-JAKE IN THE TAURUS-
POLICE BRUTALITY
"WE MUST ALWAYS BE READY TO DEFEND OUR COUNTRY FROM OUR GOVERNMENT!"
First allow me to say that there are many good police officers out there, members of my own family are employed as COPS, and it must be one of the most difficult jobs to fulfill, and regardless of this very offensive webpage, we do have a lot of respect for the fine men and women in blue. We here at FIGMENT also believe that GOOD officers should be paid a much higher wage and that a minimum of 100,000 additional officer's are needed, but "FUCK-O", a.k.a. George W. Bush doesn't agree and as with everyday citizens there will always be bad people with bad intentions.

WITH THAT SAID...BALTIMORE OFFICER, SALVATORE "FARVO"" RIVIERA "man handles" young skater. WHAT A FUCKING ASSHOLE. GO AND TAKE SOME HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE PILLS, BEAT YOUR WIFE, AND DOWN A couple CARONA'S FOR CHRISTS SAKE! (and don't forget to suck on a lemon first, or whatever your preference of sucking on may be)... And as you said, "if you keep acting like that you could get killed"...end of quote. Later DUDE!!!

SALVATORE "FARVO"" RIVIERA


BARON PIKES, TASED "9" TIMES TO DEATH WHILE HANDCUFFED.
COP FIRED AND DEATH RULED A HOMICIDE.
"FUCK YOU TASER INTERNATIONAL"


Louisiana, US: Death of man tased nine times by police ruled homicide
By Hiram Lee
25 July 2008
A Louisiana coroner has ruled the January 2008 death of 21-year-old Baron Pikes at the hands of police was a homicide. Pikes, a sawmill worker from Winnfield, Louisiana, was killed while in police custody on January 17 after being shot nine times with a Taser gun.

Wanted on charges of drug possession, Pikes was approached by police, including Officer Scott Nugent, near a Winnfield grocery store on January 17. Police claim Pikes did not stop for them and a brief chase on foot ensued. Phillip Terry, an attorney representing Officer Nugent, has said his client caught up with Pikes and fought with him on the ground without help from his partner who “had just come back to the police department from triple bypass surgery and could not assist Officer Nugent.” Terrell says Nugent only resorted to firing his Taser when he had already exhausted “every means possible” to take Pikes into custody.

Dr. Randolph Williams, coroner for Winn Parish, has challenged the official story saying Pikes was already handcuffed when Nugent fired the first shot with his Taser. Additionally, Williams’s findings reveal that Pikes was struck with six 50,000-volt shocks at the arrest site within a period of three minutes. Following this rapid succession of electroshocks, Pikes was placed in a patrol car and driven to the police station. Once there, Pikes was tased again while seated in the back of the patrol car, taking the seventh shot directly to his chest.

Dr. Williams told CNN in a recent interview that following the seventh shock, “[Pikes] was pulled out of the car onto the concrete. He was electroshocked two more times, which two officers noted that he had no neuromuscular response to those last two 50,000-volt electroshocks.” Williams says Pikes may already have been dead when the last two shots were fired. Police carried Pikes’ body into the station before calling an ambulance.

Dr. Williams, who has been extremely vocal in his criticism of the police, found that the use of Tasers in the incident that led to Pikes’ death “violated every aspect—every single aspect—of the department’s policy about its use.”

While no decision has yet been made as to whether Officer Nugent will face criminal charges for his actions, the officer has been fired by the City Council since the January incident. While Nugent apparently had a clean record, it has been revealed that of the 14 times Tasers have been used by Winnfield police since officers received them last year, 10 involved Nugent. A testament to racial tensions in the small town, no less than 12 of those 14 incidents involved black suspects.

The death of Baron Pikes, who was black, at the hands of Officer Nugent, who is white, has ignited the already tense racial situation in Winnfield, leading to angry protests. In a strange and tragic coincidence, Baron Pikes was the first cousin of Mychal Bell, one of the defendants in the infamous “Jena Six” case, which saw six black high school students from Jena, Louisiana fall victim to a racist prosecution for the schoolyard confrontation with a white classmate. Winnfield is just 40 miles northwest of Jena.

PALMDALE CA SHERIFF'S DEPT. COVER UP
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The funeral of Aaron Maropulos, 18 years old, found dead in a field in Palmdale California 2 weeks after a
Palmdale Sheriff allegedly picked him up, pointed a gun to his head and told Aaron "I can kill you and get away with it if I want to".

Ballistics show the gun used in Aaron's murder was a police issue .45 style handgun. I wonder who "SPONSERED" that one?
Two siblings of Aarons were also murdered in a suspicious arson fire allegedly started by several Palmale officials.
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COP NEWS

March 2008-Cops Say ex cop Frankie Tucker Crossed the thin blue line
Authorities say Frankie Tucker, a former COP himself, was forced to resign from his job for having an inappropriate relationship with an inmate, but the charges he currently faces are far more egregious. After years of abuse, Tucker's stepdaughter finally came forward, saying she'd been sexually abused over a period of years. Once word got out that charges were to be filed, cops say Tucker hit the road.

UPDATE

Suspected child molester FRANKIE TUCKER commits suicide in jail.
Cops in Dallas say Frankie Tucker a suspected child molester and former cop himself, took his own life in jail while he was awaiting trial. Tucker had been arrested in California a week before. He strangled himself with a radio chord in his cell. (or so they say!)

TRIGGER HAPPY "DOLTS" MURDER 12 YEAR OLD BOY NEAR PITTSBURGH (2002)
BUT OF COURSE, NO CHARGES WERE FILED.
THE POLICE, POLICING THE POLICE...WHAT A CONCEPT!
Pennsylvania state police cleared in killing of 12-year-old

No charges will be filed against the two Pennsylvania state police officers who shot and killed a 12-year-old boy on Christmas Eve in Uniontown, Pa., a small town 50 miles south of Pittsburgh. Fayette County District Attorney Nancy Vernon announced that she wouldn’t prosecute the troopers a few days after a coroner’s inquest ruled the shooting to be “justified.”

Michael Ellerbe was shot in the back on the afternoon of December 24 as he ran from police. The bullet went through his heart, killing him almost immediately. Ellerbe was in a car that had been stolen during the night. The owner of the stolen car spotted it in the early afternoon and notified police. Police chased the car for about a mile before it crashed into a fence and tree. Michael then attempted to escape on foot. He was running between two houses when he was shot.

In justifying the shooting, Vernon greatly expanded upon what is considered to be justifiable grounds for police to shoot at a suspect. “The issue here is not whether [the officer] saw a weapon,” said Vernon. “But whether there was a potential for there to be a weapon in his pocket. It’s irrelevant that he saw or did not see Michael Ellerbe with a gun in his hand. I’m saying they can’t take that chance.”

Her ruling has far-reaching and sinister implications. Using Vernon’s logic, police would be justified in shooting anyone, even a person stopped for a speeding ticket or jaywalking, since there is always a “potential” for a hidden weapon. In effect she is leaving it to the discretion of each individual officer to shoot or not shoot, assured that he or she will not face any consequences.

During the inquest, which lasted less than a day, police claimed that they shot Michael after one of the officer’s guns accidentally went off and the other officer thought that the boy had shot at them.

The testimony of the police was directly contradicted by that of 10-year-old Melvin Duley who lives across the street from where Michael was shot and watched the chase and shooting from his window. He testified that one officer fired all three shots at Michael. Melvin, along with his parents, took part in a protest outside the coroner’s inquest demanding that the police be charged in Michael’s killing.

is part of a generalized assault on democratic rights under conditions of growing social misery. It was the fourth police killing in southwestern Pennsylvania in recent months.


NEWS FROM PITTSBURGH, PA

On December 23, Charles Dixon, 43, died a day after being beaten by eight Pittsburgh-area police officers. Dixon was attending a birthday party for his friend held at a local fire hall. He attempted to defuse a dispute between his brother and two off-duty police officers who were hired for the party as security. The police called for backup and when Dixon walked away he was jumped from behind.

Police lay, kneeled and sat on top of Dixon while they handcuffed him, despite pleas from Dixon that he could not breathe. The weight and force of the police caused Dixon’s lungs to collapse. One officer sprayed paper spray in his face as he lay on the floor.

Bernard Rogers, 26, of Pittsburgh was killed by Housing Authority Police while he was being questioned over illegal drugs. Police claim that they shot Rogers when he pushed and pinned one of the officers onto a sofa. They say Rogers then ran out of the apartment, down steps and collapsed dead in the yard. However, ballistics experts and pathologists testified at an inquest that he was shot through the chest at a downward angle, as if he were shot as he ran down the steps. Both witnesses to the shooting and a shell casing found on the landing support the fact that he was shot as he attempted to escape from police.

On September 7 three undercover Pittsburgh police officers shot and killed 24-year-old Michael Hunter. According to police, Hunter was armed and refused to drop his gun. Witnesses testified that police never told Hunter to drop his weapon and proceeded to shoot him 19 times, with the bullets hitting him in his back and leg. Witnesses also testified that police then allowed their dog to maul Hunter and prevented emergency medical treatment while he lay on the ground dying.

I myself was the victim of a brutal police beating on Friday August 18th 2005 in Santa Monica, California. Here is my story...

My police report looks more like the warren commission report of the Kennedy assassination rather than an unjustified police beating.

After two long years, Betty Haviland finally dropped all charges against me after I threatened Santa Monica with a law suit.




"If the government becomes a lawbreaker it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy." - Brandeis
PUNKS VS. POLICE - ROUND 1!




PROOF OF WHO ASSAULTED AND BATTERED WHO

I was severely beaten by a Santa Monica policeman named Officer Gallagher [BADGE NUMBER 3392] on August 18th, 2005 I had a green Mohawk and I was wearing a black cut off vest with a large "FUCK BUSH" patch on my back and blue jeans. I was making a small disturbance by banging on a pay phone [BAD MOVE #1] which had been out of order.[this was the third out of service pay phone that I came across that evening. Someone outside of O'Brien's Irish pub had called the police and reported me for my pay phone abuse.

A police car suddenly approached and stopped in front of me, I walked over to the officer [BAD MOVE #2] who had his hand on his gun, and at that time, I feared for my life, so i did what I thought I had to do to prove to him that I was unarmed, so I undressed in a hurry. [sounds strange, and I admit it was, but the police in America had killed three innocent people that week who the officers said were armed, but it was later found out that none of the now dead victims had any weapons on then at all. OOPS! So I took EVERYTHING off [BAD MOVE #3] to show Officer Gallagher that I had no weapons in my possession and he took his hand off of his gun, at the same time, my pants got stuck around my ankles and I fell backwards. As soon as I got to my feet Officer Gallagher struck me in the head with his metal baton Once-twice-three times-again in the head-again to the face/left eyebrow area-again to the face/right eyebrow area-again to my neck- again to my right knee-again to my left leg, again to my back. I reached for the baton and hung onto it but only for a very brief time [BAD MOVE #4], perhaps 3 seconds, to stop him, but he grabbed it back and I moved away from him.

I was covered in blood and the cuts on my eyebrows were pouring out blood like the stigmata. [This was all being witnessed by 200 partying Santa Monica College students at the Irish pub.] I was just released from Cedars Sinai hospital the previous day with severe abdominal pain after an 11 day stay, a bill of $86,000 dollars, and weighing in at 118 pounds compared to Gallaghers 200 plus pounds. Gallagher then threw me to the ground where he jammed his knee into my chest and applied all of his weight so that I could not breathe and then he put me in a head lock and began to choke me. Frightened and gasping for air I begged God to give me the strength to be freed from his hold, and my prayer was answered. I had the strength to make a hard turn to the left and the 200 plus pound OFFICER GALLAGHER fell off of me to the right. [he slipped off of my blood covered body] I DID NOT PUSH HIM, TOUCH HIM, OR HURT HIM PHYSICALLY]

I stood up and backed about ten feet away from him and he pulled out his TASER INTERNATIONAL taser gun and shot a stream of 50,000 volts of power into my naked body. He hit me in the chest area, but I just stood there in a daze, but didn't fall, [BAD MOVE #5] so he shot another dose of 50,000 volts into my body and again, I just stood there. [BAD MOVE #6]Then he sent a third shot of 50,000 volts into me and one of the taser "strings/hooks" actually stuck in my chest right in the heart area and I finally fell to the ground.[GOOD MOVE #1]

I was then handcuffed and the ambulance arrived and covered me with a yellow raincoat or poncho and placed me in the ambulance with OFFICER GALLAGHER in tote. I wasn't taken to jail, but I was placed in the UCLA/WESTWOOD Hospital for a two week observation, then released to the SANTA MONICA POLICE DEPARTMENT for booking. After several photographs were taken of my face, body and tattoos and I was finger printed, I was released, but never arrested.

