Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Las Vegas Police Officers Cleared In Taser Death

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Las Vegas Police Officers Cleared In Taser Death

    LAS VEGAS POLICE OFFICERS CLEARED IN TASER DEATH

    KVOA.com, AZ
    Dec 3 2006

    LAS VEGAS -- A coroner's inquest jury has cleared two Las Vegas police
    officers of wrongdoing in the death of a schizophrenic man who choked
    to death after being shocked by a Taser gun.

    The jury deliberated for 40 minutes before ruling that officers Michael
    Martin and Stephen Cwalinski took excusable action when they shocked
    29-year-old Vardan Kasilyan twice with a stun gun while trying to
    subdue him in his parent's apartment.

    His parents, Areknaz and Vrezh Kasilyan, told the jury their son was
    handcuffed at the time, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported Saturday.

    Medical examiner Dr. Gary Telgenhoff testified Friday that Vardan
    Kasilyan died by choking on his own vomit. He said contributing
    factors were Kasilyan's use of methamphetamine and cocaine a short
    time before the incident, the mental illness and the use of the Taser.

    Areknaz Kasilyan just wanted to get her son to the hospital, she
    testified through an Armenian interpreter.

    Her son hadn't been taking his medications and she was afraid he
    might hurt himself, she said.

    "I didn't want police to come. I wanted just an ambulance to come to
    help him," Kasilyan said.

    An ambulance and the officers showed up at the apartment shortly
    after Areknaz Kasilyan called for help at about 9:00 p.m. on Sept. 30.

    She told the 911 dispatcher that her son might be armed with a
    screwdriver or small knife. She made the call discreetly because
    when she made a similar call two years ago, her son had jumped from
    the second floor when he saw emergency vehicles and broke both legs,
    she told the jury.

    The officers did not wait for a crisis intervention team member,
    who is trained to deal with mentally ill people, before entering
    the apartment.

    "There was a sense of urgency because we could hear a male voice and
    a female voice adamantly arguing," Martin testified.

    When he saw the officer in the apartment, Vardan Kasilyan moved toward
    a patio door, Martin said.

    Martin said he ordered Vardan Kasilyan to show his hands, but he
    wouldn't comply. Martin said he fired his Taser because he worried
    Vardan Kasilyan might attack with a screwdriver, escape through the
    patio door or grab what Martin thought was a shotgun on the floor
    nearby.

    The item on the floor was a black metal cane that Vardan Kasilyan
    has used since he broke both legs, his father testified.

    The officers said they then tackled Vardan Kasilyan to the ground
    and tried to handcuff him. Martin was able to put cuffs on his right
    hand, but Cwalinski couldn't get the left hand out from under Vardan
    Kasilyan's body, they said.

    The officers shocked Kasilyan again, handcuffed him and rolled him
    to his side when he began to vomit immediately, they said.

    Paramedics took him to the hospital, where he died.

    Both parents testified that police shocked their son while his hands
    were handcuffed behind his back.

    The officers said they wouldn't have done anything differently.

    "In my mind, there's nothing we could have done," Martin said. "I
    would have to do exactly what I was trained to do and do what I did
    that night."

    Information from: Las Vegas Review-Journal, http://www.lvrj.com

    http://kvoa.com/Global/story. asp?S=5760175
Working...
X