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Md Ag Task Force on Electronic Weapons Report 2009

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TASK FORCE ON
ELECTRONIC WEAPONS

DECEMBER 2009

REPORT
OF THE
MARYLAND ATTORNEY
GENERAL’S TASK FORCE ON
ELECTRONIC WEAPONS

i

Foreword by Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler
The strength and integrity of our criminal justice system depend on a number of factors
including our ability to protect the safety of citizens while ensuring that all citizens are treated
fairly. Public confidence in the justice system cannot be maintained without making certain that
safety and fairness are pillars of the system. In order to preserve safety, law enforcement
personnel must have effective tools to do their jobs. In order to preserve fairness, those tools
must not be used in an arbitrary or unreasonable way.
On November 18, 2007, 20-year old Jarrel Gray of Frederick died after being shocked
with an electronic control weapon during an altercation with local police. As a result of the
controversy surrounding the death of Gray and similar incidents across the country, I created the
Attorney General’s Task Force on Electronic Weapons. In general, law enforcement personnel
view the device as a non-lethal way to restrain uncooperative and dangerous suspects. In
contrast, civil rights groups challenge the device’s safety and claim that law enforcement
personnel resort to electronic control weapon use too quickly and too frequently. The Task Force
was given the difficult takes of weighing all sides carefully and developing best practices for the
use of electronic control weapons by law enforcement.
After a year of gathering information, holding public hearings and numerous meetings,
and extensive deliberation, members of the Task Force compiled this report to document the
information they received and to make recommendations to Maryland elected officials and law
enforcement personnel. I appreciate the many hours the members of the Task Force spent
compiling this report. It is my hope that the recommendations offered in the report will be
carefully considered by the members of the General Assembly, and State and local law
enforcement.

Douglas F. Gansler

Table of Contents

Foreword by Attorney General

i

I.

Executive Summary

1

II.

Introduction

7

III.

Background

10

IV.

Planning and Implementation

14

V.

Training

21

VI.

Use-of-Force Policies

28

VII.

Medical Care

44

VIII.

Medical Support

45

IX.

Reporting and Investigation

54

X.

Monitoring, Data Collection, and Evaluation

56

XI.

Research

59

XII.

Civilian Use of Electronic Control Weapons

62

XIII.

Task Force Recommendations

65

XIV.

Proposed Research Suggestions

73

XV.

Proposed Legislative Agenda for the Maryland General Assembly

74

Appendices
A.

Witness List For Task Force Hearings

B.

Electronic Control Weapon Discharge Data

C.

Survey of Law Enforcement Electronic Control Weapon Policies

D.

Glossary of Terms

E.

List of Acronyms

F.

Acknowledgments

ii

I.

Executive Summary

Electronic control weapons (“ECWs”) can be an effective law enforcement tool
that often poses less risk to officers and civilians than other force options. However, it is
critical that the legislature, law enforcement agencies deploying these devices, and
officers on the street recognize the risks of serious injury and even death inherent in
ECW use.
Only after both the risks and benefits of ECWs are understood can reasonable
judgments be made about whether to adopt these devices, how to structure the
deployment process, the appropriate training, the procedures for proper use (in
particular, placement of this weapon in an agency’s use-of-force model and use in
certain situations or against certain populations), medical care following discharge, and
supervision and record keeping related to these weapons.
The Task Force makes 60 specific recommendations, covering each of the
issues listed above. In addition, it proposes suggestions for future research and a
legislative agenda. The Task Force’s complete recommendations are found below in
Part XIII of this report. The Task Force’s proposed suggestions for future research and
a legislative agenda are found below in parts XIV and XV, respectively.
There are a high number of detailed recommendations covering a broad range of
subjects because, to date, these issues have not been adequately addressed in
Maryland. While a few law enforcement agencies currently have reasonable training
and procedures, the majority of law enforcement agencies are inadequate across the
entire range of recommendations made by this Task Force. No agency currently follows
all of the best practices recommended here.
The fact that no agency in Maryland currently meets or exceeds the standards
set forth here should not be taken to mean that these recommendations are overly
stringent. Although reached independently, the Task Force’s conclusions mirror those
found by a long and distinguished list of similar bodies both in the United States and
abroad, including the following: the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Human Effects Center of
Excellence (funded by the U.S. Department of Defense), the United States Army, the
Police Executive Research Forum, the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies, the
International Association of Chiefs of Police, the Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards
Board, the Canadian Police Research Centre, the United Kingdom’s Defense Scientific
Advisory Council’s Subcommittee on the Medical Implications of Less-lethal Weapons,
and the Braidwood Inquiry (sponsored at a national level by the Canadian government).
Each of these reports was reviewed in detail and is cited where appropriate below. In
addition to reviewing the work of similar bodies, the Task Force’s year-long process
included a careful review of the medical literature, the policy recommendations of
various advocacy groups, the invited testimony and participation of all stakeholders and
the testimony offered during two public hearings. The Task Force’s findings and
recommendations are in keeping with and supported by this extensive fact-finding
process.