Also OFFICER GALLAGHER said that he smelled alcohol on my breath and that he thought that I was on drugs, but my toxicity reports all came back negative, EVEN FOR ALCOHOL!

Has OFFICER GALLAGHER ever heard of PEPPER SPRAY?

I was then notified I was being charged with ASSAULT AND BATTERY ON A POLICE OFFICER, RESISTING AND LEWD CONDUCT. [Isn't that the way it always goes?] MY TRIAL WAS SET FOR OCTOBER 20, 2005 - RESCHEDULED FOR DECEMBER 3RD - RESCHEDULED FOR OCTOBER 2ND, 2006 - RE SCHEDULED FOR DECEMBER 2ND 2006/RESCHEDULED FOR FEBRUARY 12TH, 2007/ RESCHEDULED FOR MARCH 22, 2007 - RESCHEDULED FOR APRIL 2ND, 2007 - RESCHEDULED FOR JUNE 1, 2007.

THANKS FOR READING MY STORY, LARAMIE


UPDATE


On Monday, July 9th , 2007 yeah #9 b.f.d., all charges against me were dismissed. Thanks to my public defender, but I always said "God got me into this mess and God will get me out of it also". (Oh yea of little faith) lol! Damn, that was a close one... No more stripping in front of cops for me...My chip n' dale days are over...
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TWO WEEKS LATER...ONE DAMN GOOD MUG SHOT!!!
NICK NOLTE EAT YOUR HEART OUT!

OH CRAP...IT'S 2:43 (2+4+3=9)
THE ONE-THE ONLY...





Federal Civil Enforcement

"Police Misconduct Provision"

This law makes it unlawful for State or local law enforcement officers to engage in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives persons of rights protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States. (42 U.S.C. § 14141). The types of conduct covered by this law can include, among other things, excessive force, discriminatory harassment, false arrests, coercive sexual conduct, and unlawful stops, searches or arrests. In order to be covered by this law, the misconduct must constitute a "pattern or practice" -- it may not simply be an isolated incident. The DOJ must be able to show in court that the agency has an unlawful policy or that the incidents constituted a pattern of unlawful conduct. However, unlike the other civil laws discussed below, DOJ does not have to show that discrimination has occurred in order to prove a pattern or practice of misconduct.

What remedies are available under this law?

The remedies available under this law do not provide for individual monetary relief for the victims of the misconduct. Rather, they provide for injunctive relief, such as orders to end the misconduct and changes in the agency's policies and procedures that resulted in or allowed

the misconduct. There is no private right of action under this law; only DOJ may file suit for violations of the Police Misconduct Provision.

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Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the "OJP Program Statute"

Together, these laws prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, and religion by State and local law enforcement agencies that receive financial assistance from the Department of Justice. (42 U.S.C. § 2000d, et seq. and 42 U.S.C. § 3789d(c)). Currently, most persons are served by a law enforcement agency that receives DOJ funds. These laws prohibit both individual instances and patterns or practices of discriminatory misconduct, i.e., treating a person differently because of race, color, national origin, sex, or religion. The misconduct covered by Title VI and the OJP (Office of Justice Programs) Program Statute includes, for example, harassment or use of racial slurs, unjustified arrests, discriminatory traffic stops, coercive sexual conduct, retaliation for filing a complaint with DOJ or participating in the investigation, use of excessive force, or refusal by the agency to respond to complaints alleging discriminatory treatment by its officers.

What remedies are available under these laws?

DOJ may seek changes in the policies and procedures of the agency to remedy violations of these laws and, if appropriate, also seek individual remedial relief for the victim(s). Individuals also have a private right of action under Title VI and under the OJP Program Statute; in other words, you may file a lawsuit yourself under these laws. However, you must first exhaust your administrative remedies by filing a complaint with DOJ if you wish to file in Federal Court under the OJP Program Statute.

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Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 prohibit discrimination against individuals with disabilities on the basis of disability. (42 U.S.C. § 12131, et seq. and 29 U.S.C. § 794). These laws protect all people with disabilities in the United States. An individual is considered to have a "disability" if he or she has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having such an impairment.

The ADA prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in all State and local government programs, services, and activities regardless of whether they receive DOJ financial assistance; it also protects people who are discriminated against because of their association with a person with a disability. Section 504 prohibits discrimination by State and local law enforcement agencies that receive financial assistance from DOJ. Section 504 also prohibits discrimination in programs and activities conducted by Federal agencies, including law enforcement agencies.

These laws prohibit discriminatory treatment, including misconduct, on the basis of disability in virtually all law enforcement services and activities. These activities include, among others, interrogating witnesses, providing emergency services, enforcing laws, addressing citizen complaints, and arresting, booking, and holding suspects. These laws also prohibit retaliation for filing a complaint with DOJ or participating in the investigation.

What remedies are available under these laws?

If appropriate, DOJ may seek individual relief for the victim(s), in addition to changes in the policies and procedures of the law enforcement agency. Individuals have a private right of action under both the ADA and Section 504; you may file a private lawsuit for violations of these statutes. There is no requirement that you exhaust your administrative remedies by filing a complaint with DOJ first.

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How to File a Complaint with DOJ

Criminal Enforcement

If you would like to file a complaint alleging a violation of the criminal laws discussed above, you may contact the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which is responsible for investigating allegations of criminal deprivations of civil rights. You may also contact the United States Attorney's Office (USAO) in your district. The FBI and USAOs have offices in most major cities and have publicly-listed phone numbers. In addition, you may send a written complaint to:

Criminal Section Civil Rights Division U.S. Department of Justice P.O. Box 66018 Washington, D.C. 20035-6018

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Civil Enforcement

If you would like to file a complaint alleging violations of the Police Misconduct Statute, Title VI, or the OJP Program Statute, you may send a written complaint to:

Coordination and Review Section Civil Rights Division U.S. Department of Justice P.O. Box 66560 Washington, D.C. 20035-6560

You may also call the Coordination and Review Section's toll-free number for information and a complaint form, at (888) 848-5306 (voice and TDD).

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Cop Cleared of Choking Skateboarder
AP Posted: 2007-07-03 11:09:55

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (July 3) - A cop who appeared to choke a skateboarder in a video posted online has been cleared of any wrongdoing by an internal review board.

A panel found police Officer Joey Williams followed procedures when he arrested six skateboarders June 21 in Hot Springs, Ark. "He didn't resort to anything above hand control techniques and handcuffing," Police Chief Bobby Southard said.
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"NO JUSTICE - NO PEACE"!!!
[click the names for their stories]

MICHAEL EDWARD BELL- PATRICK AARON LEE- AMADOU DIALLO
NEIL STONECHILD


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POLICE TASERS

Only one case of death by taser has been ruled, "death by taser" all other deaths were blamed ion the victim using crystal methamphetamine or cocain, however if the dead victims were not tased by a TASER INTERNATIONAL taser they would still be alive and tweaking...

My letter to TASER INTERNATIONAL 4/05/07

Dear Phil/TASER INTERNATIONAL
Damn, your tasers really suck...It took Officer Gallagher three times to subdue my naked 118 pound blood covered body. [that's after he cracked my head open
6 different times, hit me in the kneecap, the neck, the back, and the face with his metal baton, threw me to the ground, put his knee into my chest to stop me from
breathing and put my neck in a "cobra-clutch" choke hold]...

If you're going to sell a product, at least make it work the first time...
Sincerely yours-Laramie

LETTER #2

Another death, oh you must be so proud to work for a company which supplies weapons which kill people, in stead of working properly to subdue them. How long do you actually think it will be before you lose your first case in court??? These things take time, and election year is right around the bend. Hillary will put you animals to sleep and you know it...TASER INTERNATIONALS day will soon come... (this is not a threat of violence, but a vision of your companies future. )

Have a shocking day-

signed, 3 time taser victim!!!

PHIL RESPONDS WITH A "RIGHT WING" EXPLAINATION!
-----Original Message----- From: Phil Smith

Sent: Tue, 26 Jun 2007 1:30 pm Subject: RE: ANOTHER DEATH DUE TO YOUR FAULTY PRODUCT..GOD IS WATCHING YOU!

Should you ever care to look at the Medical/Scientific data on the TASER you would see there is not one-- not one study which indicates that it causes death.

The only sources claiming that it is unsafe are media and other non medical folks.

Please take the time to learn something about this product--it is saving lives every day here on the streets of America.

Is this dude for real? This is like saying cigarettes are good for your lungs. Please feel free to e-mail this wonderful fellow and tell him your feelings about 500 people being MURDERED by tasers manufactured and distributed by TASER INTERNATIONAL. His e-mail is PHIL@TASER.COM

08-08-08

AFTER THE MURDER OF BARON PIKES TASED 9 TIMES WHILE HANDCUFFED I JUST HAD TO SEND MY LOVE TO PHIL AT TASER INTL. ONCE AGAIN!

With each taser death by a Taser International Taser, your company and every one working for you including George W. Bush gets closer to your extra hot, reserved seats in hell. Remember me Phil? I said as soon as Hillary got in you would be brought up on murder charges, well, God didn't want to wait any longer... Looks like your stocks are going to start going to hell too!!!

Have a shocking day!

3 time tased victim Laramie Beckay
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HOMELAND SECURITY NOMINEE WITHDRAWS
Saturday, December 11, 2004 Posted: 12:34 PM EST (1734 GMT)


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- One week after President Bush nominated him to be secretary of homeland security, former New York Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik withdrew from consideration Friday night after discovering a former household employee had a questionable immigration status.

Earlier Friday, White House officials downplayed the possible impact on Kerik's nomination of questions about possible conflicts of interests. Those included more than $6 million in stock options he collected as a board member from Taser International, which supplies stun guns to law enforcement agencies.

As part of the confirmation process, Kerik planned to sever his ties with Taser International and Giuliani Partners, White House spokesman Brian Besanceney said.
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Who are the REAL America's Most Wanted? How about the people masquerading as law enforcement, who bully citizens, and TASER INTERNATIONAL, a company that manufacturers a hand-held electrocution weapon (TASERS are classified as weapons). They mislead the public. Their weapon affects neurological centers in the brain, and causes the release of the most powerful hormone in the body: adrenalin. Common sense tells you that you don't want a weapon releasing 35 to 50 times the normal amount of a hormone that causes a person to have almost super-human strength into a person you want to subdue. Police are not innocent bystanders. They would not shoot their own parents, children, or dog with a TASER. As stated earlier: A TASER is a weapon, much like a baseball bat. When the fight or flight response is set iniated (which police set into action by TASER), the heart may not be able to handle the extreme contractions, and DEATH soon follows. Panic attacks occur in others, so they are TASERED again and again. Arteries narrow, and blood pressure rises, which can cause Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack). TASER trauma to the body can also result in HYPOKALEMIA, sometimes resulting in lethal heart arrhythmias, tachycardia, seizures, and DEATH. Serum Glucose (blood sugar) levels also are affected. But who cares? We're cops!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Latest Taser death raises doubts of proper police use of stun guns Associated Press

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In Oklahoma City, Milisha Thompson was already on the ground in handcuffs outside the rescue mission where she was staying when she was, according to her husband, tasered as many as 20 times. Ms. Thompson, 35, soon stopped breathing. Really?!? Of course, "the cause of her May 19 death has not been determined, pending results of toxicology tests."

"It's a legitimate law-enforcement tool," said Florida State University criminology professor George Kirkham, a former police officer. "But it's supposed to be used as a defensive weapon. The problem we're seeing around the country is it's being used abusively."

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Family sues Chicago Police, Taser maker in man's death
November 12, 2005 BY STEVE PATTERSON Staff Reporter


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Taser shocks ruled cause of deathCompany disputes first such finding

Robert Anglen The Arizona Republic Jul. 30, 2005 12:00 AM

A Chicago medical examiner has ruled that shocks from a Taser were responsible for the death of a man in February, marking the first time that the electronic stun gun has been named as the primary cause of death.

This is the latest challenge to Scottsdale-based Taser International's claim that its stun guns have never caused a death or serious injury and comes a week after an Illinois police department filed a class-action lawsuit claiming Taser misled law enforcement agencies about the safety of its weapon.

The death is the 18th case in which a coroner has cited Taser as a factor in someone's death and the fourth case where Taser has been named as a cause of death. But in all of those, Taser was secondary to other factors such as drugs, heart conditions or mental illness. advertisement

An autopsy report from the Cook County's Medical Examiner's Office attributed the death of Ronald Hasse, 54, to electrocution from two Taser jolts delivered by a Chicago police officer. The autopsy said methamphetamines contributed to Hasse's death.

Taser strongly criticized the Medical Examiner's Office in a statement Friday and said it will challenge the autopsy.

