Tased in the Chest for 23 Seconds, Dead for 8 Minutes, Now Facing a Lifetime of Recovery

limequat

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https://theintercept.com/2016/06/07...-8-minutes-now-facing-a-lifetime-of-recovery/


The sentencing hearing began with a surprise. Timothy Runnels, a 32-year-old former Independence, Missouri, police officer, sat at a large, rectangular defense table inside Courtroom 8B at the Charles Evans Whittaker Federal Courthouse in downtown Kansas City, Missouri, late last month. He was waiting to learn his fate after pleading guilty to a federal crime he committed almost two years ago, on September 14, 2014. Judge Dean Whipple had not yet watched the government’s key piece of evidence — a dashboard video — because he wanted to do so with attorneys present to make arguments. Today the video, which had never been played in any public setting, would be played in open court. Even the victim, 18-year-old Bryce Masters, had seen it only once.

As the video opens we see a gray Pontiac enter the frame, and Bryce’s dad, Matt, put his hand on his son’s knee. His mom, Stacy, folded her arms, clutching a tissue. Tears began to form in both his parents’ eyes, anticipating what everyone else in the room was about to see. Unfazed, Bryce leaned his 6-foot-1-inch frame forward, his eyes focused on the makeshift projector. He knew this piece of evidence absolved him of any wrongdoing.

In the video, Runnels pulls Bryce over and approaches the car. He tells Bryce to get out but doesn’t give a reason. Bryce repeatedly asks if he is under arrest. Runnels says, “You’re under arrest. Get your ass out of the car,” and attempts to pull him out by force. He then tases Bryce for 23 seconds, handcuffs him, drags the boy’s body behind the car, and deliberately drops him face first onto the asphalt road. Runnels may not have known it at the time, but Bryce was going into cardiac arrest. When the loud thud of the drop boomed throughout the courtroom, gasps echoed out. One woman looked down and covered her eyes with her hand. A man said, “Oh, my god.” A police officer with the Kansas City Police Department quickly brought his fist to his mouth, turned to the man next to him, and whispered, “Jesus.” Even those sitting behind the defendant — a few friends, his wife, his family — gasped, as if the recording revealed a truth about Runnels they had never considered.

Bryce Masters used his mobile phone to record his encounter with Officer Timothy Runnels on September 14, 2014. Warning: This video contains graphic scenes of police violence.



Runnels faced a dire sentence that day — up to 10 years in federal prison. The catalyst for the crime was the 23-second Taser deployment straight into Bryce’s chest. That’s what caused him to go into cardiac arrest. Assistant U.S. Attorney David M. Ketchmark argued that the length of time that Runnels held down the Taser’s trigger was an aggravating factor. One pull on the trigger sent electricity shooting out for five seconds; Runnels had held it down the equivalent of four pulls. Even so, the prosecution agreed that the initial Taser use was reasonable and within common police practice. Runnels’s crime, depriving a minor of his civil rights, occurred when he dropped the dying 17-year-old boy on his face.

Matt Masters does not agree that the Taser use was reasonable, but he agrees it was common police practice. Matt is a 19-year veteran of the Kansas City Police Department with a slew of warrior-cop credentials. He has worked on SWAT teams and has been part of Kansas City’s police narcotics unit, taking point on an estimated 1,000 search warrants during one three-year span. After Bryce was tased, Matt discovered something he’d never heard in any Taser training he’d gone through, something he resisted believing, because it violated an article of faith among police officers: Tasers can kill.

More specifically, Matt learned that on October 12, 2009, Taser International, the Scottsdale, Arizona-based maker of conducted electrical weapons, released a training bulletin suggesting that officers should avoid shooting suspects in the chest whenever possible. Five years later — on September 14, 2014 — it would be difficult to argue that Runnels was unable to avoid shooting Bryce in the chest. Yet the defense’s argument for leniency was based on the claim that Runnels had acted reasonably as an officer right up until the moment he dropped Bryce on his face.

But the wounds Bryce suffered from that part of the assault have largely healed. The permanent injury he struggles with every day came as a result of the Taser. Bryce’s brain was deprived of oxygen for six to eight minutes while he was in cardiac arrest. It was the Taser that almost killed Bryce.
 