1

The consistency between the Task Force’s recommendations and those of these
other groups underscores the consensus about what needs to be done to ensure that
ECWs are used as effectively and safely as possible. This consistency across so many
organizations also demonstrates that the Task Force’s recommendations can be
implemented here as well.
ECWs are a new and emerging technology and the science about their effects is
constantly evolving.1 Prior to the work of this Task Force, there had been no effort in
Maryland to sift through the available information and provide clear guidance. The law
enforcement representatives on this Task Force both recognized the need for such
guidance and were invaluable in shaping it.
Training materials provided by the manufacturer of these devices and early law
enforcement training tended to significantly understate the risks associated with ECW
use. This fact, coupled with the ease of use of this device, appear to have lead to overreliance on ECWs by law enforcement nationwide, particularly in response to relatively
low-level threats of harm and situations that have now been shown to involve a
heightened risk of injury or death. These events, seen as abuses by many, appear to
have arisen primarily from under-education of law enforcement officers regarding the
risks associated with ECW use.
Although rare, serious unintended ECW injuries and deaths do occur. Even
though these events are unusual, their impact can be substantial. Of course, any injury
or death is a tragedy for the individual affected, his or her friends and family, and the
officer who discharged the ECW.
Moreover, due in part to the novelty of the weapon, when serious ECW injuries or
deaths do occur, they are often reported broadly by the media. Likewise, this same
effect is seen when news of negative ECW outcomes is spread by word-of-mouth
through the community. Community reaction can broaden the impact of unintended
negative ECW outcomes beyond the subject and the officer who discharged the ECW,
affecting community-police relations. In this way, misapplication of ECWs can impair
the effectiveness of the agency and the safety of its officers. Finally, some agencies
have stopped using ECWs as a result of community reaction to high-profile ECW
injuries or deaths.
As a result of the potentially far-reaching consequences of even one ECWrelated death or serious injury, it is critical to minimize the occurrence of these
outcomes. This is accomplished through an appreciation of the risks of ECWs as well
1

The current ECW market is dominated by a particular manufacturer. Its chief product employs
technology involving darts fired from a distance which penetrate the body and through which electrical
current is sent over attached wires with the intent of causing pain and muscle incapacitation. The same
device can be used in pain-compliance mode by touching its probes to the body. This mode of use does
not cause incapacitation, but seeks to gain compliance merely through the application of significant pain
induced by electrical current. Because this is the current state of the art, it was necessary to address the
specific effects of this technology in some of the Task Force’s recommendations. However, the majority
of the Task Force’s recommendations are meant to and should apply to other types of electronic weapons
which may be introduced in the future.

2

as the benefits, and by ensuring that ECWs are used appropriately and only against
appropriate targets. The examples of injuries and deaths cited herein from the medical
literature and anecdotal accounts should be carefully reviewed and incorporated, when
possible, into officer training to help avoid the potential for reoccurrence.
Although a careful review of all of the recommendations of the Task Force is
necessary in order to get full value from this report, and even though each
recommendation is equally important, the following synopsis of 20 of its
recommendations may assist in reviewing the balance of this Report:
Implementation Recommendations:
¾

To ensure community concerns are understood and addressed before
deciding whether to implement an ECW program and, if implemented, what
safety and accountability mechanisms should be put in place, the decisionmaking process should involve community stakeholders (e.g., civil rights and
mental health advocacy groups, medical professionals, lawmakers, and other
interested parties).

Training Recommendations:
¾

The Maryland Police and Correctional Training Commission should
incorporate the Task Force’s recommendations into ECW training
requirements for Maryland public safety agencies that use ECWs.

¾

An agency’s training program must be mandatory for all officers authorized to
use ECWs and should include provisions for certification and recertification,
and have components for knowledge and proficiency testing, as well as
scenario-based training.

¾

Officers must be trained that the ECW is a less-lethal weapon, and not a nonlethal or less-than-lethal weapon.

Use-of-Force Recommendations:
¾

ECWs should not be used against a passive or restrained subject, or
otherwise to counter passive noncompliance, absent an imminent threat of
physical harm.

¾

The act of fleeing or destroying evidence, in and of itself, should not justify the
use of an ECW.

¾

Officers should be permitted to use ECWs only when individuals pose an
imminent threat of physical injury to themselves or others. For the purposes
of this standard, “physical injury” should have the same meaning as it does in
Maryland’s definition of second degree assault on a law enforcement officer.
Specifically, “physical injury” means “any impairment of physical condition,
3

excluding minor injuries.” A threat of such minor injuries ordinarily does not
warrant the application of a potentially lethal force option.
¾

Agencies should adopt a use-of-force model that recognizes that in the
following situations involving a heightened risk of serious injury or death,
ECWs should only be used when deadly force is otherwise legally permitted:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

¾

persons in elevated positions, who might be at risk of a dangerous fall;
persons operating vehicles or machinery;
persons who are fleeing on foot;
persons who are already restrained in handcuffs;
persons who might be in danger of drowning;
environments in which combustible vapors and liquids or other flammable
substances including but not limited to alcohol-based Oleoresin Capsicum
(“OC”); or
similar situations involving heightened risk of serious injury or death to the
subject.

