
Goodyear worker in Kansas dies after
tasering by police
By Kate Randall
4 April 2008
Friends and
co-workers of an employee at a Goodyear Tire &
Rubber plant in Topeka, Kansas, were horrified
when the man died after being tasered three
times by police last Saturday night.
Shawnee County
Sheriff’s deputies received a medical emergency
call at 11:17 p.m. March 29 from the Goodyear
plant. Workers and management were concerned for
the safety of Walter E. Haake Jr., 59, who had
reportedly taken a fall earlier at home and
might have sustained a head injury. Haake, who
went by the name “Ed,” had arrived at the plant
for work at 11 a.m.
When the
deputies arrived on the scene, they found Haake
behind the wheel of a white Jeep in the parking
lot. A number of Goodyear employees, as well as
company fire and rescue personnel, were also on
the scene. American Medical Response (AMR)
personnel were also summoned. Eyewitnesses
reported that Haake was acting disoriented, and
they were worried that he might endanger himself
or others if he drove home.
At a press
conference Wednesday, Shawnee County Sheriff
Dick Barta reported that one of the AMR
personnel said Haake had been in need of medical
attention and asked the deputies to remove him
from the vehicle. Barta said that the deputies
tried to communicate with Haake, who “continued
to be uncooperative.”
At this point,
the officers ordered Haake to leave his vehicle,
and threatened the use of the Taser if he
refused. When he did not comply, one of the
deputies used the Taser in “drive stun” mode for
two seconds on Haake’s left thigh. When he still
did not exit the vehicle, a second two-second
Taser was delivered, followed by a third for an
additional four seconds.
(In the “drive
stun” capacity, the Taser is held against a
person without firing a cartridge, and is
intended to inflict pain and incapacitate the
individual.)
Haake was
removed from the vehicle. It should be pointed
out that the deputies at this point were in
possession of Haake’s keys. Goodyear worker Marc
Luetje, who was present, commented later to the
Topeka Capital-Journal, “They had his
keys, where was he going to go?”
It took the
police about 45 seconds to handcuff Haake, who
was by this point lying on the ground. Luetje
said that when the officers tried to get him to
stand up, he was unresponsive. Medical personnel
administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation to
Haake, with his hands still cuffed behind his
back. After about 20 minutes of CPR, the
handcuffs were removed and the emergency
personnel began an IV.
Haake was
taken to Stormont-Vail Regional Health Center,
where he was pronounced dead at 12:37 a.m. The
exact cause of death has not been determined,
and an autopsy report will not be completed for
several weeks.
The Shawnee
County Sheriff’s office made no comment on the
incident for more than three days, asserting
that Sheriff Barta had been out of town at the
time of the incident and they were awaiting his
return. When Barta spoke at a press conference
Wednesday afternoon, a number of protesters
gathered outside the sheriff’s office.
John McNown, a
co-worker of Haake, carried signs reading,
“Tasers don’t kill, bad cops do” and “To protect
and serve, not kill.” “I still can’t believe
it,” McNown said. “You no longer have the right
to refuse medical attention.”
Another
protester, Robert Havens, described himself as a
concerned citizen and held a sign that read,
“Welcome to Beautiful Tazepeka.” He commented to
reporters that he was not in need of medical
attention and asked that he not be tasered.
At the press
conference, Sheriff Barta stated, “I think our
officers have to make a decision. Is this person
a threat to themselves or somebody else? Once
that decision is made there is a duty to act or
not act.” The deputies involved are still on the
job, and the sheriff’s office is reviewing 25
minutes of audio of the incident.
Clearly, the
decision made by the deputies involved was to
utilize the Taser, inflicting pain on a visibly
distressed individual, despite the fact that Ed
Haake was not in possession of his keys, had no
weapon and had made no aggressive moves toward
the deputies or anyone else present.
The deputies
did not call for additional police officers or
medical personnel to assess the situation and
try to mediate a solution. As Haake’s co-worker
John McNown commented later, “They should’ve
called a more qualified person to handle that
situation.”
Outrage and
bewilderment were expressed by numerous
Capital-Journal readers, who commented
online on the tragic incident. Typical were the
comments of Ladypinkr, who wrote, “It’s just
gotten to be a sad state of affairs when those
who have sworn to ‘PROTECT AND SERVE’ are the
first to make threats of violence. Compassion
and humaneness are the keywords here...because
nowhere did I read that those feelings ever
entered into the minds of those present.”
Maizy wrote:
“I don’t understand what reasonable train of
thought would bring one to the conclusion that a
guy in clear need of medical attention should be
tased? What was their hurry? This is the saddest
thing I’ve read in a long time.”
The Shawnee
County Sheriff’s office began using Tasers in
2004. A report by Amnesty International (AI) in
November 2004 stated that more than 7,000 US
police agencies out of a total of 18,000 were
using Tasers at that time. In a May 2007 study,
AI documented more than 245 deaths occurring
after the use of Tasers.
The US
National Institute of Justice is conducting a
study into Taser-related deaths in custody. The
United Nations has condemned the use of Tasers,
classifying the use of stun guns as a “a form of
torture that can kill.”
Police and
local authorities argue that the Taser is often
not the direct cause of death, as many of these
deaths occurred in individuals with serious
medical conditions or severe drug or alcohol
intoxication—a syndrome they refer to as
“excited delirium.” But if a person in such a
compromised state then receives a severe shock,
or multiple shocks, is it not more likely that
he or she faces the danger of a more acute
medical emergency, or even death?
In the UK, the
Defence Scientific Advisory Council’s
subcommittee on the Medical Implications of
Less-Lethal Weapons noted, “The possibility that
other factors such as illicit drug intoxication,
alcohol abuse, pre-existing heart disease, and
cardioactive therapeutic drugs may modify the
threshold for generation of cardiac arrhythmias
cannot be excluded.”
A recent study
by a team of scientists and doctors at the Cook
County hospital trauma center in Chicago
suggests that the use of the Taser can interfere
with heart function. The team stunned six pigs
with two 40-second Taser discharges across the
chest. Every animal was left with heart rhythm
problems, and two died of cardiac arrest.
Marketed by
manufacturer Taser International as an
alternative to the use of lethal force, the stun
guns are routinely used as a “pain compliance”
method by police. In other words, pain is
inflicted in order to force a subject to obey
police officers. Use of the Taser is not
restricted to arrests, but has been documented
in jails and prisons, as well as by campus
police on university students.
In the most
recent well-publicized case, on September 17,
2007, University of Florida journalism student
Andrew Meyer was wrestled to the ground and shot
point-blank with a Taser by campus police at a
public forum at the university addressed by 2004
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry.
The Taser
assault—videos of which found their way to
YouTube and provoked outrage and protests on
university campuses—took place after Meyer
addressed a number of pointed questions to Kerry
about his performance in the 2004 election. When
Meyer refused to comply with police officers’
demands that he give up the microphone, he was
tasered.
A subsequent
investigation into the incident by the Florida
Department of Law Enforcement concluded that the
officers’ use of the Taser against Meyer was
“well within” Florida standards for police
conduct.
Tasers are not
considered firearms by the US government, and
can be legally carried (either concealed or
openly) without a permit in 43 states. Taser
International markets them to the general
public.
“Citizen”
Taser models can be ordered online and come in a
variety of colors—standard black, desert camo,
forest camo, leopard print and “fashion pink”—at
prices ranging from $299.99 to $379.99. The
latest accessory is a combination Taser
holster/MP3 player, priced at $72.99. |