Archive for October, 2007

 

Interview: Andrew Meyer Finally Breaks His Silence (Video)

Oct 31, 2007 in News, Taser

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From MSNBC.com, the “Don’t tase me bro” bro Andrew Meyer finally breaks his silence:
Tasered student says he’s sorry
Tasered student says he’s sorry

TODAYshow.com: A lot of people have weighed in on your arrest and the events surrounding it, but we have heard nothing from you. Why have you remained silent?

Meyer: On the advice of my attorney, the inimitable Robert Griscti, I went against my instincts and stayed silent. I’m glad that I did. Not only did I have a criminal case pending, but the time away from the spotlight has allowed me to cool off and gain perspective.

TODAYshow.com: Was your arrest planned? Did you ask anyone to tape you at the John Kerry event?

Meyer: My arrest was absolutely not planned. You would have to be a fool to intentionally get arrested and incur the cost of cleaning up this mess legally (ask my lawyer, it wasn’t cheap).

I did bring my video camera along. I obviously knew I was going to ask the Senator some tough questions, and I wanted to have it on tape. Before I started asking the Senator my questions, I gave my camera to a woman in line I had never met before who also did not leave when Accent instructed her to, named Clarissa Jessup. Clarissa, I can’t thank you enough for both posting the video you shot and returning my camera to me.

TODAYshow.com: Your arrest has sparked a lot of questions about free speech and police brutality, but one of the biggest questions remains your motive for attending the John Kerry event. What was the point you were trying to make?

Meyer: The first question I asked the Senator was about his concession of the 2004 election. Greg Palast, author of “Armed Madhouse,” the book I was holding up at the forum, proved that John Kerry won the 2004 election. The ultimate point I was trying to make was to bring up was the heinous way millions of American votes were chucked in the garbage on Election Day. Not only is this a total assault on democracy, but the same tactics used to throw away votes in 2004 will be used again in 2008. Read about the Help America Vote Act and see for yourself. HAVA helps America vote in about the same way the PATRIOT Act patriotically dismantles the Bill of Rights. In other words, it’s completely Un-American.

The second question I asked was why haven’t Kerry and the Democratic Congress made any moves to impeach Bush, considering he has led us into two wars of aggression in Iraq and Afghanistan, and wasn’t even legitimately elected (as Kerry knows since, as he told me, he has read “Armed Madhouse.”) If Kerry is so concerned about the aggressive posturing the administration is taking towards Iran, why don’t he and the Democrats running Congress do something about it? They have the impeachment power. Millions of Americans believe they should use it.

The third question I asked Kerry, which Tim Russert of NBC’s Meet the Press also asked Kerry (and Bush), is was he a member of Skull and Bones in college. Some people treat this question as a joke, but Kerry and Bush never denied the assertion. Perhaps their involvement in the same secret society (once known as the Brotherhood of Death) has something to do with the answers to my first two questions.

TODAYshow.com: What do you think of John Kerry’s reaction to your arrest?

Meyer: Kerry intervened and stopped the police from taking me away initially. It appears he tried again after I questioned him, but he wasn’t so effective. Later, he said Taser use was not necessary. I definitely agree with him there.

TODAYshow.com: A lot has been made of your Web site, particularly a video of your friend (which has been incorrectly reported as you) standing on the side of the road holding a sign, “Harry Dies,” after the release of the last Harry Potter book. Is your site in any way connected to what you were trying to accomplish at the Kerry event?

Meyer: It’s funny you should mention “Harry Dies,” because that more than anything else epitomizes how my character has been misconstrued by the media. “Harry Dies” is a video two friends of mine shot on the day the seventh Harry Potter book was released. They are standing on a busy street corner holding a sign that says, “Harry Dies.” I am not in this video. I did not shoot this video. All I did was post it on my Web site. And yet this, according to the media, is the smoking gun that proves I am a “well-known prankster” and my questions to Senator Kerry were not serious. There are no other cited instances of me pulling a practical joke.

My Web site was and is intended to be a forum for me to express myself, but I was not looking to promote it in any way by attending the Kerry forum. I did plan to post the video of me asking Kerry questions on my website, the same way I posted the videos of Validus and Quigley & the St.Pete Players, a couple of local bands I had filmed. I did not, however, have a pocket full of business cards ready to pass out after the event. If I were promoting my Web site, passing out my card is exactly what I would have done. A police officer did find one of my business cards, which read “TheAndrewMeyer.com.” I was using it as a bookmark for “Armed Madhouse.”

TODAYshow.com: Your original point may not have been about free speech, but your name has now been mentioned alongside Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s in recent First Amendment debates. What has your experience taught you about free speech in 2007?