"We believe that the scientific and medical community will publicly challenge this conclusion based upon the lack of credible evidence," Taser spokesman Steve Tuttle wrote in an e-mail on Friday. "Taser International will seek a judicial review of the report and the basis for which those statements were made."

This is not the first time Taser has challenged a medical examiner. For years, Taser officials publicly said the stun gun was never cited in an autopsy report. But an Arizona Republic investigation last year revealed that Tasers have been cited repeatedly by medical examiners in death cases and that Taser did not start collecting autopsy reports until last April.

Taser officials later maintained that the medical examiners in those cases were wrong and did not have the credentials or expertise necessary to examine deaths involving stun guns. They now maintain that Tasers have never been cited by a medical examiner as "the sole cause of death."

The Republic has identified 140 cases of death in the United States and Canada following a police Taser shock since 1999. Of those, coroners said, Taser was a cause of death in four cases and a contributing factor in 10 cases. In four other cases, medical examiners said Taser could not be ruled out as a cause of death.

In his e-mail on Friday, Tuttle said Hasse's death should likely have been blamed on the methamphetamines.

"We sincerely hope that a groundless opinion will not overshadow the medical and scientific community's conclusions as to the lethal levels of methamphetamine use," he said in the statement. "Overlooking this as a primary cause of death contradicts the very nature and purpose of these known lethal values."

Cook County Deputy Medical Examiner Scott Denton said that drugs alone would not have caused Hasse's death. A five-second shock followed by a 57-second shock pushed Hasse "over the edge," Denton told the Chicago Sun-Times.

"That's extraordinary," Denton said. "He became unresponsive and died after this."

Hasse, a former securities trader who was supposed to go on trial in June in the burial of a body on an Indiana farm, confronted officers in a Chicago high-rise.

Police said they used the Taser on Hasse when he tried to kick and bite officers during a struggle. He also threatened to infect paramedics with HIV.

After Hasse's death, Chicago police halted plans for a Taser expansion. Denton told the Sun-Times that police should stop using Tasers on people who are acting psychotic or appear to be under the influence of drugs.

Denton, who grew up in Scottsdale, did not return The Republic's calls for an interview on Friday. According to a Web site for the Illinois Coroners and Medical Examiners Association, Denton has worked at the Office of the Medical Examiner of Cook County for nine years. He is also an assistant professor in the pathology department at Rush University Medical Center. He got his medical degree from the University of Arizona.

Denton told the Sun-Times that he reviewed thousands of pages of information provided by Taser. But he said his conclusion was also based on the findings of James Ruggieri, an electrical engineer who in February made a presentation to the American Academy of Forensic Sciences in which he said Taser shocks could cause cardiac arrest.

Ruggieri, who is a forensic engineer and has consulted with police departments and the military on electrical accidents, said shocks from Taser could cause delayed ventricular fibrillation, the irregular heartbeat characteristic of a heart attack. He also said that multiple shocks from a Taser could cause someone to stop breathing and go into cardiac arrest. He said that many deaths involving Tasers have likely been wrongly dismissed as simple heart attacks or drug overdoses.

Taser has challenged Ruggieri's credentials and said its own medical and electrical experts dispute his findings. Taser maintains that its guns have undergone dozens of tests through universities and the Department of Defense, which support its claim of safety.

Tuttle said Friday that Denton should not have relied on "an unsubstantiated theoretical position of electrical safety as presented by James Ruggieri."

Ruggieri said that he doesn't know Denton. He said the doctor contacted him once in February to get a copy of his academy presentation. But Ruggieri said Friday that he is not surprised by the medical examiner's conclusion.

"It was only a matter of time," he said. "All of the impartial people - doctors, scientists, pathologists - took heed of this. They now have had facts to look at when presented with death cases involving Taser." Taser, in a June 28 training bulletin, advised police that "repeated, prolonged and/or continuous exposures to the Taser may cause strong muscle contractions that may impair breathing and respiration, particularly when the probes are placed across the chest or diaphragm."

In training classes and instruction manuals, Taser has previously told police to use repeated shocks to control a suspect.

The stun guns have been sold to more than 7,000 law enforcement agencies in the country and are credited with reducing injuries and deaths to suspects and officers and lowering the number of police shootings. But several law enforcement agencies, including the department in Birmingham, Ala., and the Lucas County (Ohio) Sheriff's Office, have pulled the guns from the street.

Last week, Dolton, Ill., filed a class-action lawsuit against Taser, becoming the first police department to take legal action over what it described as Taser's exaggerated claims of safety. The city said it paid $8,572 for stun guns that are too dangerous to use on the street.

Taser stock, which soared last year, dropped by a third this year after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Arizona Attorney General's Office announced separate inquiries into the company's claims of safety. The price of Taser stock was down about 26 cents on Friday, to $9.72 per share.

The family of an Indiana man -- who investigators say was killed by jolts from a Taser stun gun used by Chicago Police -- has filed suit against the manufacturer and Police Department. Ronald Hasse's death in February marked the first time in the country that a medical examiner determined a person was killed by a Taser. Police used a Taser on Hasse after they responded to a complaint about a man out of control at a Lake View apartment. He had gone there to see two men he knew. They said he became enraged when he was asked to leave. Hasse attacked police and threatened to infect them with HIV. After three warnings to calm down, officers used a Taser to restrain him. Investigators later determined Hasse had been hit with two bursts of electricity. The first was five seconds long, the next 57 seconds. Hasse, 54, was pronounced dead 90 minutes later. The Cook County medical examiner ruled Hasse's death a homicide and said electrocution was the primary cause of death. Investigators said Hasse had a lethal level of methamphetamine in his system, but the level wouldn't have killed him if not for the electrocution from the Taser. The wrongful death lawsuit filed Thursday in Cook County Circuit Court seeks unspecified damages from Chicago Police and Taser International on behalf of Hasse's parents, Joseph and Delores; brother John, and sisters Julie, Delores, Nancy and Becky. The lawsuit says the police use of "deadly force" against Hasse "was unnecessary and excessive" because he "was not armed and did not pose a threat of serious injury." Neither Hasse's attorney nor a spokesman for Taser International returned calls seeking comment. His family's lawsuit is the latest of dozens to be filed against the Arizona-based firm. On Thursday, police in Pueblo, Colo., settled a similar lawsuit for $275,000. That same day, a similar Texas suit was dismissed. Also Thursday, Taser issued a release touting the dismissal of seven lawsuits filed against it since 2003. When Hasse died, he was awaiting trial in Indiana on charges of unlawful transportation of a body and failure to report a death. Sources in the Lake County, Ind., sheriff's department said Hasse's sister, Julie Hasse, who is among those seeking damages in Friday's lawsuit, provided the tips to help solve that case.

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Stun Gun Death Ruled Homicide; No Charges Filed
Larimer County Suspect Shocked Multiple Times With Taser

POSTED: 5:02 am MST November 10, 2005 UPDATED: 6:55 am MST November 10, 2005 FORT COLLINS, Colo.

The death of a man who died after sheriff's deputies shocked him with a Taser was ruled a homicide Wednesday, but the district attorney will not press charges.
Timothy Mathis died last month in part because of heart failure from being shocked three to seven times with the stun gun during an altercation with Larimer County Sheriff's deputies, the coroner's office said.
However District Attorney Larry Abrahamson said there are other things beyond an autopsy report to consider when looking at homicide charges, such as intent. He ruled that force was justified in the case and said not all homicides result in charges being filed.
Mathis, who had methamphetamine in his system, refused the deputies' verbal commands and threatened them with a rock, authorities said. He didn't respond to the shocks from the Taser, so deputies subdued him with batons.
Mathis was comatose at McKee Medical Center until his death on Oct. 25.
The coroner reported that "excited delirium syndrome" was a factor in Mathis' death. The syndrome is a psychological and physiological condition that can be induced by meth, which can make a person unusually strong and insensitive to pain. It can also cause cardiac and pulmonary arrest.

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Taser use in death investigated
Deputies fired stun gun twice to subdue man, 43 By Joe Hughes
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
February 23, 2007

VISTA - Sheriff's officials have begun an investigation into the death of a 43-year-old Oceanside man Wednesday night at Tri-City Medical Center, three days after he was twice stunned with a Taser during a struggle with deputies at a gas station in Vista. Martin Mendoza, an Oceanside tile setter, was pronounced dead at 8 p.m. after his family decided to take him off life support, the county Medical Examiner's Office said. An autopsy performed yesterday was inconclusive. Results from toxicology tests could take several weeks.

The incident is controversial on two counts; It involved use of the Taser, which has been questioned in some instances for use on people under the influence of drugs or the mentally unstable. Since 2001, seven people in the county have died after Tasers were used by law enforcement. Also, this latest incident occurred in Vista, where three Latino men were killed by deputies between July 28 and Aug. 1, 2005, sparking an outcry in this city of 90,000, where 40 percent of the population is Latino. "We are well aware of those issues", Undersheriff Bill Gore said yesterday. “That's why we started a full investigation by our homicide unit immediately after the incident Sunday.”

The District Attorney's Office also has begun a probe, as it does in all officer-involved deaths. Members of the Mendoza family, in interviews with media outlets, have voiced concern that Mendoza showed bruising on his arms, legs and cheekbone, swollen arms, a gashed head and burns on his torso from the Taser. They questioned the extent of his injuries and the use of force. Sheriff's officials declined to comment on the reports and were awaiting the autopsy.

The incident began about 10 p.m. Sunday on North Emerald Drive after Mendoza called the Sheriff's Department, saying that someone was “out to get him.” “When our deputies tried to talk to him, Mendoza appeared to have some kind of mental instability, and was placed in the back of a patrol car,” homicide Lt. Dennis Brugos said. When Mendoza began kicking at the rear window, deputies removed him from the car to restrain him further and he began fighting, Brugos said. One deputy fired his Taser, but it had no apparent effect, and Mendoza was then stunned a second time. Once he was subdued, deputies saw that he was in medical distress and began performing CPR until paramedics arrived.

Tasers use compressed nitrogen gas to propel two wires capped with electric barbs that deliver a 50,000-volt shock. The Sheriff's Department started issuing Tasers to patrol deputies last spring after a study of the devices, which are considered less than lethal. Jail deputies have been using Tasers for several years.

In an incident with perhaps some parallels, San Diego police shot a man with a Taser on Feb. 10, 2005, and he died at a hospital two days later. The District Attorney's Office later ruled that the death was caused by lack of oxygen to the brain, brought on by intoxication.

The devices are made by Taser International of Scottsdale, Ariz., which in literature distributed to the media says Tasers are widely used by law enforcement agencies across the country, including 500 in California.

Some studies have shown that Tasers are among the safest alternative to subdue violent people who could harm officers, innocent bystanders or themselves. However, some medical experts believe the shocks can add to the risk of heart failure, especially if a person has been using drugs.

Mendoza, who was engaged to be married, grew up in Chicago.
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167 CASES OF DEATH FOLLOWING STUN GUN USE.


Robert Anglen The Arizona Republic Jan. 5, 2006 01:20 PM

The Arizona Republic, using computer searches, autopsy reports, police reports, media reports and Taser's own records, has identified 167 cases in the United States and Canada of death following a police Taser strike since September 1999. In 27 cases, medical examiners said Tasers were a cause, a contributing factor or could not be ruled out in someone's death. In 35 cases, coroners and other officials reported the stun gun was not a factor. Below is a synopsis of each case. The Republic requested autopsy reports for all of the cases and so far has received 50.

1. David Flores, 37, Fairfield, Calif. Sept. 28, 1999 A private investigator, Flores died after being shocked three times during a scuffle with police. Flores suffered a heart attack. Toxicology results indicate Flores died from agitated delirium due to acute cocaine and methamphetamine intoxication.

2. Enrique Juarez Ochoa, 34, Bakersfield, Calif. May 14, 2000 Police responded to a call from Ochoa's mother, who said her son was acting strangely. Police shocked and handcuffed Ochoa and placed him face down on the ground for 15-20 minutes. Officers transported him to a medical center for evaluation. About 15 minutes later, officers noticed that he had stopped moving. Autopsy report lists cause of death as disseminated intravascular coagulation due to blunt impact trauma while in a hyper-excitable state and cocaine toxicity.

3. Mark Burkett, 18, Gainesville, Fla. June 17, 2001 Burkett, who suffered from paranoid schizophrenia, collapsed after struggling with officers at a county jail. Burkett was shocked with a Taser and became unresponsive. He died four days after being placed on life support. Autopsy report lists cause of death as acute exhaustive mania, meaning he worked himself into a frenzy that caused him to suffer a cardiac arrest Toxicology exam revealed no traces of cocaine, methamphetamine or steroids. Coroner notes that mania in psychiatric patients can lead to death. Coroner reports family history of paranoid schizophrenia.

