Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
Depends. Police are allowed to use force, up to deadly force, if they fear for their life or safety.
So am I, and so is any man or woman. (With the caveat that the fear must be reasonable).
Police just have the additional power to use force even when they don't fear for their life or safety, if it is necessary to make an arrest.
The behavior of the father, from the filmclip, seemed to justify the use of taser. I mean, the father was hardly a bystander. Anyone attacking a police officer exercising his duty or defending himself should not be able to make that claim.
Obviously the jury saw it differently, but this says more about Western Australia than anything else.
Certainly. The tasering was justified, because the police did not know he had a heart condition. The headbutt was (arguably) justified, because the man's son did know he had a heart condition.
Justification hinges on what is reasonable given the information available to the actor at the moment they act. It's perfectly possible that both the officer and the son were justified, given what they knew at the time.