Meyer: Politicians are not used to being asked the hard questions. I think free speech has been willfully discarded to an extent by American journalists. They have stopped asking questions that matter. Maybe their refusal to be vocal is what makes my outburst look so surprising in contrast.

TODAYshow.com: How has this experience changed your life? Has it affected your post-graduation plans?

Meyer: I think this whole experience has been an opportunity for me to learn and become a better, more complete person. I’ve never had to deal with anything so challenging as the media heat lamp before in my life.

As for my post-grad plans, they haven’t changed much. I didn’t know what I was going to do then, and I still don’t now.

TODAYshow.com: How has this experience changed your campus life at the University of Florida? Has the national attention had a larger effect on the student body?

Meyer: After my incident, Student Government held open-mic debates, which I had never seen before. Also, the University is looking into the use of Tasers on campus, so that’s a plus. Other than that, things on campus are about the same. The topics in the student newspaper, the Alligator, have changed a bit, but the lack of respect for the rag is still the same.

TODAYshow.com: Do you feel generally supported by the student body or is the vibe more negative?

Meyer: It’s probably split right down the middle, as it was when I wrote about Dance Marathon or Chris Leak. I’ll tell you though, people definitely have an opinion. They either love me or they hate me. Scratch that. Most students are probably apathetic towards me, as they are towards everything else that doesn’t involve their FaceBook.

TODAYshow.com: How has this event and the national attention affected your family?

Meyer: My parents and my sister have been a rock of support for me throughout this whole situation. If anything, our family is stronger because of this.

TODAYshow.com: What is your biggest criticism of the media in covering your story?

Meyer: I haven’t seen any mainstream news outlet once dissect the questions I asked the Senator. Everything is about me personally or the taser. This is the type of tabloid journalism prevalent in America today. When my story is over, they won’t start covering Blackwater or Ron Paul. It’ll be Britney Spears and Paris Hilton, business as usual.

TODAYshow.com: “Don’t Tase me, bro” has been printed on T-shirts, coffee mugs, parodied on YouTube. It’s even a ring tone. Do you own any of these items? What’s your general reaction? Do you think the message on these commercial items sends a good reminder to people, or do you feel it merely represents people trying to profit off of your situation?

Meyer: I have not profited from my catch phrase at all. The YouTube music videos and the ring tones and such, sometimes it amuses me, sometimes it saddens me. I think “Don’t Tase me, bro” genuinely makes some people think about the growing threat to American rights. But I think most people are having a laugh, disregarding the seriousness of the situation. Thank you Jon Stewart.

TODAYshow.com: Knowing what you know now, is there anything you would have changed about your own actions at the John Kerry forum?

Meyer: I have talked about this a lot in my apology letters. Next time, I will definitely line up in front of the microphone sooner!

I wish I had maintained my composure. The next time I will.

Oregon Man Tasered, Shot with Bean Bag Rounds for Filming Warantless Police Search

Oct 17, 2007 in News, Police Brutality, Taser, Video

PORTLAND, OR – Four men who say Portland police ran roughshod over their constitutional rights are taking their cases to court.

Monday their attorneys called for independent investigators to review complaints against police and for the mayor and chief to curb what they called officers’ “dirty tactics.”

Portland Police Bureau spokesman Sgt. Brian Schmautz said he couldn’t comment on pending litigation.

One of the four cases is documented by the videotape which is at the heart of the complaint:

Frank Waterhouse is suing for unlawful seizure with excessive force, alleging that police fired a Taser and bean bag rounds at him on May 27, 2006 because he was videotaping their search of a friend’s property in the 5800 block of Northeast Portland Highway.

Police officers followed a police dog onto the property during a search for a fleeing suspect. After the dog keyed on a car, officers broke out a window. Upset residents, insisting no one had run onto their property, started to videotape the police search.

When one woman was told to stop recording, she gave the videocamera to Waterhouse. He walked to the edge of the property, climbed up a dirt embankment and continued to record. At one point, he yelled to his friend, “Yes, I got it all on film. They had no right to come on this property.”

He says in the suit that police immediately came after him, and yelled at him “put it down.” Officers moved towards him, and he said, “Don’t come after me.” Waterhouse said seconds later he was shot with a bean bag gun and a Taser and fell to the ground.

Officers wrote in their reports that Waterhouse ran off, they chased and then bean-bagged and Tasered him.

One officer wrote, “He had refused to drop the camera which could be used as a weapon.”

Waterhouse was arrested, accused of criminal trespass and disorderly conduct. A jury acquitted him of all charges.