4. Hannah Rogers-Grippi, 6-month-old fetus, Chula Vista, Calif. Dec. 15, 2001 Police shocked a 36-year-old pregnant woman in the back for refusing to follow orders. At the hospital, fetal heart sounds were heard during the examination. Two days later, an exam revealed that the fetus had died. Autopsy report lists cause of death as intrauterine fetal demise. Maternal methamphetamine use was a contributing factor. The coroner said It was difficult to make a causative link between the Taser event and the intrauterine fetal death.

5. Marvin Hendrix, 27, Hamilton, Ohio Dec. 17, 2001 Hendrix was fighting with paramedics at his house. A police officer shocked him twice. Two minutes after being shocked, he lost consciousness. An autopsy revealed Hendrix swallowed a bag of crack cocaine about seven hours before he died. The cause of death was cocaine toxicity. The medical examiner reported "the exact role of Taser in this individual's demise is unknown."

6. Steven Vasquez, 40, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Dec. 21, 2001 Vasquez was shocked during an altercation with police who were attempting to escort him out of a bar. A medical examiner said he died four days later as a result of drug toxicity, due to a mixture of pain medication. Coroner says Taser shocks were not a contributing factor in the death.

7. Vincent Delostia, 31, Hollywood, Fla. Jan. 27, 2002 Delostia was running around in traffic then ran into the lobby of a hotel where he refused to leave. When police arrived, he lay down and kicked at officers. He was shocked, rolled onto his stomach and handcuffs were placed around his arms and legs. After 30 seconds of restraint, he stopped breathing. The coroner said the cause of death was cocaine toxicity and notes a history of bipolar disorder. Says Delostia exhibited multiple signs of excited delirium.

8. Anthony Spencer, 35, Philadelphia Feb. 12, 2002 Police, responding to a domestic disturbance, used pepper spray and Tasers to subdue Spencer, who was brandishing a knife. He died in an ambulance en route to the hospital. City officials said tests reportedly found that the death was due to cocaine intoxication and that shocks from a Taser were not a contributing factor.

9. Henry Canady, 46, Hilliard, Fla. March 27, 2002 Canady was shocked after he fled deputies who were attempting to arrest him on drug charges. The coroner said the cause of death was cocaine toxicity and artery disease. The stress of his struggle with police might have contributed to his death.

10. Richard Baralla, 36, Pueblo, Colo. May 17, 2002 Police arrested Baralla after he was seen walking down a street exhibiting strange behavior. Officers sprayed him with chemical spray, shocked him with Taser and handcuffed his legs and arms behind his back. During the struggle he stopped breathing. Autopsy report says death was caused by cardiac arrest during a state of excited delirium that necessitated restraint.

11. Eddie Alvarado, 32, Los Angeles June 10, 2002 Alvarado died after being shot five times with a Taser by Los Angeles police officers in 2002. He was fighting with officers after having a seizure. The coroner said he died from a mixture of methamphetamine and cocaine while being restrained. The coroner said the stun gun could not be ruled out as a cause of death and indicated a relationship between the Taser and Alvarado's heart attack.

12. Clever Craig, 46, Mobile, Ala. June 28, 2002 Relatives called 911 because Craig was acting strangely. Police found the 6-foot, 200-pound Craig holding a barbell. When he refused to drop it, officers shocked him twice in about 40 seconds. According to police, Craig struggled for five minutes. The autopsy report says Craig died of a heart attack during an episode of delirium "following electrical shock from Taser while resisting arrest."

13. Jason Nichols, 21, Oklahoma City, Okla. June 15, 2002 Nichols was involved in a family fight. He struggled with police officers who shocked him with a Taser. He was taken to a hospital with various wounds from the fight and died 13 minutes later. The Cause of death was listed as head injuries. The coroner said it was extremely unlikely that the Taser played a part in the death. Drug tests were negative for all but a slight trace of marijuana.

14. Fermin Rincon, 24, Fontana, Calif. June 27, 2002 Died after a struggle with police at a business complex. Officers reportedly shocked Rincon three times and placed him in a chokehold in order to subdue him. A coroner reported that Rincon died because of prolonged methamphetamine abuse. He suffered a cardiac arrest. An autopsy report said the cause of Rincon�s death was acute cardiac arrhythmia due to methamphetamine use.

15. Unknown male, 39, Phoenix June 2002 An unidentified man found bleeding in the driveway of a home near 80th Avenue and Osborn Road became combative with police officers responding to a domestic violence call. Police shocked the man and put him in handcuffs. He went into cardiac arrest and died at Maryvale hospital. According to Taser International, the man had a cardiac arrest due to a drug overdose.

16. Johnney Lozoya, age unknown, Gardena, Calif. July 19, 2002 Lozoya was seen running on the roof of a convalescent home. A few minutes later, police received reports that he was jumping on a parked car. Officers found Lozoya unconscious in the street and he was taken to a hospital, where he awoke and became combative. An officer shocked him. Several minutes later he died. An autopsy report shows Lozoya died of hypoxic encephalopathy, cardiac arrest and cocaine intoxication. But the medical examiner reported, "one cannot exclude the Taser causing the above damage to the tissues, specifically, the heart."

17. Gordon Jones, 37, Windermere, Fla. July 19, 2002 Jones was drunk in a hotel lobby. When Orange County Sheriff's deputies ordered him to leave, he dumped his clothes from a duffle bag. He struggled with deputies who shocked him repeatedly until they were able to place him in handcuffs. He walked with deputies to an ambulance and died on the way to the hospital. A coroner reported that Jones died from positional asphyxia, suffocating while being restrained. The coroner said Taser strikes likely made it hard for Jones to breathe. Nine months later, county officials requested a second opinion, which concluded that Jones died primarily from cocaine-induced excited delirium, not from being shot 11 times.

18. Frederick Webber, 44, Orange City, Fla. Sept. 1, 2002 A husband and father of four, Webber was involved in a fight at a campground. Police arrived and Webber refused to comply with their orders. Police say he resisted arrest and they shocked him multiple times. He was handcuffed with his hands behind his back when police realized he had stopped breathing. The autopsy report says he died of cardiac arrhythmia due to cocaine-induced agitated delirium while being restrained.

19. Stephen Edwards, 59, Shelton, Wash. Nov. 7, 2002 Edwards fought with a store security officer and police officers attempting to arrest him on a shoplifting charge. A police officer shocked the 300-pound man four times when he reached for a gun in the waistband of his pants. After putting him in handcuffs, officers saw that Edwards had stopped breathing. A coroner said he died of a heart attack due to diabetes and obesity. The coroner said Taser was not a factor.

20. Unknown male, 31, Albuquerque, New Mexico March 16, 2003 Officers were called about a man jumping on parked cars and breaking windows. He resisted arrest and fought with police, who used chemical spray, a baton and a Taser to subdue him. The suspect died after being arrested. According to Taser International, the man died of drugs and ethanol intoxication. Taser reports that toxicology tests showed amphetamines, cocaine and marijuana.

21. Terrance Hanna, 51, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada April 19, 2003 Hanna barged into a hotel holding a knife and hammer. A Burnaby Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer shot him with a Taser. His heart stopped. An autopsy report has not been released. The British Columbia Coroners Service has scheduled an inquiry into Hanna's death for December. Taser International says preliminary reports indicate Hanna died of a cocaine overdose. A coroner reported that Hanna�s death was caused by acute cocaine intoxication and heart disease. The coroner also listed police restraint as a contributing factor in the death, but focused on the way officers hog-tied Hanna.

22. Joshua Hollander, 22, Normal Heights, Calif. May 10, 2003 He stabbed his ex-girlfriend to death and then slashed his wrists. Police found him in the bathroom. Despite his wounds, he struggled with police who used a carotid restraint and shocked him with a Taser. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. Autopsy report lists cause of death as suicide. Coroner says he died as a result of a cardiac arrest due to slashed wrists. The coroner says the carotid restraint and Taser did not contribute to death and notes Hollander continued to talk 30 minutes after being shocked.

23. Timothy Sleet, 44, Springfield, Mo. June 9, 2003 Police responded to a 911 call from a child saying her father was killing her mother. Sleet had stabbed his wife to death after she stabbed him with a kitchen knife. Police said he refused to obey commands. They used Taser, beanbag gun, baton, chemical spray and then piled on top of him in an attempt to subdue him. He lost consciousness and died. A coroner said Sleet died from a cardiac arrest from stress while officers tried to restrain him. The coroner said Sleet was in a state of psychosis due to PCP intoxication.

24. Clay Willey, 33, Prince George, British Columbia July 22, 2003 Willey died after an altercation at a mall. Police, who said Wiley was exhibiting strange behavior, shot him with a Taser while trying to get him into an ambulance. He died 16 hour later. A jury at a coroner's inquest ruled that Willey died as the result of an accidental cocaine overdose. The jury also recommended that Royal Canadian Mounted Police give serious consideration to a report looking at Taser use that calls for standardized training and reporting.

25. Troy Nowell, 51, Amarillo, Texas Aug. 4, 2003 Police said Nowell assaulted two elderly women and a man outside of a union hall. When police arrived, Nowell resisted arrest and was shocked multiple times. City officials said an autopsy report cleared the Taser as a cause of death. They said Nowell had a heart attack during a violent struggle. They said it was due to arteriosclerotic and hypertensive heart disease. A grand jury cleared officers.

26. John Thompson, 45, Carrollton Township, Mich. Aug. 8, 2003 Became violent during a card game with friends. Police were called. They shocked him multiple times with a Taser. He was taken to jail where he struggled with officers. Later, while in an isolation cell, Johnson seemed unresponsive. He was taken to a hospital and later died. A coroner said Thompson's death was not a result of physical force but said the cause of death was unknown.

27. Gordon Rauch, 39, Citrus Heights, Calif. Aug. 17, 2003 Rauch's father called to report that his son was threatening to kill him. Police officers said Rauch charged at them. Two officers shot him with Tasers. He fell to the ground and went limp as officers put him in cuffs. He died about an hour later. The autopsy report is unavailable. Police said Rauch's prescribed psychotropic drugs might have contributed to his death.

28. Ray Austin, 25, Gwinnett, Ga. Sept. 24, 2003 Austin was incarcerated and awaiting trial on a parole violation when he got into a scuffle with a deputy at the Gwinnet County Jail. He bit off a portion of the deputy's ear and was shocked three times with a Taser. He was restrained in a chair and given psychotropic drugs. He lost consciousness and died. Austin had a history of mental illness. A preliminary autopsy could not determine the cause of death. A coroner reported that physical restraint might have impaired breathing.

29. Glenn Leyba, 37, Glendale, Colo. Sept. 29, 2003 Police were called to Leyba's apartment by firefighters who said he was out of control. When Leyba refused medical treatment, a police officer shot him with a Taser. Police said he was on the ground and kicking and thrashing at officers, who shocked Leyba repeatedly. He stopped breathing. Autopsy report lists cause of death as a cardiac arrest during cocaine-induced agitated delirium. Coroner said the Taser is not a contributing factor.

30. Clark Whitehouse, 34, Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada Sept. 2003 Royal Canadian Mounted police reported that Whitehorse fled on foot while attempting to swallow drugs. Police officers used a Taser to subdue him A short time later, he appeared to be having trouble breathing. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. Yukon Coroner's Service is not making the autopsy public. An inquest is pending.

31. Roman Pierson, 40, Brea, Calif. Oct. 7, 2003 Pierson was shocked twice after running through traffic and breaking into an ice machine at a supermarket. He had been complaining that he was hot and thirsty. Four police officers ordered Pierson to lie down and shocked him when he refused. Police said he took a fighting stance. The autopsy report lists cause of death as cardiac arrest due to acute methamphetamine intoxication. Notes coronary artery disease.

32. Dennis Hammond, 31, Oklahoma City, Okla. Oct. 11, 2003 Hammond was walking down the street screaming at the sky. When police arrived, he was perched on a brick mailbox. When officers approached, he would scream at them. Officer shot Hammond three times with a beanbag shotgun and five times with a Taser. After being handcuffed, he turned blue and stopped breathing. The autopsy report lists cause of death as acute methamphetamine intoxication. The coroner said the beanbags and Taser shocks were significant but did not have an immediate role in Hammond's death.

33. Louis Morris, 50, Orlando, Fla. Oct. 21, 2003 Morris drove erratically through the parking lot of a supermarket. When approached by store security officers, he said a passenger in the van needed medical attention but nobody else was in the van. He went into the store and started yelling. When officers arrived, he fled to a nearby convenience store where police shot him with a Taser. After he was handcuffed, the man started banging his head on the ground. Officers turned him over and saw he was in distress. The autopsy report lists cause of death as cocaine excited delirium, a sudden collapse from cardiac arrhythmia brought on by restraint. A pre-existing heart disease contributed.

