(no title)
zeteo
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1 year ago
I'm sure there are legitimate cases where sedation is reasonably the best available solution. The problem is - who draws the line? There was a case the other day where a university professor was tackled to the ground, her head hitting the cement, and forcefully handcuffed because she had tapped a police officer on the shoulder asking him to stop what he was doing to a student. She was booked for assaulting a police officer, which is clearly a "combative" thing to do. Do you think the officer who tackled her down and then climbed on top of her should also have the authority to inject her with a sedative at his discretion? Do you think that, in an environment where simply not following directions promptly to the full satisfaction of the arresting officer can result in being tased or even shot, law enforcement also needs to be able to sedate people whenever they find it appropriate?
bastawhiz|1 year ago
The person you're replying to is, assuming they're not lying, a medical professional.
> Do you think that, in an environment where simply not following directions promptly to the full satisfaction of the arresting officer can result in being tased or even shot
Are you suggesting that a person trying to bite folks is on equal legal footing with a college professor tapping an officer on the shoulder? In any case, sedatives are unquestionably less lethal than guns (and probably tasers, where Google suggests hundreds of people die in the US from being tased by the police each year). Putting aside whether the officer's discretion in such a situation is being wielded appropriately, sedation (by the numbers) is essentially never a worse option than what police have at their disposal already, no?
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
NewJazz|1 year ago
Medical professional, sure... But not a doctor. Not a nurse. And often facing immense pressure from LEO (even nurses get pressured).
Are you suggesting that a person trying to bite folks is on equal legal footing with a college professor tapping an officer on the shoulder?
You missed the whole point.
snakeyjake|1 year ago
The local EMS Medical Director. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK526093/
zeteo|1 year ago