A Summit County Common Pleas judge ordered the county medical
examiner to delete any reference that Tasers contributed to
the deaths of three Ohio men.
All three men were in an 'agitated' state and 'on drugs'
when police officers shot them with Tasers, and the judge
ordered their deaths be ruled 'accidental' also that any reference
to "homicide or "electrical pulse stimulation"
should be deleted from death certificates and autopsy reports."
Five sheriff's deputies had been indicted on charges related
to the death of one of the men, who also had a history of
mental illness. The judge further ordered that man's death
be ruled as "undetermined" and to "delete any
references to homicide and the death possibly being caused
by asphyxia, beatings or other factors."
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The court hearing centered around the "very narrow issue"
of whether or not the use of the Taser Model X26 could contributed
in any way to the cause of death.
A Taser International spokesman issued the following statement
after the court ruling:
"Taser International believed from the beginning that
these determinations of cause of death must be supported by
facts, medical research and scientific evidence," spokesman
Steve Tuttle said in a prepared statement Friday.
As of mid-April, 68 wrongful-death or injury lawsuits have
been dismissed or judgments entered in favor of Taser, according
to the company. The company has not lost any product-liability
lawsuits.
The attorney from the prosecutor's office representling the
medical examiner said of the case:
"It was an interesting case and an uphill battle,"
said Manley. "Taser is quite a force to be reckoned with
and does everything to protect their golden egg, which is
the Model X26."
The full article is available online here.