34. James Borden, 47, Monroe County, Ind. Nov. 6, 2003 On the eve of his father's funeral, Borden was arrested on a minor violation. Although officers were supposed to transport him to a hospital, he was taken to jail instead. Upon arrival at the jail, Borden did not follow commands of jailers. He was first shot with a Taser for initially refusing to pull up his pants. A jailer shocked him repeatedly until he collapsed and died. The autopsy report lists cause of death as a heart attack due to an enlarged heart, pharmacologic intoxication and electrical shocks from Taser. The jailer who shocked Borden has been charged with two counts of felony battery, including battery while armed with a deadly weapon.

35. Michael Johnson, 32, Oklahoma City, Okla. Nov. 10, 2003 Officers responding to a burglary call found Johnson sitting in a chair. When he did not respond, they shocked him with a Taser. Officers said Johnson began struggling after being shocked. He was shocked multiple times and two minutes later he stopped breathing and went into cardiac arrest. He was placed on a ventilator and died 22 hours later. Autopsy lists cause of death as acute congestive heart failure due to cocaine-induced sudden cardiac arrest. The coroner said it appears to be a case of agitated delirium. He said the drugs caused the heart attack, not the restraint.

36. Kerry O'Brien, 31, Pembroke Pines, Fla. Nov. 11, 2003 O'Brien was banging on cars in an intersection. Police shocked him with a Taser. He was hogtied before dying. A coroner determined that O'Brien died as a result of being hogtied, saying he was a victim of positional asphyxia, meaning he suffocated while being restrained. The coroner ruled the death as accidental. The coroner also concluded that Taser did not contribute to O'Brien's death. The case is being investigated by the Broward State Attorney's office.

37. Curtis Lawson, 40, Unadilla, Ga. Dec. 9, 2003 Lawson confronted a woman at a gas station then fled to a hotel room. When police asked him to come out he refused. Police entered the hotel room and Lawson struggled with officers, who shocked him twice with a Taser and sprayed him with pepper spray. He died about 15 minutes after being arrested. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation concluded that Lawson died from acute cocaine toxicity. An enlarged heart contributed to his death.

38. Lewis King, 39, St. Augustine, Fla. Dec. 9, 2003 King fled deputies who stopped his car over a broken taillight and began questioning him about a pill bottle. In attempting to get away, police say he dragged a deputy with his car. Officers shocked him twice with a Taser. He was subdued after a struggle and secured face down. He went into full cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at the hospital. The autopsy report lists cause of death as cardiac arrest following prone restraint by police. King had a history of heart disease and an enlarged heart.

39. David Glowczenski, 35, Southampton Village, N.Y. Feb. 4, 2004 Glowczenski, who had a history of mental illness and had been twice institutionalized, was shouting and wandering two blocks from his home. When officers approached, he began struggling. Officer sprayed Glowczenski with chemical spray and shocked him multiple times with a Taser. Glowczenski kicked and screamed even after he was placed on his stomach with his hands cuffed behind his back. He suddenly stopped and died. A preliminary autopsy was unable to determine the cause of death. A Suffolk County medical examiner said Glowczenski died from exhaustive mania due to schizophrenia.

40. Raymond Siegler, 40, Minneapolis, Minn. Feb. 12, 2004 Siegler was living in a group home for the mentally ill. While celebrating his engagement, Siegler consumed some alcohol and created a disturbance. Police were called because Siegler reportedly threatened other residents. Siegler, who suffered from paranoia, panicked when he saw police. Officers shocked him multiple times with a Taser. He suffered a cardiac arrest. Siegler's family says he went into cardiac arrest immediately after being shocked and remained in a coma until they removed life support about a week after the incident. The autopsy report has not been released.

41. Curt Rostengale, 44, Silverdale, Wash. Feb. 21, 2004 Rostengale was shocked twice with a Taser during a struggle with police at his apartment. Police say Rostengale was breaking glass and banging on door of the complex. An officer ordered Rostengale to stop and shocked him with a Taser when he refused. He continued struggling with officers and was shocked again. A coroner reported that Rostengale died as a result of cocaine abuse and said Taser was not a factor.

42. William Lomax, 26, Las Vegas, Nev. Feb. 21, 2004 Lomax died after being shocked multiple times during a struggle with police and private security at a public housing complex. A jury at a coroner's inquest ruled that the Taser contributed his death. The Clark County Coroner says the death raises questions about the way Tasers are used. Lomax was high on PCP, a stimulant known for its ability to spark aggression. The coroner said multiple Taser bursts prevented Lomax from being able to breathe and ultimately contributed to a cardiac arrest. Doctors could not say if Lomax would have died if the Taser had not been used.

43. Perry Ronald, 28, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada March 23, 2004 Ronald suffered a head injury during a fight at a friend's house. Afterward, police were called about a man jumping on cars and blocking traffic. It took several officers, who shocked Ronald with a Taser, to place him in custody. He was transported to a hospital to have his head injury examined and suffered a heart attack. He died a week later. A preliminary autopsy could not determine the cause of death. The autopsy report is unavailable.

44. Terry Williams, 45, Madison, Ill. March 28, 2004 Police, responding to a domestic violence call, shocked Williams when he refused to follow commands and resisted arrest. He was placed in a police car and transported to the police station where he was found to be unresponsive. A preliminary autopsy did not reveal the cause of death.

45. Phillip LaBlanc, 36, Los Angeles, Calif. April 1, 2005 A security guard reported that LaBlanc was acting strangely. The guard persuaded LaBlanc to sit by the curb and handcuffed him to a chain-link fence. When police arrived, LeBlanc became aggressive. Although he was still handcuffed to the fence, officers shocked him at least twice with a Taser to subdue him. He became unresponsive, stopped breathing and was pronounced dead at the hospital. A coroner reported in an autopsy that LeBlanc died of excited delirium and cocaine intoxication.

46. Melvin Samuel, 28, Savannah, Ga. April 16, 2004 Samuel called police to report a burglary. He was subsequently arrested on a warrant for failing to pay a traffic ticket and taken to a Houston County jail. Jail officials said he was uncooperative and were forced to shock Samuel twice with Taser while moving him out of a holding cell. About 10 minutes later, Samuel became unresponsive. An autopsy found that Samuel asphyxiated after being hog-tied on his stomach. A Georgia Bureau of Investigation autopsy report said the Taser was not a factor in the death.

47. Alfredo Diaz, 29, Orange County, Fla. April 18, 2004 Sheriff's Deputies were responding to a 911 call about a man running naked in the street. Diaz's brother also called 911 and reported that someone had slipped acid into his drink and that he was going crazy. Deputies approached Alfredo Diaz and tried to calm and restrain him. Diaz reportedly struggled with deputies and threatened to kill them. Deputies sprayed him with pepper spray and then shocked him with a Taser. After he was handcuffed, Diaz started having problems breathing. He was taken to a hospital where he died. A coroner in an autopsy report said that Taser contributed to Diaz's death. The coroner said Diaz died from LSD-induced psychosis with hyperthermia. "A contributing significant condition is that he was subdued by police with a struggle and Tazed."

48. Eric Wolle, 45, Washington Grove, Md. April 27, 2004 Diagnosed as a bipolar schizophrenic, Wolle panicked when he saw a car stop outside his house. Believing that nameless agents were coming to get him, he fled his house and his mother called police. Officers stopped Wolle, who was carrying a machete in the waistband of his pants and ordered him to the ground. Wolle refused and officers shocked him twice with a Taser. He continued to struggle then lost consciousness. A preliminary autopsy found Wolle died of cardiac arrhythmia during a state of psychosis. Police said Taser shocks did not contribute to his death.

49. Roman Andreichik, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada May 1, 2004 Shocked during a struggle with police at an apartment. He died shortly after being shocked. His death is under investigation. The autopsy report has not been released.

50. Peter Lamonday, 38, London, Ontario, Canada May 13, 2004 Police received complaints that Lamonday, a landscape worker, was breaking windows and doors of businesses. When police confronted him, Lamonday reportedly swung at officers, who sprayed him with chemical spray and punched him. Seven officers forced Lamonday to the ground and he was shocked several times with a Taser. He stopped breathing about 20 minutes after being placed in handcuffs. A probe by a police watchdog group concluded that Lamonday died of cocaine-induced delirium and said the Taser was not to blame. A coroner also reported that Taser was not involved in the death.

51. Henry Lattarulo, 40, Hillsborough County, Fla. May 22, 2004 Sheriff's deputies were called to a trailer park on a report that a man was trying to stab people with a screwdriver. They reportedly found Lattarulo fighting with a friend. He refused to follow commands and officers shocked him with a Taser. He reportedly pulled the barbs out and kept fighting. Deputies restrained him, placed him in handcuffs and leg restraints and Lattarulo stopped breathing. The Hillsborough County Medical Examiner's Office determined that the death was caused by cocaine-induced excited delirium.

52. Frederick Williams, 31, Lawrenceville, Ga. May 27, 2004 Williams died after being shocked with a Taser at the Gwinnett County Jail. The computer technician, who had epilepsy, was acting strangely when police officers responded to a domestic violence call at his house. He was shocked during a struggle with jail officers and died a shot time later. A coroner said he died of brain damage from a heart attack, but the cause of the heart attack could not be determined. The coroner said there is no evidence that five shocks from a Taser caused or contributed to Williams' death.

53. Darryl Smith, 46, Atlanta May 30, 2004 Smith was found unresponsive in the street and became violent with paramedics who responded to help him. A sheriff's deputy used a Taser to subdue him, shocking Smith multiple times. Smith died about six hours later. A coroner says his death was caused by agitated delirium associated with acute cocaine poisoning.

54. Anthony Oliver, 42, Orlando, Fla. May 31, 2004 Oliver stopped a police officer by banging on the back window of her patrol car. He told her people were pursuing him and going to shoot him. When officers attempted to talk to Oliver and move him out of traffic, he began struggling. Police reported that he attempted to pull the officer into traffic. An officer shocked him with a Taser. Oliver fell to the ground but got back up, and the officer shocked him seven more times. Oliver began foaming at the mouth and was taken to a hospital where he died. The coroner reported that Oliver died from cocaine-induced excited delirium.

55. Jerry Pickens, 55, Bridge City, La. June 4, 2004 Police shocked Pickens while responding to a domestic violence call at his house. Pickens refused to comply with orders not to go back into his house. After being shocked, Pickens fell backwards and hit his head on his driveway. He went into a coma and died about a week later. A coroner said he died as a result of a brain hemorrhage because of the fall.

56. James Cobb, 42, St. Paul, Minn. June 9, 2004 Two days after being released from prison on a robbery conviction, Cobb was walking in the middle of a rain-swept street shouting at motorists. Police ordered him out of the street and Cobb became combative. Officers sprayed him with chemical spray, shocked him multiple times with a Taser and hit him with a baton. He collapsed on the street and died. A preliminary autopsy report said he did not die as a result of blunt force trauma.

57. Jacob Lair, 26, Sparks, Nev. June 9, 2004 Officers were attempting to question Lair at his home when the convicted robber and burglar became combative. Police sprayed Lair with chemical spray and shocked him with a Taser. He collapsed and died. The autopsy report shows he died of acute methamphetamine intoxication. A coroner says he suffered cardiac arrhythmia during a struggle with police involving Taser, pepper spray and restraints.

58. Robert Bagnell, 44, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada June 23, 2004 Police responding to a disturbance at a rooming house found Bagnell frenzied and destroying a washroom. Police shot him with a Taser and he stopped breathing and died at the scene. Police did not disclose the details surrounding Bagnell's death for more than a month while waiting for toxicology reports. A preliminary autopsy could not determine the cause of death. A coroner said Bagnell might have had a lethal level of cocaine in his system.

59. Kris Lieberman, 32, Bushkill Twp., Penn. June 24, 2004 Lieberman was found naked in a cornfield, crawling around and talking to himself. Officers said Lieberman lunged at them when they attempted to talk to him. They shocked him with a stun gun three times until he lost consciousness. Officers tried to revive him but he was pronounced dead a short time later. A medical examiner reported that Lieberman had high levels of cocaine in his system. The medical examiner also said the exertion of Lieberman�s fight with police � including shocks from a Taser and restraint � contributed to his death.

60. Bernard Christmas, 36, Dayton, Ohio June 2004 Police responded to reports that Christmas was running in circles in the middle of the street. When police arrived, the man reportedly jumped in the front seat of a patrol car. When police tried to remove the man from the car, he struggled and an officer shot him in the chest with a Taser. He stopped breathing and was transported to a hospital where he died. A coroner said the cause of death was a cardiac arrest due to cocaine-induced excited delirium.