Here is the video that Waterhouse shot. It depicts the final 27 seconds of footage and ends with him being hit by the Taser darts:



SOURCE:

  • The Oregonian
  • Study:Tasers Are Safe To Use

    Oct 09, 2007 in News, Police Brutality, Taser

    WINSTON-SALEM, NC – U.S. scientists examining the safety of Tasers used by some law enforcement officers have found the devices are safe, causing few serious injuries.

    The study, led by Dr. William Bozeman of the Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, is believed to be the first large, independent study of injuries associated with Tasers — weapons that incapacitate people through an electrical current delivered by shooting wires into the body.

    In a review of nearly 1,000 cases, 99.7 percent of those subjected to Taser use had mild injuries, such as scrapes and bruises, or none at all, Bozeman said. Only three subjects suffered injuries severe enough to need hospital admission.

    Two other subjects died after being shot by a Taser, but autopsy reports indicated neither death was related to the use of a Taser.

    Bozeman presented the study Monday in Seattle, during the American College of Emergency Physicians’ Research Forum. Earlier partial results involving 597 cases were published in the September issue of the journal Annals of Emergency Medicine.

    Unedited Police Video of Epileptic Man Being Killed by Taser

    Oct 08, 2007 in News, Police Brutality, Taser, Video

    In Gwinnett County, Georgia, an unedited police videotape shows 31-year-old Deacon Frederick Williams being struck with a Taser five times in 43 seconds, just 4 minutes after being led into the jail.

    He was handcuffed behind his back and in leg restraints, following an epileptic seizure at his home; an ambulance was called by his wife and son, but the police arrived first.

    His last words were, ironically enough: “Don’t kill me, man. Don’t kill me”:

    Busty Woman Volunteers to Get Tasered

    Oct 06, 2007 in News, Taser, Video

    For all you kinky Taser fetishists out there, this one’s for you:

    Taser Demonstration Hits Guy In His Family Jewels

    Oct 05, 2007 in News, Taser, Video

    While conducting a demonstration of the Advanced Air Taser stun guns for the public, one volunteer gets zapped right in the family jewels and it’s um, ball clinching to watch him pull the darts from his nuts.

    Watch the whole video, and remember – if you ever volunteer to get tasered, make sure you get it in the back:

    Tough Fightin’ Marine Dude Falls to Taser

    Oct 04, 2007 in News, Taser, Video

    Gunnery Sgt. Hans Marrero is a former Chief Instructor for hand-to-hand combat for the Marines.

    He’s tough.

    He’s a fighter who could probably kill you in seconds with his bare hands.

    But can he overcome the powers of the Taser?

    Nervous, Hyped-Up Cop Gets Tasered

    Oct 03, 2007 in News, Taser, Video

    Watch this nervous, hyped-up cop as he prepares to get tasered in a demonstration:

    DUI Suspect Tasered Repeatedly. Is This ‘Funny’?

    Oct 02, 2007 in News, Police Brutality, Taser, Video

    Sadly, the Youtube source page for this vid calls it the “Funniest Taser Video Ever!”:

    Flroida Traffic Stop Turns Into Unnecessary Tasing

    Oct 01, 2007 in News, Police Brutality, Taser, Video

    Typical traffic stop in Boynton Beach, Florida by Officer Rich McNevin leads to unnecessary tasing of woman:


    Here are some excerpts of comments left on a blog post about the incident:

    10-4 on the Punk Bitch. A real loser that Mr. Rich McNevin. Big powerful Mr. Rich McNevin. One can only hope that the wee little women in his wee little life get to experience the same treatment that he bestowed on this unsuspecting lady. I wonder how right the spokesperson for the Boynton police dept. would feel if Mr. Big Bad Rich McNevin did the same to one of the ladies in his family. Some personalities can not handle authority, it goes to their swelled heads. Big bad Mr. Rich McNevin obviously can not handle authority. He will have to answer for his actions in the end. Surely he knows it. He gets to spend his time now wondering when his day is coming. Suffer big bad Mr. Rich McNevin suffer you punk bitch! - David Williams

    Punk Bitch? Did you even watch the whole video? I am Rich’s cousin and I know first hand that Rich is a good cop. If you would have watched the whole video, you would have seen that the lady was a complete bitch right off the bat with him. She should have listened to him the first 6 times he warned her and that would have never happened. So, since you were wondering if his family is proud of what he did, I’m here to tell you that the answer is YES, he was totally justified. And if that happened to one of the ladies in our family, it would be justified also. So, Mr. Big Bad David Williams, maybe you should watch the tape again and keep your damn mouth shut. - Kristy McNevin

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