More at the link. I have no desire to see the video. The screen shots were enough.

What I find particularly striking about this case is that the Dad of the victim admits to blaming his son, and feeling sorry for the cop. Of course the dad is a cop himself.
 
The dashcam should be thrown out as evidence because clearly the dashcam malfunctioned
 
Here's a shortened version of the dashcam video, the full 20 minute video is at the bottom of the article. It really is one of the more sickening police videos I've ever seen so don't watch if you are squeamish, but I hope as many people see this as possible so put it on the front page.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lfJ5WSpiWA



Really good article worth the long read, thanks for posting limequat.


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More at the link. I have no desire to see the video. The screen shots were enough.

What I find particularly striking about this case is that the Dad of the victim admits to blaming his son, and feeling sorry for the cop. Of course the dad is a cop himself.

Only three types of people in this world, to a cop, and strictly in this order.

1 - Cops.

2 - Cop's families and friends.

3 - Scumbags.
 
Goons gonna goon... and goon... and goon... It never stops.

It could stop tomorrow, and we all know how.

Nobody has the stomach or the strength for it, myself included, damn me.


“And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if every Security operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive and had to say good-bye to his family? Or if, during periods of mass arrests, as for example in Leningrad, when they arrested a quarter of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing left to lose and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand?... The Organs would very quickly have suffered a shortage of officers and transport and, notwithstanding all of Stalin's thirst, the cursed machine would have ground to a halt! If...if...We didn't love freedom enough. And even more – we had no awareness of the real situation.... We purely and simply deserved everything that happened afterward.”

― Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
 
It could stop tomorrow, and we all know how.

Nobody has the stomach or the strength for it, myself included, damn me.

Wrong.

It's a simple numbers game.
Plenty of people have the stomach and the strength.
The problem is, for every one person with the stomach and strength, who chooses to do something about it, and ends up getting burned alive on national TV, there are millions of sheep pumping their fists in the air and cheering when he is lynched.
 
That video is literally nauseating.

One of many outcomes if you try to assert your rights.
 
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Crime: Contempt of cop.
Judge and Jury decision: Guilty.
Punishment: Potentially lethal electrical torture, potentially lethal slamming of head into ground.
To be carried out: Immediately.

After Bryce was tased, Matt discovered something he’d never heard in any Taser training he’d gone through, something he resisted believing, because it violated an article of faith among police officers: Tasers can kill.

Well, duh, you don't say? Were all of the laws, regulations and codes related to electricity there for nothing?

On the other hand, the kid's actions indicate he followed advise he no doubt heard about on the internet...
 
And this is a pro-cop shirt. Lol. Irony is ironic.

d23c566d-bafe-47e1-992d-9795cc70b5f8-original.jpg
 
What do you people expect? The kid didn't roll his window down all the way and asked questions, he's lucky he wasn't shot.
 
https://theintercept.com/2016/06/07...-8-minutes-now-facing-a-lifetime-of-recovery/


The sentencing hearing began with a surprise. Timothy Runnels, a 32-year-old former Independence, Missouri, police officer, sat at a large, rectangular defense table inside Courtroom 8B at the Charles Evans Whittaker Federal Courthouse in downtown Kansas City, Missouri, late last month. He was waiting to learn his fate after pleading guilty to a federal crime he committed almost two years ago, on September 14, 2014. Judge Dean Whipple had not yet watched the government’s key piece of evidence — a dashboard video — because he wanted to do so with attorneys present to make arguments. Today the video, which had never been played in any public setting, would be played in open court. Even the victim, 18-year-old Bryce Masters, had seen it only once.

As the video opens we see a gray Pontiac enter the frame, and Bryce’s dad, Matt, put his hand on his son’s knee. His mom, Stacy, folded her arms, clutching a tissue. Tears began to form in both his parents’ eyes, anticipating what everyone else in the room was about to see. Unfazed, Bryce leaned his 6-foot-1-inch frame forward, his eyes focused on the makeshift projector. He knew this piece of evidence absolved him of any wrongdoing.