61. Demetrius Tillman Nelson, 45, Okaloosa County, Fla. July 3, 2004 Nelson got into an argument with his girlfriend after their car overheated in a parking lot. When police arrived, Nelson was argumentative and combative; a struggle ensued and officers shocked him multiple times with a Taser. He reportedly talked to officers but developed trouble breathing. He was taken to a hospital where he died. The coroner reported that Nelson's death was caused by cocaine-associated excited delirium.

62. Willie Smith, 48, Auburn, Wash. July 11, 2004 Smith's wife called 911 and said her husband had assaulted her. Police arrived at Smith's apartment and ordered him to the floor. They said Smith refused and came at them. Two officers shocked him with Tasers. They arrested him and put him in a patrol car where he went into cardiac arrest. Smith's reportedly told police that her husband was on a cocaine binge. The autopsy report is unavailable.

63. Jerry Knight, 29, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada July 17, 2004 Knight, a former semi-professional boxer, reportedly tore up a hotel room in a fit of rage. Police arrived and shocked Knight with a Taser when he refused to comply with their orders. He was pronounced dead upon arrival at the hospital. According to police, Knight died of asphyxia while being restrained by police. Police reported that Knight was on cocaine and suffering from excited delirium. Police also reported that a forensic pathologist concluded that the Taser was not a factor in the death. An inquest has been scheduled to look into his death.

64. Milton Salazar, 29, Mesa July 23, 2004 Hours after Salazar was released from the state prison on July 21, police said he reportedly threw rocks at motorists on Dobson Road then entered a convenience store and threw candy bars at the clerk. When an officer tried to arrest him, Salazar lay on the floor with his hands underneath his body and refused to obey commands. Officers shocked Salazar multiple times and when they rolled him over, he immediately turned white. Salazar was taken to Banner Desert Medical Center, where he died two days later. Police say chemical tests showed he had cocaine in his system. The medical examiner found that Salazar died of complications from excited delirium due to cocaine intoxication. The autopsy report said the shocks from Taser and the stress of his struggle with police contributed to Salazar's death.

65. Keith Tucker, 47, Las Vegas

Aug 2, 2004 Tucker's roommate called police saying Tucker was punching walls and talking to people not in the room. Police arrived and found Tucker sitting on his bed. They reported that Tucker punched and kicked officers as they approached. Officers shocked him with Tasers and placed him in handcuffs. Police reported that Tucker started having trouble breathing. He died at the hospital. The cause of death has not been determined. The autopsy report is unavailable. 66. Samuel Truscott, 43, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

Aug. 8, 2004 Truscott reportedly overdosed on drugs and barricaded himself in a bedroom where he was armed with a knife and a bat. Police attempted to use chemical spray and when it didn't have any affect, they shocked Truscott with a Taser. Police said Truscott walked unaided to a police car and was taken to hospital where he suffered a suffered a seizure and died. Ontario's coroner said death was due to a drug overdose. He said the Taser was not to blame in any way. The autopsy report is unavailable.

67. Ernest Blackwell, 29, St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 11, 2004 Blackwell, a former University of Missouri football star, went on a rampage, shooting his stepdaughter with a shotgun and beating a teenage neighbor girl and her mother. Officers said the 230-pound, six-foot-three Blackwell attempted to grab an officer's gun during a struggle in which he was shocked twice with a Taser. Paramedics sedated him and Blackwell died on the way to the hospital. A coroner concluded that he died as a result of agitated delirium.

68. David Riley, 41, Joplin, Mo. Aug. 11, 2004 Riley threatened to commit suicide and barricaded himself in a house. He had pulled a gas line from the back of the stove and turned on the valve, filling the house with gas. Riley was outside, but when two police officers arrived he started to run back inside. One of the officers deployed a Taser. The house subsequently exploded, killing Riley and wounding the two officers. Police are investigating what sparked the explosion. A Taser was recovered from the wreckage of the house.

69. Anthony Lee McDonald, 46, Harrisburg, N.C.

Aug. 13, 2004 McDonald's mother called 911 to report her son was damaging his home. When police arrived, McDonald was breaking out the windows. Two officers entered and McDonald became aggressive. The officers shot him twice with a beanbag round and then wrestled with him. They shocked him with a Taser and he immediately had difficulty breathing. He died shortly after arriving at the hospital. The autopsy report is unavailable.

70. William Teasley, 31, Anderson, S.C. Aug 16, 2004 Teasley was arrested for disorderly conduct. Deputies say he became violent while they tried to book him into jail. During a struggle, deputies shocked Teasley with a Taser. He stopped breathing. The coroner said Taser contributed directly to Teasley's death, saying it was the proverbial last straw. The coroner said his heart, spleen and liver were enlarged, he had hardened arteries and an obstructed airway. "The added stress of Taser shock with its electrical current was proximal to the cardiac arrhythmia and must be considered contributory," the autopsy report states. The coroner says officials with Taser International asked his office to reverse its ruling and leave the Taser out of the autopsy report.

71. Richard Karlo, 44, Denver, Colo. Aug. 19, 2004 Karlo was frothing at the mouth and breaking into cars when police stopped him. He reportedly attacked two officers who shocked him four times with a Taser. Karlo started having trouble breathing and then died. Karlo's family reported that he had a heart condition and was taking cocaine when he encountered police. A coroner said Karlo died of a cocaine and antidepressant overdose. The coroner said Karlo was in a state of agitated delirium when he died. The coroner said Taser was not a factor in the death. The autopsy report lists cause of death as acute cocaine and nortriptyline toxicity.

72. Michael Sanders, 40, Fresno, Calif. Aug. 20, 2004 Police said Sanders was struggling with his wife when they shocked him several times with a Taser. They said the musician was delusional and stabbed an officer several times with an unknown object. He was handcuffed, put on a gurney and transported to the hospital. He died in the ambulance. The coroner's office said an autopsy revealed that Sanders died of complications related to cocaine intoxication. The autopsy report lists cause of death from complications of cocaine intoxication.

73. Lawrence Davis, 27, Phoenix Aug. 24, 2004 Police say Davis jumped on the windshield of a patrol car and began yelling incoherently. Officers followed the man as he walked away from the car and rounded a corner. When he spotted police, the man again ran toward the vehicle and jumped on the bumper before officers attempted to detain him. Davis pushed the officers and an officer shocked him with a stun gun. Officers brought Davis to the ground and shocked him twice more. Police said the stun-gun shots had no effect, so a sergeant used a chokehold to temporarily knock the man unconscious. Paramedics were called. Davis died at the hospital. The medical examiner said Davis died as a result of excited delirium.

74. Jason Yeagley, 32, Winter Haven, Fla. Aug. 27, 2004 Yeagley was wandering in the road and acting strangely. Police say when an officer tried to escort him out of the road, Yeagley attacked. The officer shocked Yeagley with a Taser. He continued struggling and was shocked again. Police said he was still fighting with the officer. After putting him in handcuffs, officers noticed Yeagley was in distress. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. A coroner reported that Yeagley died as a result withdrawal from the drug Xanax and a struggle with a deputy. The coroner said the Taser was not a factor in the death.

75. Michael Rosa, 38, Del Rey Oaks, Calif. Aug. 29, 2004 Rosa was wandering through yards and screaming. When police approached, he picked up a 2x4 piece of wood and swung it at officers. Police shocked him with a Taser. After being handcuffed. Rosa started having difficulty breathing. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. Rosa had a 2003 arrest for cocaine possession. The coroner said Rosa died of a heart attack from methamphetamine intoxication. But he listed Taser as a contributing factor in the death. The coroner says the Taser shock and the struggle with police combined with the drugs led to Rosa's death.

76. Samuel Wakefield, 22, Rio Vista, Texas Sept. 12, 2004 Wakefield was reportedly a passenger in a car stopped by police for suspicion of drunken driving. He tried to run and fell. An officer shocked him twice with a Taser. Wakefield appeared to have a cardiac arrest. Paramedics were called and he was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Witnesses told police Wakefield had ingested a large amount of cocaine about an hour before the traffic stop. An autopsy report said Wakefield died from cocaine intoxication.

77. Andrew Washington, 21, Vallejo, Calif. Sept. 15, 2004 Police say Washington stole a car and was involved in a hit-and-run accident. An officer shot him with a Taser as he tried to climb a fence to run away. After being arrested, police say Washington showed signs of physical distress and was having difficulty breathing. Emergency crews were called to the scene. He was taken to a hospital where he died. An autopsy report concluded that Washington died from a cardiac arrest brought on by the excitement of the police chase and restraint. Cocaine was found in his system.

78. Jon Merkle, 40, Miami Sept. 20, 2004 Merkle, an attorney with a history of cocaine use and drug arrests, was reportedly running through backyards and acting erratically. Police say they found him inside an abandoned house, where he was beating the walls and windows with a large stick. Officers were able to get him to drop the stick, but when they say Merkle started swinging when they attempted to arrest him. They shocked him with a Taser. Officers reported that he was feverish and excited and repeatedly attempted to lie down. Once on his stomach, he stopped breathing. Police say he had significant levels of cocaine in his system at the time of his death. An autopsy report lists cause of death as excited delirium associated with cocaine intoxication.

79. Dwayne Dunn, 33, Lafayette, La. Oct. 4, 2004 Dunn was arrested outside of a Piggly Wiggly store for public intoxication. An officer tried to talk Dunn into leaving the property and when he refused, the officer shocked him with a Taser. Dunn was taken to jail and booked on charges of resisting arrest, disturbing the peace and for misrepresentation. Jail officials later put Dunn on a medical watch. An ambulance was called when his condition deteriorated. He died at the hospital. A corner reported that Dunn died from cocaine poisoning. He said Taser was not a factor in Dunn�s death.

80. Greshmond Gray, 25, LaGrange, Ga. Nov. 2, 2004 Gray reportedly refused to leave an apartment and police were called. Officers shocked him when he would not follow orders to put his hands behind his back. Officers reported that he bent down to pick up a hibachi loaded with hot coals. He was shocked at least two more times for attempting to run away. After the shocks, Gray became unresponsive. Police reported that Gray had previous arrests for cocaine possession. A coroner reported that Gray had an abnormal heart. The coroner said the emotional and physical stress Gray underwent during the struggle with police, including being shocked with a Taser, led to the lethal heart rhythm.

81. Robert Guerrero, 21, Fort Worth, Texas Nov. 2, 2004 A father of two, Guerrero fled from police after an apartment manager reported that he was trying steal electricity for a friend's apartment. Guerrero reportedly tried to hide in a closet. When he wouldn't come out officers shocked him at least twice. Witnesses said they noticed he wasn't breathing as officers carried him out of the apartment. He was pronounced dead at a local hospital. The Medical Examiner�s Office said Guerrero died from heart failure due to cocaine overdose.

82. Keith Raymond Drum, Clearlake, Calif. Nov. 7, 2004 Drum called 911 and reportedly talked about bodies being placed in the trunk of a car. Officer responding found that Drum had a warrant for his arrest. Officers said Drum charged them when they entered his house. Drum was sprayed with chemical spray and shocked with a Taser. He continued fighting and more officers were called to the scene. He was eventually placed in handcuffs. Shortly after, drum stopped breathing. A coroner reported that Drum's death was the result of cardiac arrest brought on by methamphetamine intoxication, existing heart disease and his struggle with officers.

83. Ricardo Zaragoza, 40, Elk Grove, Calif. Nov. 8, 2004 Zaragoza, a paranoid schizophrenic, was shocked during a struggle with sheriff's deputies who were attempting to take him to the hospital for a mental health exam. Zaragoza's parents called police for help after their son exhibited strange behavior. Although Zaragoza reportedly had been taking his medication, he hadn't eaten for several days. Officers entered his bedroom, shocked him at least twice with a Taser, sprayed him with pepper spray and pinned him to the ground. He stopped breathing. A medical examiner reported Zaragoza died from a heart attack brought on by excited delirium and schizophrenia.

84. Charles Keiser, 47, Hartland Township, Mich. Nov. 25, 2004 Keiser took a bulldozer from a road construction site and moved it onto a highway. When state police officers arrived, he was reportedly trying to start a backhoe and move it onto the highway. Keiser fled and police chased him into some woods. During a scuffle with the officers, Keiser reportedly grabbed one by the throat. Four sheriff's deputies arrived. Keiser was shocked three times with a Taser and stopped breathing at the scene. A coroner ruled that his death was due to drowning.

85. Byron Black, 39, Lee County, Fla. Nov. 27, 2004 Black died in a struggle with guards trying to remove him from a Lee County jail cell. Black, an insurance salesman, had been arrested four days earlier for allegedly setting his own van on fire. The sheriff's office reported that deputies believed Black was having a seizure and tried to take him out of the cell for medical attention. Black began to fight and kick. He was sprayed him with pepper spray and shocked with a Taser.

