The problem is that this is very simple.
Police officers are required to use minimal force.
Using excessive force is a crime.
This was excessive force.
How do I know it was excessive force?
Because the use of a tazer is potentially deadly force. You can argue that it isn't, and that argument is wrong. Police are trained to know the effects of tasers.
And potentially deadly force may only be used if the suspect represents an immediate threat of harm. This is how police officers are trained. This is the law.
In addition to knowing when they are permitted to use a taser, police are also trained to know when using a taser represents a greater risk to the target. For instance when someone is running over concrete.
This suspect did not represent an immediate threat of harm, and the shallow vapid factually incorrect excuses you and Ninjaboot are making that she was, are shallow, vapid and factually incorrect. The argument that she is a drug user and has committed crimes in the past is completely irrelevant to that fact, yet you two keep using it as an excuse.
And contrary to what you may believe Kaijyuu, I am holding very steadfast to my ideals. Justice is the highest ideal.
The facts do not change, no matter how much you ignore them. And in arguing the facts, I keep going over the same arguments... perhaps because facts do not change? If you want to call that irrational or a circular argument? go right ahead, you would be just as wrong as the people arguing that it is just and right for police to break the law because they are police and their victims are criminals.
http://www.law.stanford.edu/program/centers/scjc/library/tasers.pdf"the use of tasers should be permitted to the extent that such use is necessary to
protect officer safety while minimizing the risk of physical injury to suspects."
"These strong muscle contractions usually render a subject temporarily
unable to control his or her movements and may result in secondary
injuries. Under certain circumstances, this loss of control can elevate the
risk(s) of serious injury or death. These circumstances may include, but
are not limited to, use of the TASER device on a person who is physically
infirm or pregnant, or a person on an elevated or unstable platform,
operating a vehicle or machinery,
running or in water where the inability
to move may result in drowning."