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Boardman reports: "None of the officials will explain why it's been almost three months since a Vermont State Trooper tasered Macadam Mason, a 39-year-old epileptic artist who died almost immediately, and there's still no completed autopsy report."

Macadam Mason died after being tased by a police officer. He was unarmed. (photo: theduckshoot.com)
Macadam Mason died after being tased by a police officer. He was unarmed. (photo: theduckshoot.com)


Who's Holding Up Autopsy of Vermont Man's Taser Death in June?

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

11 September 12

Reader Supported News | Report

 

one of the officials involved in Vermont's first taser death will explain why it's been almost three months since a Vermont State Trooper tasered Macadam Mason, a 39-year-old epileptic artist who died almost immediately, and there's still no completed autopsy report.

The same officials in two states, Vermont and New Hampshire, also failed to reveal last June that Taser International, the taser manufacturer, almost immediately intervened in the investigation, submitting guidance and background information for the Vermont State Police and the NH Medical Examiner's office which was in the midst of performing Mason's autopsy. That was June 21, and Taser's involvement remained unknown to the public until reported September 9 by the Burlington Free Press.

Taser's covert intervention into Mason's taser-related death is part of apparently long-standing policy on the company's part to intervene as early as possible to protect the Taser brand from bad publicity. With some 500 taser-related American deaths since 2001, Taser has already changed its characterization of its 50,000-volt stun gun from "non-lethal" to "less lethal."

Taser's approach to taser deaths is to challenge anyone suggesting that Taser was in any way to blame. Last July when OpEdNews.com ran a story headlined, "Taser Death in Vermont: Trooper Zaps Unarmed Epileptic Artist," Stacey Todd of Taser International posted a comment asserting that: "It's premature to describe Mr. Mason's death as a 'Taser death.' To simply infer that the use of one police tool may be to be to blame for this man's death is irresponsible as there are no facts to support that causal relationship."

All reports of the event of June 20 are consistent, relating that when trooper David Schaeffer shot his taser at Macadam Mason, Mason dropped to the ground and never regained consciousness. He was taken to a hospital in NH where he was pronounced dead.

When asked, "Do you think Mason would be dead even if no taser was used?" the Taser International spokesperson did not answer the question. Instead, Stacey Todd wrote that: "Until a medical expert, coroner or medical examiner, determines a cause of death it's speculation to state that the Taser device caused Mr. Mason's death."

In fact, in three different cases in Ohio in 2005-06, when the Chief Medical Examiner's office in Summit County, Ohio, made exactly that determination, Taser International took the county to court. After a four-day trial in 2008, Ohio Judge Ted Schneiderman found for Taser on every item in the company's complaint, as well as some items it had not requested, and ordered the medical examiner to re-write three separate death certificates.

The judge's 13-page decision in May 2008 described three events that unambiguously included tasers and fatalities, as well other factors like extreme drug use, a badly slashed wrist, serious mental impairment, and obesity. These descriptions alone raise doubts about the taser use directly causing any of the three deaths, but tasers were indeed deployed just a matter of minutes before each of three men died, belying the judge's conclusion that: "The Taser device had nothing to do with their deaths." [emphasis added]

In Arizona, where Taser International is based in Scottsdale, the Arizona Republic newspaper of Phoenix covered the decision in a story that starts: "Taser International has fired a warning shot at medical examiners across the country. The Scottsdale-based stun gun manufacturer increasingly is targeting state and county medical examiners with lawsuits and lobbying efforts to reverse and prevent medical rulings that Tasers contributed to someone's death."

The medical examiner appealed the decision on seven separate issues, getting upheld on one and denied on the rest. In April 2009, the three-judge appeals court denied the medical examiner's constitutional due process argument on the ground that it had not been raised in the original trial. The appeals court also reversed the trial judge for granting Taser items it had not requested.

In a pointed dissent, Judge Donna J. Carr argued that Taser International had no basis for bringing the suit in the first place "because it has not suffered an actual injury and because the interests it seeks to protect do not fall within the zone of interest to be protected by the statute." The statute in question is concerned with preserving the integrity and finality of cause-of-death determinations.

Judge Carr went on to say that the cases the majority cited to support its position "involved persons with direct interests in the cause of death of the decedent, such as persons accused in the death, not corporations seeking to make a preemptive strike to preclude lawsuits from being filed against it."

In Ohio, at least, "the controversy of medical examiners and Taser-related deaths" continued to make news in 2012 when WCPO-TV in Cincinnati looked into the taser-related death of a teenager that was ruled "unknown/undetermined" after he was tasered by a police officer. That ruling was challenged by the family's attorney who said, "He's a very clean and upstanding kid, very healthy kid ... and the only thing that happened that night is he was Tased and then he died and she's saying this doesn't matter, the Taser doesn't matter ... I don't think so."

WCPO also reported on a 2003 study by the Dept. of Defense that discussed the difficulty of assessing tasers as a cause of death, since electric shock leaves no tracks. Without direct evidence, medical examiners must rely on inference to assess the elements of a death, the same inferences that seemed so obvious to the Summit County Medical Examiner until Taser took her to court.

Asked if she had an opinion of the courts' rulings, Medical Examiner Dr. Lisa J. Kohler said, "Yes." She declined to say what that opinion was.

