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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 2002)
June 26, 2002 Page A4 < f lb « r lit r O pinion Portland. OR 97211 3 it o « - i n - C h ie e ,P C o rn E d it o Joy Ramos u b l is h e r Charles H. Washington ___________ USPS 959-680__________ 4 7 4 7 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., 331)e}Jortlant> ODhseruer Eu il’r JJortlanb ¡©bsertier Established 1970 Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f A F F BUSINESS MANAGE« Gary Ann Taylor A sst . P l b l is h e k D is t r ib u t io n M r a n a g e « Mark Washington C r e a t in e Michael Leighton D ir e c t o « Paul Neufeldt P ostmaster : Send address changes to Portland Observer PO Box 3 1 3 7 , Portland, OR 9 7 2 0 8 _______ Periodical Postage paid In Portland, OR » Subscriptions are $60.00 per year_________ 503-288-0033 • FAX503-288-0015 • EMAIL: news@portlandobserver.com subscnDtion@Dortlandobserver1£om ad$@WrtJandob$ervercom Advertise with diversity in 2'1" ^ J o rtia ttò (DbscrUcr call 503.288,0033 or email: ads@portlandobserver.com The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accompanied by a self addressed envelope. All created design display ads become the sole property of the newspaper and cannot be used in other publications or personal usage without the written consent of the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of such ad. © 1996 THE PORTLAND OBSERVER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUCTION IN W H O LEOR IN PART W ITHOUT PERM ISSION IS PROHIBITED. The Portland Observer-Oregon’s Oldest Multicultural Publication-is a member of the National Newspaper Association-Founded in 1885, and The National Advertising Repre sentative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc, New York, NY, and The WestCoast Black Publishers Association • Serving Portland and Vancouver. Tasers at Worst are Killers Electro-shock devices may do more harm than good SEE IT ALL WITH A TRI-MET SUMMER YOUTH PASS. G e t u n lim ite d rides on T r i- M c t ’s M A X and buses w i m o n th ly pass at S I 6 each, o r a 3 -m o n th pass to r yo u n g er. A v a ila b le at the usual I r i - M c t o u tle ts inciti and m ost A lb e rts o n ’s stores, o r o n lin e at u PLUS GET GREAT DEALS ON FOOD, FUN AND GAMES WITH YOUR PASS FROM Editor’s note: The following is a response by the group Portland Copwatch to the Portland Police B ureau’s ex perim ent with a new taser electric dart gun, a weapon developed as an alternative to lethal force. On Monday, June 17, Port land P o lice C h ie f M ark Kroeker announced that the Portland Police Bureau is now equipped with tasers, small electro-shock devices which are supposed “less lethal” al ternatives to guns or pepper spray. T a se rs are at best an unknown danger and at worst, two-time killers, according to human rights group Amnesty Inter national. A 1998 book on police brutality and prison abuse in the USA, “United States of America: Rights for All,” de scribes the taser and its cousin, the stun gun, as devices that “jolt” a suspect with 50,000 volts of electricity. The book claims that in two separate incidents in 1996, a 29-year-old woman and a man died after being shot by police with tasers. Not enough independent re search has been done on the short-and long-term effects of tasers to be conclusive. How ever, last September, the medi cal journal "The Lancet" cited three deaths from 218 people hit by tasers. The Lancet also articulated the need to study “injury thresh olds” and the effects on nerves, adding that two people with no history of cardiac disease went into cardiac arrest between 5 and 15 minutes after being hit with tasers. We are very concerned that the chief is adding to the police arsenal with no community input. He seems to have forgotten his promise to leave L.A.-style policing in L.A. --Kristian Williams of Cop watch A Che of th e re a s o n s th e p o lic e are e x perim enting with th e se d e v ic e s is due to the com m unity outcry follow ing the shooting death o f Jose Santos M ejia Poot last year in a psychiatric hos pital. Ironically, it appears that the m anufacturer of the gun suggests not using the taser on people who have epilepsy — a neurological disorder that M ejia suffered. M em bers of local police accountability group Portland Copw atch question whether the taser has been fully and in d e p e n d e n tly te s te d for safety on people with spe cific health ailm ents such as heart conditions or epilepsy. The group also worries that once the new devices are readily available, police may m isuse them, as they have with other weapons like pep per spray and “beanbag” guns; each of which have been used against un armed civilians including peaceful dem onstrators. “ W e are very c o n cerned that the chief is adding to the po lic e a rs e n a l w ith no c o m m u n ity i n p u t,” sa id K ris tia n W illia m s of C o pw atch. “ He seem s to have forgotten his promise to leave L.A .-style policing in L .A .” Copw atch also raised the issue o f officer training and noted that other “less lethal” tech n o lo g ies have proven quite deadly. They pointed to the Portland deaths of Brian Penton and Richard “D ickie” Dow in 1998 as probably re lated to the “ less lethal” OC Pepper Spray (the m anufac tu re r paid D o w ’s fam ily $ 10,000 earlier this year), and the use o f “beanbag” guns— which is being curtailed na tionally in the wake of nu m erous deaths caused by those supposedly “non lethal” w eapons. H. & B. Too NOW OPEN Oregon’s Oldest Licensed Pawnshop 4709 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd. 2 blocks south of Alberta Weekdays til 6 p.m. - Saturdays til 4 p.m. Free Parking - State Controlled Rates - Se Habla Español www.hbloan.com Oregon Family Business for over 50 years l