fact that she was handcuffed," Shorstein said. Shorstein said an
assistant state attorney called the case to his attention and thought
it was a questionable use of a Taser. The child was originally charged
with domestic battery, but the charges were later dismissed. "We did
not think it was an appropriate case to prosecute," he said. According
to the police report, officers were called to a Jacksonville apartment
complex after the girl struck her mother in the nose and kicked her in
the face. The girl was handcuffed and placed into a patrol car, but she
managed to slide her cuffed arms to the front of her. Police said the
refused requests to put her arms behind her back and began kicking and
screaming. An officer attempted to subdue the girl with a neck lock,
but was unable to get control of her. Officer G.A. Nelson then used his
Taser on her. When she continued to fight, and she was stunned again,
according to the police report. She then complied and placed her arms
behind her back. The action occurred two weeks before Rutherford
announced a moratorium on use of Tasers by his department. Mackesy said
the technique used on the girl -- putting the Taser directly against
the body -- was vastly different from the common shooting of barbs into
someone. "It's a localized application that doesn't seize the body. It
only hurts the area where you put it." Mackesy said an internal police
investigation is not complete. "The reason I did this is because of the
age and size of the suspect. Just because she was small does not mean
she was frail," he said. The girl's mother told police she had called
police because she was afraid the girl was run away and hoped to get
medical attention for the girl. The Sheriff's Office, which has spent
$1.8 million for the Tasers, suspended their use Feb. 22, until
officers are given more training. [more]