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World View: Security, Taser Guns and the Obnoxious Guest
Columnist Paul Raines ponders when and how security should intervene with people at public events who just won’t shut up
By Sandy Kendall
November 06, 2007
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CSO
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By Paul Raines
A security incident occurred a few weeks ago at the University of Florida during a visit by former presidential candidate and U.S. Senator John Kerry. During a question-and-answer period, a member of the audience, Andrew Meyer, was asking Kerry a question when the campus police intervened, tackled the student, administered a taser gun electronic shock, and hand-cuffed and arrested him. The protester spent a night in jail before being charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.
The incident achieved minor public notoriety via the Internet because a member of the audience captured the episode on video and posted it to YouTube (view here). Political blogs picked up on the story, and it was further amplified when television talk show host Bill O’Reilly called the protester a wimp for begging not to be tasered. O’Reilly then began hawking bumper stickers on his show that quoted Meyer’s pleas for mercy--“Don’t taze me, bro!” (View here.)
I viewed the video several times because I was so shocked by the incident. It appeared that Meyer--despite being long-winded and somewhat preachy--was simply exercising his right to free speech.
As the story unfolded, the campus police explained that they intervened for two reasons. First, they had been warned ahead of time that Meyer was a political activist; therefore, they had a heightened awareness of any of his actions. Second, although there was no way of knowing it by watching the video, the campus police said afterward that Meyer had been asked to sit down because he was not getting to the point. Not exactly a “taserable offense” in my book--especially because you can also hear Kerry tell the police that he would be happy to answer the question. In short, Meyer’s primary offense seemed to be, at first, that he was a bit obnoxious and long-winded, and then, that he demanded loudly to know why he was being arrested. To the campus police, this simple exercise of free speech constituted disruptive behaviour, resisting arrest and hence, the need for a taser shock. Nice try, but I think this flimsy justification sounds better in the original 1930s German.
Whether or not you agree with me that the police over-reacted, the incident raises interesting questions about when and how police or security personnel should intervene at public events. Ironically, the campus police at the University of Florida were well prepared for Kerry’s speech, in that they were able to id
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