86. Patrick Fleming, 35, Metairie, La. Dec. 4, 2004 Sheriff's deputies stopped Fleming around 1 a.m. for driving erratically. When he refused to get out of his vehicle, deputies dragged him out. Officers said Fleming became combative. Fleming, who had prior drug charges and was wanted on a warrant of criminal neglect of family, was shocked once with a Taser before being taken into custody. While being booked, officers say Fleming again became combative. He was shocked a second time. His started having trouble breathing and died the next day.

87. Kevin Downing, 36, Hollywood, Fla. Dec. 15, 2004 A fire-rescue crew found Downing's van blocking traffic on a Hollywood Street. When they tried to help Downing, he became agitated and acted strangely. Police reported that when officers arrived he became violent. An officer shot Downing with her Taser, but police said he continued to fight. He was shocked again and police officers tackled him to the ground. Downing died about two hours later at a hospital. An autopsy found that Downing died as a result of cocaine psychosis and excited delirium due to a lethal dose of cocaine.

88. Douglas Meldrum, 37, Wasatch County, Utah Dec. 17, 2004. Meldrum was shocked twice by police after he lead them on a chase and then resisted arrest. Police said Meldrum punched one officer as they attempted to remove him from his truck. He was shocked twice. Police say that he immediately stopped breathing and was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. The county attorney reported that Meldrum died of heart failure because of agitated delirium and a high concentration of ephedrine. The county attorney also reported that Taser might have contributed to Meldrum's death.

89. Lyle Nelson, 35, Columbia, Ill. Dec. 17, 2004 Police responded to an emergency call at Nelson's home. Police did not immediately report what the call was about, but said Nelson struggled with officers at the scene. He was shocked eight times with a Taser, placed in custody and taken to the county jail. He collapsed about 90 minutes later and was taken to a hospital where he died. He was married with three children. A coroner reported that he died from a cocaine overdose. Police reported that Nelson admitted to smoking crack and had a history of cocaine abuse.

90. Timothy Bolander, 31, Delray Beach, Fla. Dec. 23, 2004 Bolander's wife called police when he showed up at her house in violation of a restraining order. When officers arrived, they say he was banging his head against a fence. He struggled with officers and they shocked him four times with a Taser. He collapsed and was pronounced dead at a hospital. A coroner reported that he died of accidental cocaine toxicity after swallowing four bags of cocaine. Taser was reported not to be a factor in the death.

91. Ronnie Pino, 31, Sacramento, Calif. Dec. 23, 2004 Pino was found dead in the medical ward of the county jail. The day before, Pino had been shocked twice with a Taser during a struggle with police after he shattered the glass door of a mental hospital. A coroner reported Pino died from "sudden unexpected death syndrome."

92. Christopher Hernandez, 19, Naples, Fla. Dec. 28, 2004 Hernandez was a passenger in a car that sheriff's deputies attempted to pull over around 1 a.m. According to the police, the car kept driving and finally stopped in the parking lot of a convenience store. When deputies ordered the driver out of the car, Hernandez reportedly got out and attacked a deputy. Hernandez was sprayed with a chemical and shocked with a Taser. He continued struggling before deputies were able to place him in handcuffs. He was taken to a hospital and died an hour later. The 16-year-old driver of the car was arrested on an outstanding warrant. Another passenger in the car was arrested after police found a handgun under his seat.

93. Jeanne Hamilton, 46, Palmdale, Calif. Dec. 29, 2004 California Highway Patrol attempted to stop Hamilton's car around 2:30 a.m. Officers reported that the she was driving about 90 mph then slowed and accelerated before stopping. Officers said Hamilton refused to get out of the car so the sprayed her with chemical spray and pulled her out of the car. Officers said she lay on her stomach on top of her hands and refused to show officers her hands. She was shocked and then placed in handcuffs. Officers said she continued to struggle while being booked into jail and stopped breathing after they put her in a cell. She was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead.

94. David Cooper, 40, Marion County, Ind. Dec. 30, 2004 Cooper was incarcerated for allegedly strangling a Baptist minister that he believed to be the devil. During his Dec. 19 arrest, police shocked Cooper repeatedly with Tasers. Two days later, he was shocked in jail for injuring himself in a padded cell. On Dec. 24 he was transferred from the jail to a hospital's psychiatric ward, where he stopped breathing and was placed on a respirator. He was pronounced dead on Dec. 30. Relatives said he had a heart condition.

95. Gregory Saulsbury, 30, Pacifica, Calif. Jan. 2, 2005 Saulsbury's family called 911 for help. Saulsbury, who was mentally ill, was agitated and his parents were trying to calm him down. Instead of paramedics, police arrived. Officers said Saulsbury was confrontational and refused to obey commands. Saulsbury's relatives reportedly told police that they had succeeded in calming him down. But officers attempted to place Saulsbury in handcuffs. He struggled and they shocked him with Tasers. During the struggle, police reportedly shocked Saulsbury's unarmed father. Saulsbury immediately stopped breathing and died. The coroner reported that Taser contributed to his death. The Taser shocks, along with cocaine intoxication and a struggle with police, all played a roll in the heart attack that killed him.

96. Dennis Hyde, 30, Akron Jan. 5, 2005 Hyde broke into a home and when police responded, he reportedly told them he was the devil and threatened to kill the homeowners and the officers. During a struggle officers shocked him with a Taser and he died. A medical examiner said Taser contributed to the death but also cited other factors, including methamphetamines and blood loss.

97. Carl Trotter, 33, Pensacola, Fla. Jan. 8, 2005 Trotter broke into several homes and attacked residents in a quiet neighborhood. Chased out of one residence, he reportedly picked up an elderly woman walking on the sidewalk and literally carried her, kicking and screaming, to a church parking lot. When a neighbor forced Trotter to let her go, he crashed through the glass door of another house and attacked a woman there. Sheriff's deputies and residents struggled with Trotter. More deputies arrived and one of them shocked Trotter multiple times with a Taser. According to police, Trotter continued to fight, then collapsed and died in the front yard. The coroner reported that the cause of Trotter's death was unknown and said the Taser might have contributed. "The potential effects of the Taser shocks delivered just prior to his cardio-respiratory collapse cannot be ignored," the coroner said in an autopsy report.

98. Unknown man, Chickasha, Okla. Jan. 28, 2005 A suspect was shocked with a Taser after fleeing from a drug raid led by the FBI. A Chickasha Police officer reported that the man swallowed cocaine and then began running. The officer said he shocked him to stop him from escaping. Officers said the unnamed suspect became unresponsive and he was taken to the hospital where he died.

99. Jeffrey Turner, 41, Lucas County, Ohio Jan. 31, 2005 Turner was loitering outside of a Toledo museum when Toledo Police officers approached him and asked for identification. Officers said Turner resisted when they attempted to search him. During a struggle he was shocked repeatedly with a Taser. Once placed in custody, he was taken to the Lucas County Corrections Center. At the center, sheriff's deputies said he became combative. They went into his cell and used a Taser multiple times to subdue him. Turner died. Taser use has been suspended inside the jail. The Lucas County Coroner ruled that the Taser use contributed to Turner's death, and classified the case as a homicide. Turner had been stunned with a Taser a total of nine times. The coroner also reported that Turner's own cardiac condition was the main cause of his death.

100. Ronald Alan Hasse, 54, Chicago Feb. 10, 2005 Hasse was shocked by police during a confrontation at a Chicago apartment. He had been visiting friends, who asked him to leave when he started acting strange and lost control of himself. Chicago police reported that he tried to kick and bite an officer and threatened to infect officers with HIV. After warning Hasse to calm down, a police sergeant shocked him with a Taser. Hasse was a former Chicago securities trader who was supposed to go on trial in June for burying a body on an Indiana farm. A medical examiner said that Taser was the primary cause of death. He said drugs contributed to Hasse�s death, but ruled that shocks from the Taser �pushed him over the edge,� causing cardiac arrest. .

101. Robert Camba, 45, San Diego, Calif. advertisement Feb. 12, 2005 Police were called to investigate a possible fight an apartment where they reported finding Camba thrashing on the floor. Officers said Camba threw things at them and kicked at them. An officer shocked him with a Taser. And police placed him in handcuffs. Camba became unresponsive and paramedics were called. He died two days later. An autopsy report showed Camba died as a result of a cardiac arrest following Taser shocks while intoxicated with cocaine and in a state of excited delirium. The autopsy report said heart disease contributed to his death.

102. Joel Dawn Casey, 52, Houston Feb. 18, 2005 Casey, a psychiatric patient, was shocked by police during a confrontation at his mother's house. Deputies from the Harris County Sheriff's Office mental health unit reported that they had received information that he did not have any health problems. It turned out that Casey had a heart condition. Deputies said he resisted when they attempted to restrain him and that he continued to struggle after being shocked. After they placed him in handcuffs, officers noticed Casey was not breathing. A preliminary report found some evidence to suggest that Casey might have strangled when a bone near his windpipe broke.

103. Robert Heston, 40, Salinas, Calif. Feb. 20, 2005 Heston died two days after suffering a cardiac arrest following a police Taser strike. Heston was shocked as many as 10 times after officers were called to his residence where he was fighting with his father. Police said Heston was throwing objects and assaulting his 66-year-old father. When officers tried to stop him, Heston allegedly attacked them. They shocked him several times with the Taser and he continued to fight. Officers said they noticed his heart stopped breathing and they used CPR to revive him. He was taken to a hospital where he died. In interviews following the death, the police chief defended Tasers using language directly out of the stun gun company's promotional material. An autopsy was performed and then underwent reviews by two other pathologists, each of whom wrote a report. All three medical examiners agreed that methamphetamine was the cause of Heston�s death. But one medical examiner also cited Taser as a cause of death while the other two cited Taser as a contributing factor in Hestons death.

104. Shirley Andrews, 38, Cincinnati, Ohio March 3, 2005 Police responded to a group home for the mentally ill where Andrews, 5-foot-7 and 270 pounds, was reportedly assaulting staff members. Officers reported that she threw a plastic case at them. After warning her, officers shocked her with a Taser. Andrews reportedly continued fighting and officers shocked her again. Police reported that her obesity prevented the Taser from working. Andrews finally agreed to let herself be placed in cuffs and was taken to jail. She died a week later. A coroner reported that she died of a pulmonary embolism. He reported that the Taser was not a factor in her death.

105. Willie Towns, 30, Deland, Fla. March 6, 2005 Towns, who was suspected of burglary, died after being shocked three times with a Taser during a struggle with police. Deland police said Towns resisted arrest and stopped breathing on the way to a hospital. Officers said Towns admitted to taking cocaine before he died. A medical examiner said Towns died of acute cocaine intoxication and his death was ruled an accident.

106. Milton Woolfolk, 39, Lake City, Fla. March 12, 2005 Columbia County Sheriff's deputies were attempting to take Woolfolk, who had a history of mental problems, into custody for a court-ordered psychiatric evaluation. Deputies say he resisted arrest and refused to follow commands. They shocked him and Woolfolk allegedly attempted to pull out the Taser prongs. Deputies took him to the ground and placed him in handcuffs. He stopped moving, was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead.

107. Mark Young, 25, Indianapolis, Ind. March 17, 2005 Young was arrested at a suspected drug house. Police say he resisted and was shocked with a Taser to get him into handcuffs. Less than an hour after the arrest, Young went into a seizure and was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Indianapolis police said Young continued talking after he was shocked. Police reported that Young swallowed drugs during a search of the house and that he tested positive for cocaine.

108. James Wathan Jr., 32, Delhi, Calif. April 3, 2005 Wathan's father called deputies to his Delhi home to help control his son, who he reported was a longtime drug and alcohol abuser. Deputies discovered Wathan had outstanding warrants on narcotics charges and attempted to arrest him. Wathan struggled and deputies hit him with batons and sprayed him with pepper spray. A Livingston police officer also came to the scene and shocked Wathan with a Taser. He lost consciousness and died at the scene.

109. Eric Hammock, 43, Fort Worth, Texas April 3, 2005 Hammock, an architect, reportedly trespassed into a wastewater treatment plant. When ordered to stop by an off-duty Fort Worth police officer working as a security guard, Hammock continued driving. The officer followed Hammock after he left the plant. Hammock drove for a while then reportedly jumped out of his rental car. The officer followed on foot. The officer shocked Hammock with a Taser when Hammock attempted to hit him. Another officer who arrived to help also shocked Hammock, who was placed in custody. The officers noticed that Hammock was having trouble breathing and took him to a hospital where he died. A coroner reported that Hammock's death was due to cocaine intoxication.

110. Ricky Barber, 46, Carter County, Okla. April 8, 2005 Barber was accused of assaulting a retired sheriff's deputy at a campsite. He reportedly attacked deputies responding to the call, who used a Taser to subdue him. Barber was taken to jail. Three days he was found dead in his jail cell. Deputies originally thought he was asleep.

