Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’
CBC News
December 10, 2008
Taser International is responding to moves by several Canadian police agencies to pull some stun guns off the streets for testing following a recent CBC/Radio-Canada investigation into the devices, saying the U.S. laboratory tests commissioned by the CBC and Radio-Canada are “flawed.”
In written releases to news agencies, the Arizona-based company says the CBC investigation made scientific errors by failing to spark-test the weapons before firing them, which the company recommends to police officers.
However, Taser International’s testing protocol used by CBC doesn’t call for a spark test before conducting measurements. In addition, the CBC test found some units still delivering higher current after the equivalent of a spark test.
Taser International is also criticizing the CBC tests over the way the tests replicated electricity moving through a human body, which is measured in ohms.
The CBC tests followed the company’s protocol and written instructions from Max Nerham, Taser International’s vice-president of research and development. Nerheim advised using a resistance of 250 ohms when testing the Taser. After seeing the CBC test results, the company is saying that resistance should have been 600 ohms.
The tests, conducted by the U.S.-based lab National Technical Systems, found about 10 per cent produced more electrical current than the weapon’s specifications. The malfunctioning Tasers were manufactured before 2005.
This week, municipal police forces in B.C. joined the RCMP in suspending the use of all Tasers bought before Jan. 1, 2006.
Solicitor General John van Dongen said Tuesday the weapons will be tested to ensure that the electrical currents generated are consistent with the manufacturer’s specifications.
“We are establishing a provincial standard for both testing and calibration so that we know that all of the equipment that’s in service meets the required specifications,” he said.
Van Dongen said the government has taken the action in the interest of public and officer safety.
Other police forces make similar moves
Meanwhile, other police jurisdictions across the country are also planning to test the older Tasers in the wake of the CBC/Radio-Canada investigation. Ottawa police are removing some of their Tasers from service and testing others.
The Ottawa police tactical and explosives unit has 32 Tasers, nine of which were manufactured before 2005, confirmed Staff Sgt. Mike Maloney, who is in charge of the unit. All nine older Tasers will be retired and replaced with newer devices.
The rest, all newer units, will be re-tested, even though they met standards in earlier tests, Maloney said. “We’re just going to make sure we have the data to show that, yes, these Tasers are working properly.”
The Winnipeg Police Service is also planning to remove older Tasers from service.
Police will decide in due course whether older X26 models of the stun guns will be tested and returned to service or new equipment will replace the old ones, a police spokesperson said Wednesday.
Of 191 Tasers in the Winnipeg police arsenal, 41 have serial numbers indicating they are older X26 models — made before 2005.
On Wednesday, Nova Scotia’s justice department ordered police forces in the province to stop using the older Tasers.
Quebec was the first province to respond to the CBC/Radio-Canada testing.
On Dec. 5, the day after the test results were made public, Quebec’s public security minister immediately ordered all police departments to take Tasers older than 2005 off the streets.
Police use of Tasers has generated intense public concern after Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski died at Vancouver International Airport more than a year ago. An RCMP officer hit him with a Taser shortly before his death.
The Braidwood Inquiry, which has been looking at the use of Tasers and circumstances surrounding Dziekanski’s death, will continue to examine the use of the weapons by municipal police, SkyTrain police, sheriffs and corrections officials in the second phase of the public hearing.
Statement by Taser International spokesman Peter Holran:
“It is regrettable that false allegations based on scientifically flawed data can create such uncertainty. Taser International stands behind the quality and safety of its products and is prepared to provide the assistance and information necessary to allay any concerns.
Taser International welcomes proper testing of its devices and has provided its factory test protocols to test laboratories in Canada so police agencies can avoid the scientific errors made by the CBC. Using proper test protocols will ensure that going forward decisions are not based on scientifically flawed data such as was presented in the CBC report.
According to the data provided by CBC from its test, ALL 41 Taser devices tested produced energy outputs consistent with the expected outputs published by Taser International. It also is apparent from the data that four devices each produced what can only be explained as an anomaly in peak current during one of six firings — the first firing of each device tested at 250 ohms — most likely the result of the testers failing to spark test the Taser device before the test — a requirement made to all officers and agencies in the training as a check for proper function and to condition electronic components.”