In the video, Runnels pulls Bryce over and approaches the car. He tells Bryce to get out but doesn’t give a reason. Bryce repeatedly asks if he is under arrest. Runnels says, “You’re under arrest. Get your ass out of the car,” and attempts to pull him out by force. He then tases Bryce for 23 seconds, handcuffs him, drags the boy’s body behind the car, and deliberately drops him face first onto the asphalt road. Runnels may not have known it at the time, but Bryce was going into cardiac arrest. When the loud thud of the drop boomed throughout the courtroom, gasps echoed out. One woman looked down and covered her eyes with her hand. A man said, “Oh, my god.” A police officer with the Kansas City Police Department quickly brought his fist to his mouth, turned to the man next to him, and whispered, “Jesus.” Even those sitting behind the defendant — a few friends, his wife, his family — gasped, as if the recording revealed a truth about Runnels they had never considered.

Bryce Masters used his mobile phone to record his encounter with Officer Timothy Runnels on September 14, 2014. Warning: This video contains graphic scenes of police violence.



Runnels faced a dire sentence that day — up to 10 years in federal prison. The catalyst for the crime was the 23-second Taser deployment straight into Bryce’s chest. That’s what caused him to go into cardiac arrest. Assistant U.S. Attorney David M. Ketchmark argued that the length of time that Runnels held down the Taser’s trigger was an aggravating factor. One pull on the trigger sent electricity shooting out for five seconds; Runnels had held it down the equivalent of four pulls. Even so, the prosecution agreed that the initial Taser use was reasonable and within common police practice. Runnels’s crime, depriving a minor of his civil rights, occurred when he dropped the dying 17-year-old boy on his face.

Matt Masters does not agree that the Taser use was reasonable, but he agrees it was common police practice. Matt is a 19-year veteran of the Kansas City Police Department with a slew of warrior-cop credentials. He has worked on SWAT teams and has been part of Kansas City’s police narcotics unit, taking point on an estimated 1,000 search warrants during one three-year span. After Bryce was tased, Matt discovered something he’d never heard in any Taser training he’d gone through, something he resisted believing, because it violated an article of faith among police officers: Tasers can kill.

More specifically, Matt learned that on October 12, 2009, Taser International, the Scottsdale, Arizona-based maker of conducted electrical weapons, released a training bulletin suggesting that officers should avoid shooting suspects in the chest whenever possible. Five years later — on September 14, 2014 — it would be difficult to argue that Runnels was unable to avoid shooting Bryce in the chest. Yet the defense’s argument for leniency was based on the claim that Runnels had acted reasonably as an officer right up until the moment he dropped Bryce on his face.

But the wounds Bryce suffered from that part of the assault have largely healed. The permanent injury he struggles with every day came as a result of the Taser. Bryce’s brain was deprived of oxygen for six to eight minutes while he was in cardiac arrest. It was the Taser that almost killed Bryce.

Police Are More Dangerous To The Public Than Are Criminals


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On the other hand, the kid's actions indicate he followed advise he no doubt heard about on the internet...

Actually I think I read somewhere that the "kid" was following the advice of his father, who is a Kansas City police officer.

His dad being a cop I'm sure he knows that many cops are scumbags, and thus he advised his son to stick up for his rights when stopped.

The only problem is, with a rogue cop standing up for your rights can get you killed, or permanently injured.

Sad thing for the kid is this all probably could have all been avoided if he had just played the "my dad is a cop" card ...
 
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That video is literally nauseating.

One of many outcomes if you try to assert your rights.

It's pretty disgusting, but at the end of the day what counts is that he did assert his rights. It took some time for him to find the courage & bravery, but he did finally exercise his rights to tase that kid and drag him out. And that's what matters, because you know what they say about rights (and tasers, actually):

Use it or lose it
 
What do you people expect? The kid didn't roll his window down all the way and asked questions, he's lucky he wasn't shot.

^ This

That boy's parents failed horribly, did not teach him at all, how to show respect to these brave Officers who risk our lives to protect & serve us.
 
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