Ban Tasers if RCMP doesn't curb use by year's end: Commons committee
Last Updated: Thursday, June 19, 2008 | 1:49 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Electronic stun guns
In depth:
- Taser FAQs
- What are stun guns?
- Excited delirium
- Is it at the root of many Taser deaths?
- Taser-related deaths in Canada
- A list of documented deaths from 2003 to present
- Searchable database of RCMP Taser use
- Data from 2002 to 2008
- Behind the scenes: CBC's Taser project
- How the story took shape
Documents:
- Response by Magne Nerheim, Taser International vice-president of research and development
- Posted Dec. 4, 2008
- Taser International's official statement on the CBC/Radio-Canada investigation
- Posted Dec. 4, 2008
- Analysis of the quality and safety of Taser X26 devices tested for CBC/Radio-Canada
- Posted Dec. 4, 2008
Video:
- A stunning debate
- Part 1: A joint CBC News/Radio-Canada investigation takes a closer look at Taser International and its claims. (13:51)
- A stunning debate
- Part 2 (9:34)
RCMP and Tasers
- Robert Dziekanski video
- Select footage from hours in Vancouver International Airport
- Use of RCMP Tasers rises dramatically, records show
- CBC News story from March 24, 2008
- RCMP Taser use: Documents show sharp increase in use
- May 13, 2008
- Interactive graphic: RCMP Taser use by province
- Last updated June 2008
- RCMP firing Tasers multiple times at subjects, probe reveals
- CBC News story from June 11, 2008
- Table: RCMP and multiple Taser use
- Last updated June 2008
Related
- Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP's report on RCMP use of Conducted Energy Weapons
- Final report released June 18, 2008, by commissioner Paul Kennedy
- Letter to Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day from RCMP Commissioner William Elliot
- PDF file
News Archives
A parliamentary committee is threatening to call for a moratorium on the use of stun guns if the RCMP doesn't begin restricting use of the weapons by the end of the year.
The House of Commons public safety and national security committee made its report on Taser use public in the hours following the release Wednesday of a high-profile final report from an RCMP watchdog.
In that report, Paul Kennedy, head of the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, called for Mounties with less than five years experience in the field to be banned from using Taser stun guns and for individuals zapped to get immediate medical treatment.
Kennedy also asked that the stun gun be reclassified as an "impact weapon," meaning it should only be used in situations where an individual is combative or poses a risk of "death or grievous bodily harm."
That recommendation and many others are echoed in the committee's report, but MPs went one step further — threatening to introduce a motion in the House of Commons calling for a stun gun moratorium if the RCMP doesn't restrict use of the weapon by Dec. 15. The report received the unanimous support of its 12 members.
The two studies of Taser use are among at least five probes of the weapon undertaken following the Oct. 14, 2007, death of Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski after he was zapped with a stun gun.
RCMP officers were called to the Vancouver International Airport after Dziekanski, 40, who spoke no English, became agitated and destructive, damaging a computer and throwing a small table.
The incident was captured on amateur video and covered by media around the world.
The committee's report says the video "seriously shook public confidence in the RCMP."
"To prevent confidence in the RCMP from eroding further," the committee calls for the force to "react immediately" by reclassifying the weapons for restricted use.
"We want them to change for the better — to restrict the use, have better training, better reporting, better data collection so Canadians are safe and protected and the RCMP and other police forces have the tools they need," said Liberal MP Ujjal Dosanjh, a committee member.
Also among the recommendations are training officers on the potential risk of death and injury from Tasers, as well as teaching them about mental health and addiction issues.
It also suggests the RCMP be required to submit detailed information about Taser use in their annual reports to Parliament.
The RCMP complaints commissioner blasted the Mounties for failing to comprehensively track use of the weapons, which incapacitate people with their 50,000-volt electric shock.
The report also recommended that:
- Health Canada look into a lack of psychiatric programs and drug addiction programs.
- Three federally-subsidized research councils study stun gun technology.
- The government commission an independent study on stun gun safety.
- Statistics Canada be given the mandate to create a national database on in-custody deaths and the use of Tasers and other restraint methods.
An RCMP civilian watchdog with "broad powers" must also be established as soon as possible, the committee says.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma case charged with 1st-degree murder
- Mark Smich of Oakville, Ont., is formally charged with first-degree murder in the death of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man who disappeared earlier this month after taking two men on a test drive of his truck. Smich's arrest follows the first-degree murder charge against Dellen Millard of Toronto. more »
- U.K. attack suspects were focus of past security probes
- WARNING: This story contains graphic content. Two men accused of butchering a British soldier had featured in previous investigations by security services, a British official said, as investigators tried to determine whether the men were part of a wider radical Islamic plot. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Beset by three so-called scandals at the moment, Barack Obama has been meeting his accusers and the press head on, Neil Macdonald writes. The same cannot be said for how Stephen Harper operates. more »
- Rob Ford: Councillors, media want answers on crack issue
- Newspaper editorials and commentators are expressing frustration over Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's silence on allegations he was captured on video smoking what appears to be crack cocaine. more »
Must Watch
Latest Canada News Headlines
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma case charged with 1st-degree murder
- Mark Smich of Oakville, Ont., is formally charged with first-degree murder in the death of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man who disappeared earlier this month after taking two men on a test drive of his truck. Smich's arrest follows the first-degree murder charge against Dellen Millard of Toronto.
more »
- How was the Mike Duffy report 'whitewashed?'
- Liberal MPs and senators will spend today pressing the government to answer why the original Senate committee report on Senator Mike Duffy's expenses was significantly changed so that it omitted conclusions about his primary residence. more »
- RCMP moving to freeze assets in widening SNC-Lavalin probe
- The RCMP is moving to freeze millions of dollars in bank accounts and real estate holdings in Montreal and Florida as part of its expanding probe into Canadian engineering firm SNC-Lavalin. more »
- B.C. teen saves pet dog in 'terrifying' cougar attack
- A teenager who says he heard a horrible "scream" from his beloved black labrador outside the family home in Belcarra, B.C., looked out his window and then went into action to save the dog from a vicious cougar. more »
- RCMP Google Doodle salutes 140 years of Mounties
- Google Canada has marked the 140th anniversary of the founding of the North-West Mounted Police, the force that would later merge with the Dominion Police to become the RCMP. more »
The National
The Current
- Politics in the Classroom May. 23, 2013 9:35 AM We visit a place where the rhymes of Dr. Seuss are thought too politically shrill to be heard in a classroom in British Columbia.
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma case charged with 1st-degree murder
- U.K. attack suspects were focus of past security probes
- Mike Duffy's primary home not P.E.I., unedited Senate report says
- 2nd suspect named in Tim Bosma slaying
- Man in chained-teen case pleads guilty to sex assault, kidnapping
- Killing near London barracks probed as 'terror' act
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Senators' Alfredsson on defeating Penguins: 'Probably not'
- B.C. teen saves pet dog in 'terrifying' cougar attack

