Suit: Cops Choke And Tase Unresponsive Deaf Man, "Intentionally Burning His Flesh"
California officers beat innocent man unconscious and then charged him with assault
Four police officers in Hawthorne, California beat and tased an innocent
deaf man when he failed to respond to their demands during a routine
call out. The cops then charged the man with assault, according to
details released as part of a lawsuit on behalf of the man.
Cops in Hawthornes face charges of civil rights violations after tasering a deaf man 'til his flesh burned.
The
suit, being facilitated by the Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness,
notes that the plaintiff, Jonathan Meister, attempted to use sign
language to explain to the cops that he could not hear him when they
confronted him outside his friend's home, from which he was removing
boxes of his own possessions.
A neighbor had called police,
saying that Meister was acting suspiciously, after he had failed to
respond to verbal calls from across the street.
Believing he was a burglar, the cops approached Meister, and grabbed him by the wrists when he didn't verbally respond to them.
"Because
he is deaf, Mr. Meister depends on using his hands while facing a
person to communicate," the complaint states. "The officers' sudden
aggression, which both caused pain and interfered with his ability to
communicate, caused Mr. Meister reflexively to pull his hands away, hop
back over the fence and step toward the gate ... to create some space so
that he could communicate."
The suit then notes that Meister
began to panic and resist being handcuffed. That was when one of the
officers shot him twice with a taser. Another officer then deployed a
second taser, delivering a "drive stun" to his abdomen.
The
report notes that officers "struck Meister with fists and feet, and
forcibly took him to the ground." The cops then kicked and punched him
in the back and stomach, while another choked him around the neck. The
suit also alleges that the cops delivered "punishing shocks" with the
tasers, intentionally "burning his flesh."
After he was knocked
unconscious and taken to a hospital, Meister was cited for assaulting
the officers. The charges were later dropped.
Meister is suing
the police for civil rights violations under the federal Americans with
Disabilities Act, claiming that they used unnecessary aggression.
"We're
really concerned about the problem of law enforcement and people who
are deaf," said Meister's attorney, Paula Pearlman. "He wasn't doing
anything other than trying to get away from people who were hurting
him."
The suit states that "this incident
occurred in substantial part because the HPD does not provide its
officers the training and resources to serve people who are deaf or hard
of hearing."
It claims that Hawthorne police failed "to provide
effective communication to deaf and hard of hearing individuals,
including himself, who come into contact and interact with the HPD,
thereby discriminating against them."
There are untold numbers of
cases of police beating and even tasering both physically and mentally
disabled people across the nation. In cases of people in wheelchairs to
diabetics literally having fits on the ground, police have deployed
tasers, which are supposed to be used only as a last option before
lethal force.
Such cases highlight both a woeful lack of training
in police departments, as well as an endemic eagerness to attack and
punish anyone who fails to respond to demands and orders. sea something
say something
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