Whether any of these events have anything to do with the delay in Vermont getting Macadam Mason's autopsy report from NH is anyone's guess. Taser International has contacted at least some of the officials involved. The Vermont Attorney General's office and the Vermont State Police won't comment. The NH Medical Examiner's office says that Taser hasn't influenced them. The NH Attorney General's office refers inquiries to the Vermont Attorney General, and other NH officials refer autopsy questions to the Vermont State Police. The Vermont State Police won't comment beyond saying that when it gets the autopsy report it will forward copies to the Attorney General and to the Orange County State's Attorney Office, which has primary jurisdiction, since Mason died in Thetford in Orange County.


William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

 

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+7 # ilenewells 2012-09-11 19:43
Taser's are used on people with mental illness when they are psychotic...the y are inhumane. It would be better to use a tranquilizer gun.
 
 
+22 # Phlippinout 2012-09-11 21:58
Holy shit people, this is disgusting. Cops are killing at will and never held responsible. But no one says a thing. I hate police now! I see a cop and all I see is a thug with a license to kill. They are not my friends, they are my enemy! That is what it has come to. No more excuses, make them responsible for the murders of innocent people that they kill.
 
 
0 # RandyF 2012-09-13 10:31
Most Police Officers take extra steps to de-escalate situations. They aren't killing at will. They are definately not getting away with anything as their actions are now scrutinized more now than ever before. A lot of police officer prefer not to have tazers for several reasons. Unfortunately, these evolved from political pressures. According to the article, 55 death nation wide occur annually due to tazer deaths. I would like to know how many deaths would have occurred if tazers were not in the inventory of "lesser lethal" options?
 
 
+25 # ritaague 2012-09-12 03:06
The young, 17 year old girl, cried last October as she begged me for help. Pulling up her blouse, she showed my three of five close range Taser burns - red burns that hurt just to look at. Her parents from had joined her in the Colo. Springs emergency room, following cops grabbing her, throwing her face down on a bed in her motel room where she and two other OWSers had spent the night to get out of the bitter cold, and, with no charges or advisement of rights, close range Tasered her repeatedly.

I took her to a nearby newspaper, and watched as staff photographed the gruesome burns. Parents, scared for their daughter, decided to not persue a civil action against cops and city. It flashed into my mind the Taser that had been used to threaten peace and justice activists at the 2007 St. Patrick's Day Parade, where that Taser threat was but one of the brutalizing/tor ture things done, including to a 65 year old, fully disabled former nun who was dragged by a cop in the street, in front of parade onlookers (including kids) until large sections of her lower belly and upper thigh were bloody and raw. Google: Colorado Springs Independent, Jan. 21, 2010, "No Peace or Justice".

What the hell, kill, torture, kill. No real McCoy investigation will occur, either locally or by the Dept. of Justice. Time to take off the blinders, see what this country has become, and.....

OCCUPY LIBERTY AND JUSTICE FOR ALL !!!
 
 
+8 # Glen 2012-09-12 05:07
Community/stree t level assaults are what will ultimately create a reason to fight back. And it WILL happen. Threats and the presence of military cops elicits emotion, but continued assaults will elicit anger and retaliation.

Somehow, I doubt that any government cares, but they WILL put down any retaliation with hard violence. It has already been shown that local cops are willing and able to attack.
 
 
+7 # oakes721 2012-09-12 05:54
"Corporations United" has allowed the laws to be turned backward. From Monsanto's lawsuits against those whom they've harmed to the gestapo immunity assured by weapons-makers who have weaseled their way into creating an American battlefield, this portable shock-treatment makes for a pocket-sized judge, jury and execution device.
 
 
+7 # Kootenay Coyote 2012-09-12 06:42
We’ve seen enough Taser abuse to know they kill, & Taser Corp. continues desperately to deny, lie & cover up its sins. In Canada, Robert Dziekanski was effectively murdered by out-of-control RCMP officers who tasered him numerous times for no greater offense than being a first-time air traveller, exhausted & confused after an 18-hour flight.
 
 
+3 # Granny Weatherwax 2012-09-12 06:46
How about requiring that security agents of all stripes be themselves tazed before they have the right to bear one?
 
 
0 # RandyF 2012-09-13 10:34
I cannot speak for ALL "security agents", however most police departments, in this case - the Vermont State Police - do receive training prior to use and are required to be on the receiving end (they are tazed) during training so they know what they are using.
 
 
0 # Mrcead 2012-09-12 08:05
Just speaking with frustration and anger here but we need to pass 2 laws regarding tazers (I'd love to get rid of them altogether to be honest).

1. A minimum 5 minute per event recharge after discharge. 50,000 volts brings down anyone. If you need more than that, you've drawn the wrong weapon and mis-assessed the situation.

2. Every firing event needs to be logged to a public database AS IT HAPPENS to allow for public scrutiny of the people whom WE PAY to PROTECT(key word) us. Your mobile phone routinely logs it's activity so it isn't a problem for a tazer to do the same.

A warranted use of a tazer under these rules will survive the rigors of public scrutiny should it go to trial. We can't trust parties with their own interests in mind to protect to safeguard such information.

Remember. Laws are often made in this country when people continually fail to act responsibly and in a civilised manner.
 

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