111. John Cox, 39, Bellport, N.Y. April 22, 2005 Cox, who was taking anti-psychotic drugs, became upset while visiting his girlfriend. Police officers, responding to a 911 call, ordered Cox to his knees. Officers reported that he charged them instead. Cox was shocked with a Taser and reportedly pulled out the darts. He was shocked four more times during the ensuing struggle involving nine officers. Cox was placed down on a gurney and taken to a hospital where he died. Witnesses reported that police continued to shock him after he was placed on the gurney. The Suffolk County Medical Examiner said Cox had cocaine and alcohol in his blood.

112. Keith Graff, 24, Phoenix May 3, 2005 Police stopped Graff, a former soldier in the Army's 82nd Airborne, at an apartment complex near Eight Street and Bell Road. Officers wanted to question Graff about an assault three weeks earlier during which he reportedly fled from officers. Officers reported that Graff provided them with them false identification and then tried to run away. Officers said Graff began fighting and one officer fired her Taser and missed. Another officer shocked Graff, but it reportedly had no effect. Police continued to shock him until he was placed in handcuffs. Police officers estimate the Taser was used for 84 seconds, until Graff stopped fighting. Graff stopped breathing a short time later and was pronounced dead at a hospital. An autopsy report listed methamphetamine intoxication as the cause of death.

113. Kevin Geldart, 34, Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada May 5, 2005 Officers were called to a bar on complaints that a patron had become violent. Geldart, who was reportedly 6-foot-6 and 300 pounds, confronted police who shocked him with a Taser. He slumped to the floor unconscious. An ambulance was called and Geldart was pronounced dead upon arrival at the hospital. Geldart was a patient at a local psychiatric hospital and apparently walked away earlier in the day during a cigarette break.

114. Stanley Wilson, 44, Miami May 6, 2005 Wilson was found dodging traffic on a busy Miami street. When officers approached Wilson, he reportedly tried to hit them. Officers shocked him with a Taser and arrested him. Wilson was taken to Miami-Dade County Jail where jail staff said he became violent and combative. He was placed in a cell, where he was found unconscious. He was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead.

115. Lawrence Berry, 33, Jefferson Parish, La. May 6, 2005 Guards at the Jefferson Parish Correctional Center shocked Berry at least twice with a Taser after he became violent and combative, reportedly breaking a shatterproof glass window and fighting with guards. He was strapped to a special restraint chair when guards noticed that he was unresponsive. They preformed CPR and took him to a medical center where he was pronounced dead. Berry had been jailed on charges of crack distribution and battery on a police officer. He was taken to a hospital a week earlier when he reportedly had a seizure, but he had refused treatment.

116. Vernon Young, 31, Union Township, Ohio May 13, 2005 Young went on a rampage in an apartment complex, first using a gun to shoot into his own closet then forcing his way into the manager's unit and threatening her with a knife. Police officers ordered Young to the floor and he complied. But when he started to rise, an officer shocked him with a Taser. He died an hour later at a medical center. The coroner said preliminary tests showed Young had ingested enough cocaine that he would have died with or without the Taser.

117. Leroy Pierson, 55, Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. May 17, 2005 Pierson had been arrested on outstanding warrants by sheriff's deputies who were called to investigate reports that a man was engaged in odd behavior while walking down a road. Deputies took Pierson to a detention center. When they ordered Pierson, who was handcuffed, out of the patrol car, he reportedly refused and became aggressive. Deputies shocked him with a Taser and moved him to a cell where he was shocked a second time for refusing to obey commands. He lost consciousness and was taken to a medical center. He was placed on life support for 24 hours before being pronounced dead.

118. Randy Martinez, 40, Albuquerque, New Mexico May 20, 2005 Martinez's mother called 911 for help, saying her son was out of control. Police arrived and a struggle ensued. Officers shocked Martinez multiple times. He suffered a heart attack and was taken to a hospital where he died two days later.

119. Lee Marvin Kimmel, 38, Reading, Penn. May 23, 2005 Kimmel was shocked with a Taser after reportedly breaking into a municipal building. Kimmel, who had on only socks and a T-shirt, was attempting to climb through a window when police stopped him. Officers said Kimmel began to struggle and they shocked him with a Taser and sprayed him with chemical spray. His heart stopped and he was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.

120. Richard Alverado, 38, Tustin, Calif. May 23, 2005 Police said Alverdo had broken into an apartment and struggled with officers when they attempted to arrest him. Officers shocked him with a Taser and placed him under arrest. Paramedics were called to the scene to treat Alverado for wounds he received while breaking through the apartment window. He stopped breathing and was taken to a medical center where he died the next day without regaining consciousness.

121. Walter Lamont Seats, 23, Nashville, Tenn. May 26, 2005 Seats reportedly sold drugs to an undercover officer. As police attempted to arrest him, officers reported that he stuffed a baggie of drugs into his mouth. They say he refused to spit out the drugs and wrestled with officers who shocked him with a Taser. An hour later, Seats appeared to get sick and started drooling. An ambulance was called to the scene and Seats died an hour later. A medical examiner said that Seats choked on the drugs, which went down his windpipe. The medical examiner said there was no evidence that Taser was involved in Seats� death.

122. Richard Holcomb, 18, Springfield Township, Ohio May 27, 2005 Police found Holcomb trespassing in a field following a graduation night party. Police reported that Holcomb was shirtless and incoherent. Police said he was alternatively swing his arms and sitting on the ground mumbling. When an officer approached Holcomb, he reportedly charged her. The officer shocked him with a Taser three times when he refused to stay on the ground. An investigation found that Thomas had been drinking and taking drugs on the night of his death A medical examiners report said methamphetamines, ecstacy and other substances were found in Holcomb�s system. His death was attributed to drugs and the Taser. The report said were it not for the drugs, Holcomb would not have succumbed to the Taser shocks.

123. Nazario Solorio, 38, Escondido, Calif. June 2, 2005 Solorio, an unemployed cook and a father of five, suffered from schizophrenia. Police were called to his mother�s home May 28 where Solorio was creating a disturbance. Officers were attempting to take him to a hospital. When Solorio refused to obey commands, officers shocked him with a Taser. He lapsed into a coma and died five days later. An investigator with the San Diego Medical Examiner�s Office said the Taser had nothing to do with Solorio�s death, which was described as suffocation due to positional asphyxia, meaning he couldn�t breath while being restrained.

124. Unknown man, 33, Sacramento, Calif. June 4, 2005 Police responded to calls that a man was assaulting people on a downtown street. Police said the man, who was described as 6 foot 2 and 300 pounds, tossed an officer who attempted to arrest him. Officers shocked him twice with a Taser and he reportedly continued to fight. Officers shocked him once more. Police reported that the man was taken into custody and was being transported to a hospital for removal of the Taser darts when his heart stopped. The man reportedly had a history of drug arrests.

125. Russell Walker, 47, Las Vegas. June 6, 2005 Walker was shocked three times by officers who were called to remove him from a hotel casino. Walker was reportedly getting into fights, yelling and tearing up money. Officers reported that Walker refused to obey commands so they shocked him twice with a Taser. While he was handcuffed officers shocked Walker a third time as he continued to resist. The coroner ruled Walker�s death a homicide. He said Walker died of cardiac arrhythmia during the restraint.

126. Horace Owens, 48, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. June 11, 2005 Owens reportedly broke into a house and was screaming that somebody was trying to kill him. The owner of the house fled and called police. Broward County Sheriff�s deputies entered the home and coaxed Owens outside where he apparently began fighting with them. Owens was shocked with a Taser but allegedly continued struggling with officers. He stopped breathing and deputies tried to revive him. He was pronounced dead at a hospital. A coroner said cocaine, not shocks from the Taser, caused Owens� death.

127. Michael Anthony Edwards, 32, Palatka, Fla. June 13, 2005 Edwards was shocked three times by Putnam County Sheriff�s deputies who were responding to a noise complaint. Deputies say Edwards, who was naked, ran through two plate-glass windows and was trying to climb a fence in an attempt to escape. Deputies say they ordered him to stop before shocking him with a Taser. He stopped breathing at the scene and could not be revived. A medical examiner said Edwards was suffering from excited delirium, but the final autopsy report has not been completed.

128. Shawn Pirolozzi, 30, Canton, Ohio June 13, 2005 Police say Pirolozzi went berserk inside his home, breaking windows and splashing the inside of the home with water to purify it from demons, before running outside and jumping in front of traffic. Police say Pirolozzi jumped on a patrol car and began attacking officers who arrived on the scene. At one point, the naked and bleeding Pirolozzi got inside the police cruiser and began fighting with officers who shocked him with a Taser. He died after being taken to a hospital. Officers who reportedly hit and kicked Pirolozzi were later suspended. An investigation is under way.

129. Robert Earl Williams, 62, Waco, Texas June 14, 2005 Police responded to a domestic disturbance call at Williams� sister�s house. Upon arrival, officers learned that Williams was wanted on a previous charge of resisting arrest. When they attempted to put him in handcuffs, officers say Williams picked up a steel bar. Officers shocked him with a Taser about four times. Police reported that Williams continued fighting. After he was arrested and sitting down, Williams said he was having trouble breathing. He died at the scene. The medical examiner reported that Williams died from acute physiological stress associated with multiple electrical shocks during attempted restraint by police. He was schizophrenic and in the throes of excited delirium.

130. Melinda Kaye Neal. 33, Whitfield County, Ga. June 24, 2005 Neal, who reportedly suffered from manic depression and drug addictions, was arrested after walking into someone�s home and going through cabinets. When deputies arrived, she reportedly became combative. A deputy shocked her once with a Taser and placed her in handcuffs. While transporting her to jail, Neal reportedly kicked out a window of a patrol car. After passing out at the jail, Neal was transported to a hospital where she died. Police said her death was likely caused by drugs.

131. Carolyn Daniels, 25, Fort Worth June 24, 2005 Daniels, a convicted prostitute, approached a police officer and said someone was following her. The officer, believing she was under the influence, attempted to arrest her. During the arrest, the officer shocked Daniels with a Taser. She died 90 minutes later at a local hospital.

132. Unknown man, Miami, Fla. June 29, 2005 Police responding to a burglary call encountered an extremely agitated suspect who was banging on doors and climbing on roofs in a Miami neighborhood. Police said when they confronted the man he ran and attempted to break into a house. Officers shocked him at least twice with a Taser. He was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.

133. Gurmeet Sandhu, 41, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada June 30, 2005 Police responding to a domestic violence call heard screaming coming from inside Sandhu's home. Police say that Sandhu was assaulting a woman and became combative when officers attempted to intervene. They say he fought with officers who shocked Sandhu multiple times with a Taser and sprayed him with pepper spray. Officers reported that he stopped breathing and died at the scene.

134. James Foldi, 39, Beamsville, Ontario, Canada July 1, 2005 Police were responding to reports of numerous neighborhood break-ins when they found Foldi. When they attempted to arrest Foldi, he resisted. Officers shot at him with the Taser, which the department had deployed only days earlier. Foldi was taken to a police station but later transported to a hospital where he died.

135. Rockey Bryson, 41, Birmingham, Ala. July 7, 2005 Bryson, who had been arrested on alcohol-related charges, was in jail when authorities say he became confrontational in his cell. Corrections officers shocked him with a Taser and sprayed him with chemical spray in order to subdue him He was found dead in his cell a few hours later. The medical examiner said Bryson died of a heart attack brought on by alcoholism. He said the Taser had nothing to do with the death.

136. Kevin Omas, 17, Euless, Texas July 12, 2005 Officers responded to calls that Omas had ingested four �hits� of LSD and two tabs of Ecstasy and was suffering an overdose. Police said when they arrived on the scene Omas became combative and refused to obey commands. Officers said he charged at them. Officers shocked Omas three times with a Taser. He was taken to the hospital where he died two days later.

137. Ernesto Valdez, 37, Phoenix July 15, 2005 Police say Valdez exhibited bizarre behavior and �incredible strength� after he broke into a Church's Chicken restaurant, chased out the employees and fought with officers, who shocked him three times with a Taser. They say even after being shocked the man continued struggling. Officers reported that after Valdez was placed in restraints and masked to prevent him from spitting, they noticed he had stopped breathing. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

138. Paul Sheldon Saulnier, 42, Digby, Nova Scotia, Canada July 15, 2005 Saulnier�s wife wanted police to take her mentally ill husband into custody. Saulnier had just spent seven days under psychiatric observation. His wife said she felt he would get better treatment in custody. Officers arrested Saulnier, but while they were fingerprinting him, he fled outside. Three officers followed. During the struggle, officers used batons, pepper spray and a Taser gun to place Saulnier in custody. He was shocked multiple times. Once Saulnier was