Originally Posted by Meerkat
Well done! Those were exactly the points I was going to address! Excellent!
Lurksalot is biased, sure she/he wants to see his/her spouse at the end of the day. I imagine, though, that so did the patient's family want to see him, too.
And jut to humor him/her, here's an article from yesterday:
http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/...606180328/1006
By the way, this article only mentions 3 deaths. The fourth to which I referred was at a juvenile detention center in another county.
Quite a thread here. I just wanted to add a few observations. Of the three deaths mentioned in the article, one person was not listed as tased and another one was tased several days before he died in a restraint chair. This article was not even listed until page 4 of the thread.
I think tasers are a valuable tool for police as long as they are not misused just as handcuffs, handguns, batons, and pepper spray are valuable tools when not misused. However, for those who absolutely don't like tasers consider the alternative. If an officer is facing someone acting irratically armed with a knife, he'd just have to shoot him. Shooting is a little messier and has a higher likelyhood of being fatal. Oh well.
Here's an article about a homeless man who
died in a scuffle with police. Perhaps police should not scuffle with suspects anymore. There are alternatives to scuffling.
There are problems when police have to deal with
mentally ill suspects. "One of the deficiencies with mentally ill people is that they don't make good judgment calls. If a corrections officer gives them orders, they're not going to respond like another inmate would. They may take those orders as a threat, and then a fight may take place and quickly turn violent."
Just a note here, failure to cooperate with an order does not mean a prisoner is mentally ill. He may be on drugs, alcohol, or have no respect for authority.
Maybe the psych nurses can help me with a question. How long does it take to make an accurate diagnosis on a new patient? Would a cop on the street have enough time to make an accurate determination even if he had the necessary training?
I do think we should demand a psych workup on everyone who is taken to jail. It won't hurt the sane ones and could help those who need it.