This
is totally fucked up! A supposedly non lethal weapon has killed 500
people! WTF do they expect when you are shooting electricity into the
human body!!
This
young man should not have been tased in the first place! For what, a
fucking ticket! I have never trusted the police less than I do now.
They are to be feared.
This young man should not have been tased in the first place! For what, a fucking ticket! I have never trusted the police less than I do now. They are to be feared.
Seeking Answers After Youth’s Death in Police Stop
BAY HARBOR ISLANDS, Fla. — Israel Hernandez-Llach, a skateboarder and
18-year-old artist, was typically adept at dodging police officers while
he tagged Miami Beach walls with his signature, “Reefa.”
But early Tuesday morning, after he rolled up to a shuttered McDonalds,
his lookout with him, the police caught up with the teenager. Mr.
Hernandez-Llach bolted, running through the streets and a building and
over an iron fence, according to a report by the Miami Beach police. The
officers ultimately stopped him, after firing a Taser to immobilize him, said Raymond A. Martinez, the Miami Beach police chief.
At 6:15 a.m., an hour after the police first spotted him, Mr.
Hernandez-Llach, a former Miami Beach High School student and a
Colombian immigrant, was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital. The
teenager was in medical distress after being shocked by the Taser, Chief
Martinez said, and paramedics were called.
Chief Martinez said that the cause of death had not yet been determined
and that the department was waiting for autopsy and toxicology reports.
Mr. Hernandez-Llach had no other injuries, the police said. The
department is investigating.
On Thursday, Mr. Hernandez-Llach’s parents held a news conference and
called for an independent investigation. The family’s lawyers pointed
out that had Mr. Hernandez-Llach been arrested he most likely would have
been charged with criminal mischief, a misdemeanor that seldom ends in
jail time. The teenager’s only previous arrest had been for shoplifting,
the police said.
“Those guilty of this must be brought to justice,” said his father,
Israel Hernandez Bandera, who was a former Avianca pilot in Colombia,
holding back tears as he spoke. “Not even animals deserve that kind of
treatment.”
A friend of Mr. Hernandez-Llach’s, Thiago Souza, 19, who served as the
lookout on Tuesday, said he saw the police officers giving each other
high-fives after deploying the Taser.
Family and friends called for a vigil on Thursday night and for two more
vigils on Saturday at the location where Mr. Hernandez-Llach was
shocked with the Taser. They are also trying to raise money for his
funeral, relatives said.
“Art is nothing to be killed for,” said Offir Hernandez, 21, the teenager’s sister.
----
Tasers are used by an estimated 17,000 law enforcement agencies around
the world to subdue people who pose a threat, according to Steve Tuttle,
a spokesman for Taser International.
A 2011 Department of Justice report found that the devices are
considered safe for a vast majority of those who are subjected to them
and can save lives by immobilizing suspects. Taser use results in few
injuries, the study found. Although people have died, the risk is
extremely low, the report stated. Often, deaths are associated with
pre-existing medical conditions, drug use or a subsequent fall.
Continuous or repeated shocks are also associated with deaths, the
report stated.
An estimated 500 people have died after being shocked by Tasers since
2001, according to data compiled last year by Amnesty International.
Jacqueline Llach, Mr. Hernandez-Llach’s mother, described her son as
frail; friends said he was skinny and about 5 feet 10 inches.
“The police could have done what they needed to do without killing him,”
she said in her apartment, where friends had gathered to console the
family.
Even in his native Barranquilla, Colombia, Mr. Hernandez-Llach had a
knack for art, friends said. His talent flourished when he arrived in
the United States. At Miami Beach High School, he won awards for his
painting and recently had two sculptures accepted in a temporary exhibit
at the Miami Art Museum, said Savannah Diaz, a friend and fellow
student.
His artwork was on display at his parents’ apartment in Bay Harbor Islands, just off Bal Harbour.
The teenager, who enjoyed pushing the boundaries of self-expression,
also gravitated to photography and graffiti, Ms. Diaz said. She said he
and his helpers would look for wall space in different corners of Miami,
including Wynwood, which is known for its graffiti art, and Broward
County.
Ms. Diaz, who graduated this year, said that her friend was not
aggressive. “Israel is the most creative person any of us had ever met,”
she said. “His life revolved around art and skating.”
Recently, he had started designing specially shaped skateboards.
This May, when friends graduated from Miami Beach High, Mr.
Hernandez-Llach was not one of them. He had failed physical education, a
subject he disliked, friends and family said.
“That’s Israel,” Ms. Diaz said. “P.E. wasn’t a priority. It was about his art work.”
1 comment:
If you see a taser you HAVE to react as if it is a deadly weapon.
The idea that it is not deadly to a SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF PEOPLE, is merely an argument that the public good is served by a 'few' deaths of good people (who have been DRAFTED for the purpose)
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