July 27, 2009 6:23 PM

Triple Taser: New Gun Can Stun 3 at a Time

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CBSNews
(AP)  Taser International unveiled its first new stun gun since 2003 on Monday, a device that can shock three people without being reloaded.

Older Taser stun guns, in use by 14,200 law enforcement agencies throughout the United States, have to be reloaded after one shot, which can be a problem for an officer who has missed a target or has more than one suspect to subdue.

Taser CEO Rick Smith and his brother, Chairman Tom Smith, unveiled the new device to hundreds of law enforcement officers and distributors at the Scottsdale-based company's annual conference. They stood on stage, each holding two new Tasers, and fired six rounds a piece at metal targets to whoops and applause.

"This is as big a step as when firearms went from a muzzle loader to the revolver," Rick Smith said later. "If I was a cop I'd want to carry one."

The new stun gun costs $1,799, compared with $799 for the older model, though Smith said law enforcement agencies could trade in their older ones for credits worth $300-$800.

He said the device will be available to law enforcement agencies in late August. Officers at the conference will receive free ones provided they pass an operating test.

Smith said he believes the device will become the new standard for police officers who want greater tactical abilities and allows for greater accountability because it has sensors that measure each discharge; that data can then be downloaded and analyzed.

He said the devices are in line the costs of other law enforcement tools, and that Taser hopes law enforcement agencies can tap tap federal stimulus funds.

Like the older models, the new stun gun shoots two barbed wires that deliver about 6 watts of electrical current for several seconds, temporarily immobilizing people from a distance.

The device, which can hit people up to 35 feet away, looks like a bulky gun but weighs less than two pounds. It's about 2.5 inches wide and seven inches tall.

While the device can be used against three people, it target the same person more than once. Smith said each barb would deliver a separate shock.

Human rights groups contend Tasers cause heart attacks. Taser spokesman Steve Tuttle said the company has won 96 of 97 wrongful-death and product liability lawsuits filed against it and is appealing after being found 15 percent responsible in the one suit it lost.

Amnesty International says 351 people in the U.S. died after they were shocked with Tasers, and that in 50 of those cases, medical examiners cited a link between Taser shocks and death.

Curt Goering, deputy executive director of Amnesty International USA, said while he hasn't been able to fully examine the new mode Taser, it raises concerns.

"The new models will likely fuel the controversy about the potential lethality or abuse because there's potential for repeat Tasings," he said.

He said his organization generally supports the development of non-lethal force for police agencies but claims officers are using Tasers far too often. "The threshold for use of force is often lower, so police are using these weapons in situations where the operation of a firearm would never be justified," he said.

Smith said Tasers are saving the lives of suspects across the country and saving police departments money that would have gone for workers' compensation for injured officers and litigation stemming from the use of firearms.

"It's just one of those things that unfortunately, Amnesty is more about what they're against than what they're for," he said. "We are the new technology — it's splashy because of the electricity, you can make it scary. And I'm really disappointed they haven't taken a more constructive approach."

AP
Add a Comment See all 19 Comments
by mjlewis6 July 28, 2009 2:11 PM EDT
Multiple shocks by tasering....don't forget that aspect...
It is continuous shocking of the nervous system, so it would not be hard to imagine its effect on the heart. Not just a one shot deal.

My suggestion?

Let cops who use the taser in this fashion with repeated shocking applications EXPERIENCE this effect of their NON-LETHAL WEAPON, for it is a weapon, EVERY TIME THEY COME ON SHIFT so that they will learn the NON-LETHAL limit or a REASONABLE APPLICATION to effect control without death...
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by gunownerdan July 28, 2009 9:39 AM EDT
Doesn't the UN classify tasers as torture devices?
"Don't torture me, bro!"
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by omnibus66 July 28, 2009 7:56 AM EDT
Simply put, a taser is a torture device and should be outlawed. Police brutality is becoming rampant in this country, and this device is a tool of brutality. When the cops figure out how to rid their ranks of power hungry sociopaths, then they can have tasers.
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by John_Merritt July 27, 2009 8:23 PM EDT
That sounds like a risk management nightmare. Just think what if there is a misfre by an officer or malfunction of the weapon and someone gets 3 times the dose. Something along the lines of that little old lady that got drilled. Let's just say, I hope Taser, Int. has lawyers on retainer I have a feeling they will be busy. Yikes!
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by DogBitez July 27, 2009 8:00 PM EDT
Goody. Now we can stun three 12 year olds at a time... or maybe three senior citizens with pacemakers. There seems to be zero discretion anymore, which is why we don't need new and better taser guns. We need new and better laws, judiciously enforced, about when to use a taser and on whom.
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by texbelle123 July 27, 2009 7:01 PM EDT
Oh great. We have idiot cops tasering a 14 year old girl, a 72 year old granny, and who knows how many other "violent" criminals, not to mention the prison guard who stunned kids there on a go-to-work-with-Dad day . . . and now we give these idiots a new gun that can stun 3 at a time?!?!
Jeez. Yeah, we really need that.

Here's a thought. Let's train them to actually DO their jobs. Maybe that will work so that they will stop pulling out their stun gun and shooting it to prove how big and tough and important they are.
Reply to this comment
by bobnjersey July 27, 2009 5:41 PM EDT
[They stood on stage, each holding two new Tasers, and fired six rounds a piece at metal targets to whoops and applause. ]

these handheld torture devices should be banned ... and these brothers should be sued by everyone they've ever been used against.
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by stn_sage July 27, 2009 5:39 PM EDT
The primary problem I have with this is: are things so 'out of control' in the streets of America, that law enforcement agencies REALLY NEED THIS?!

The simple truth: NO! Question: what effect is this weapon really designed to achieve, then? The answer: create a NEED!

The occasional police abuse will become the norm, people will defend themselves, and THEN the police HAVE their excuse for using these weapons on the public!

Hence, a situation of ever increasing escalation will occur! It's bound, too! Responsible police units will stay away from this weapon and NOT provoke the public to 'police them'!
Reply to this comment
by curiously1 July 27, 2009 4:55 PM EDT
I think this is designed for intimate threesomes !
Reply to this comment
by nofoolling July 27, 2009 4:48 PM EDT
They stood on stage, each holding two new Tasers, and fired six rounds a piece at metal targets to whoops and applause.

I wonder if the same crowd would cheer when the police kill someone in their family by using these dangerous devices?
Reply to this comment
by billpl-2009 July 27, 2009 5:00 PM EDT
as long as that someone happened to be a legitimate target

you'll get a 3 cheers from me
by DaVicar5 July 27, 2009 6:04 PM EDT
If it saves the life of a Police Officer, who cares?
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