Source | See Also under Tasers: Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s Distraught Son | Amnesty urges moratorium on Taser use after CBC/Radio-Canada probe | Some tested Tasers fire stronger current than company says: CBC/Radio-Canada probe | RCMP Investigates, Clears Self of Wrongdoing in Case of TASERed Inuvik Girl | US Cops Tase 54 Year Old Woman For Sitting In Wrong Seat At Football Game | Prison service ices TASER pilot project | B.C. man dies after Taser used during Calgary arrest | Mountie involved in fatal crash was supervisor at time of airport Taser death | Drug abuser executed by TASER blasts – TASER toll stands at 25 | Mountie arrested in fatal crash present at airport Taser death | Inquiry into Vancouver airport Taser death put off 2nd time | Tasers being used for pain compliance during interrogation, suit alleges | Family sues police claiming Taser raid on autistic son in own bedroom | Naked Langley, B.C., robbery suspect dies after Taser jolt | Tasering of mom with baby ‘necessary’ in order to take child, police say | Brampton man is 23rd Canadian TASER death; police duly investigate themselves | RCMP didn’t study Taser use enough: Report | Probe into tasering of teenaged girl reopened | Police Taser and abuse suspect, lie on stand, man still convicted | RCMP should end use of Tasers: Zaccardelli | Police delay report on Taser until 2009 | Mounties pinned me down in cell and tasered me, Manitoba girl says | 21st Canadian TASER death occurs in Winnipeg alleyway | RCMP e-mails throw Dziekanski Taser probe into question, critics say | Taser use could put police under fire | Inquiry says ‘insidious’ TASERs being used as tool of convenience, should be reclassified, restricted under criminal code | Man dies in custody after Taser incident involving Ontario police | Ban Tasers if RCMP doesn’t curb use by year’s end: Commons committee | One-third of people shot by Taser need medical attention: probe | RCMP firing Tasers multiple times at subjects, probe reveals | U.S. jury shocks Taser, investors, with rare loss in court | Youth Worker Subjected to Warrantless Raid on Secret Evidence | Tasering violated suspect’s rights, judge rules | RCMP willing to change Taser policy, inquiry told | Tasers pose risk to heart, MDs testify | ‘Peel and Stick’ Tasers Electrify Riot Control | Canadian police have been brainwashed, Taser inquiry told | Mounties censor Taser report | Taser group’s chair to defend stun guns at public inquiry | Chicago study calls Taser’s safety claims into question | Officer injured in Taser demonstration
December 13th, 2008 at 6:48 am
We’ll be discussing Taser safety at 5 PM New York time Friday December 19 on News Talk Online on Paltalk.com.
Please go to http://www.garybaumgarten.com and click on the Join The Show link to participate.
Thanks,
Gary
January 26th, 2009 at 11:49 pm
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]
February 4th, 2009 at 11:45 am
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]
February 12th, 2009 at 6:37 pm
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]
February 24th, 2009 at 4:54 pm
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]
February 27th, 2009 at 9:11 am
I am upset that the RCMP and Police commissions have the nerve to ask that all officers have access to tasers. These are unproven weapons that do take lives. The gentleman at YYC was tasered for no reason what so ever. There were four officers there who could have easily subdued this man with physical force rather than tasering him. I have worked corrections for many years and many inmates were subdued with three or less staff without harm or incident. These RCMP gangsters who tased the guy at YYC are wimps who don’t want to soil their uniforms. I am sick of their poor “I felt threatened excuses” that seem to hold up in court. Charge them, find them guilty, and sentence them because they murdered an innocent man. I just don’t seem to get why people are supporting the use of these things. Yes they tased him, but five times???? anyones heart would stop while being told to contract that many times for that length of time. People, your cops are not that honest a group, don’t you get it?
March 27th, 2009 at 4:13 pm
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]
April 11th, 2009 at 2:36 am
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]
November 6th, 2009 at 4:10 am
[...] in airport Taser death | RCMP to face no charges in case of TASERed Polish immigrant: Report | Taser International disputes CBC/Radio-Canada testing as ‘flawed’ | Red Deer man shot by Taser had pre-existing heart condition: doctor | Cops Taser Drowned Dad’s [...]