Taser Thurston Co Wa Gets 60 2001
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Olympia, WA OLYMPIAN Olympia M.t Ar.. D38,698 Frld.y OCT 19, 2001 11I111111111111111111111111111111111111 I'lIIIIPllII'iiI UlL!lLlI!IPRESS P5B3B CLIPPINGS Sheriff's office to outfit force with 60 tasers Hansen, who took a shot from a taser as part of training. THE OLYMPIAN After being hit, "You reTHURSTON COUNTY main with a sensation simi- They deliver something lar to having your foot go to that feels like a swift punch, sleep," Hansen said. Tumwater police Chief leaving a person breathless and unable to move for a few Mike Vandiver describes it minutes, but they're less as a "really strange feeling. painful than pepper spray and It's like someone hitting you really hard. It disrupts your far less lethal than a bullet. They're lasers, and the ability to move. Thurston County Sheriff's "It's definitely an uncomfortable feeling. Office will buy 60 You know when of them with the 'Tllis would you've been hit." help of a $50,000 Tumv.'ater oflaw enforcement allow us to equip ficers were grant. our officers with "This would alequipped with low us to equip less deadly force. tasers in fall 2000, and also took our officers with less deadly force. Ifs vel)' effective, taser hits as part of their training It's very effective, has no long. "so officers know has no long-lasting effect, but it is lasting effec~ what it feels like," Vandiver said. very incapacitatbutitisvery Vandiver is ing," said Ray Hansen, chief incapacitating." aware of a taser being used by criminal deputy - Ray Hansen, , Tumwater offifor the sheriff's ofchief criminal cers only once, fice. deputy for the and that was Hansen prewhen a drunken sheriff's office sented the plan driver became vifor using the olent after being grant to Thurston County Commissioners. The stopped. "It's most definitely a majority of the grant $36,000 - will be used on good tool to have," he said. Among other items to be the tasers. "We thought this (grant) purchased with the law enwas about the only source forcement grant are: • Two pinhole surveilwe could go to for these,"_ lance cameras, mainly used Hansen said. "It's becoming more com- when fraud is suspected at a mon where deputies are hav- business. • An upgrade of phone ing to deal with physical confrontations with people," he lines at Rochester High and Rochester Middle schools, said. Tasers give officers a tool to where sheriff radio transmisuse with violent, combative sions are often poor or don't suspects - often people who work at all. The phone lines have mental illness problems will work with an upgrade in or are on drugs - other than communications hardware. • A nlght·vision monocpepper spray, batons or guns. A taser is a small plastic ular for the SWAT team. • A computer for use device that shoots two met~ al prongs on wires for up to with·phone lines into the jail. 21 feet. The prongs deliver a Phone lines are legally monfive-second electrical charge itored. and inmates are that stuns a suspect, render- warned of the monitoring, ing his or her muscles use- but inmates frequently call from the jail to make threats, less for about five minutes. "You don't have a pain sen- Hansen said. This is particsation. You have an immobi- ularly common in domestic lization sensation," said violence situations. BY LORRINE THOMPSON