Agencies should adopt a use-of-force model that recognizes that the
populations listed below may be at a heightened risk of serious injury or
death. When deciding whether to discharge an ECW, the officer should
consider the heightened risk of serious injury or death for these groups and
be able to articulate the justification for exposing a person to increased risk:
•
•
•
•
•
•

persons with known heart conditions, including pacemakers;
elderly persons or young children;
frail persons or persons with very thin statures (i.e., may have thin chest
walls);
women known to be pregnant;
persons in mental/medical crisis; or
persons under the influence of drugs or intoxicated by alcohol.

¾

Agencies should adopt a use-of-force model that recognizes that unless
articulated exigent circumstances exist justifying the increased risk, ECWs
should not be discharged at sensitive areas of the body, including the head,
neck, chest, or genitals.

¾

An individual’s apparent mental health or medical crisis (including any display
of symptoms that are considered by some to constitute a syndrome called
“excited delirium”) should not in itself justify the use of an ECW.

¾

Multiple ECWs should not be simultaneously discharged against a person
unless there is a specific articulable reason for doing so and should be
avoided when possible.

¾

An officer should only administer an additional ECW discharge after an initial
discharge if the officer has concluded that the subject still poses an imminent
4

threat of significant physical harm and other options are not appropriate.
Repeated or prolonged (i.e., beyond the five-second standard cycle)
discharges should be avoided whenever possible due to the increased risk of
serious injury or death.
¾

ECWs should not be used in pain compliance (drive-stun) mode except when
necessary to complete the incapacitation circuit, or when the probe mode has
been ineffective and use of drive-stun mode is necessary to prevent imminent
harm to the officer or others.

Medical Care Recommendations:
¾

Agency policies and training should reflect the responsibility to ensure the
rapid provision of medical care, particularly where the need for medical
intervention was cited as a reason for the ECW discharge.

Reporting and Investigation Recommendations:
¾

Comprehensive use-of-force reports should be completed when an ECW is
discharged or aimed (e.g., the subject is targeted with the ECW’s ”laser” or
“red dot”). Information recorded on use-of-force reports should include data
required for consistent, state-wide reporting.

¾

A post-discharge investigation should be conducted of all discharges,
including accidental discharges. This investigation should include interviews
with the participants and other witnesses, a review of the use-of-force report,
and collection and review of evidence, including cartridges, ECW data, and
photographs.

¾

When a death occurs in temporal proximity to an ECW discharge, the State
Medical Examiner should specifically indicate whether the use of the ECW
may have or did contribute to the death. “Excited delirium” should not be
cited as the cause of death where there is a known direct cause. The Medical
Examiner should explain in the autopsy and death certification the cluster of
symptoms that led to the finding of “excited delirium.”

Monitoring and Data Collection Recommendations:
¾

Agencies should maintain comprehensive data (identified in this report)
regarding use of ECWs for the purpose of tracking trends over time and
determining whether some officers are using ECWs at a different rate or in a
different manner than similarly situated peers. This data should be
considered when determining whether to recertify or decertify officers for
ECW use.

5

Proposed Legislative Agenda for the Maryland General Assembly:
¾

A requirement that the Maryland Police and Correctional Training
Commission (“MPCTC”) incorporate through regulation this report’s training
recommendations into the Commission’s law enforcement ECW certification
and training program instituted pursuant to Chapter 320, Laws of Maryland
2009. Chapter 320 requires a law enforcement officer to complete MPCTC
training before being issued an ECW and requires MPCTC to provide such
training and related certification and recertification. As noted in this report,
best practices reflect the need for such training to include important
components to address officer safety and public safety priorities to
accomplish the goals of Chapter 320. Such legislation would ensure
fulfillment of the legislative intent expressed in Chapter 320.

¾

A requirement for state-wide collection, compilation, and analysis of uniform
and comprehensive agency data regarding ECW use. The data collected
should include all data listed in the report above, as well as the Medical
Examiner’s report for any death for which an ECW is listed as a cause of
death or a contributing factor. This data should be collected, compiled and
published annually by the Governor’s Office of Crime Control and Prevention
(or other appropriate state agency). The legislation should also require that
each individual law enforcement agency make its reported data available to
the public upon request to ensure that citizens can be informed about use of
ECWs in their communities.

The highest and best use of this report is to provide recommendations which, if
followed, will prevent unnecessary injuries and deaths. Each Task Force member has
expended substantial time and effort over the course of a year because we view our
work as no less than a life-or-death matter and the resulting product (not just this brief
summary) should be reviewed in its entirety with the care required in such
circumstances.
In conclusion, broad adoption of the full recommendations of the Task Force will
save lives, prevent injury, improve community-police relations and allow the continued
use of an effective law enforcement tool.

6

II.

Introduction

Maryland Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler authorized the creation of the
Task Force on Electronic Weapons (“Task Force”) in October 2008 to assess issues of
current and critical importance to residents of Maryland and to provide policymakers
with concrete judgments and recommendations for best practices regarding the use of
Electronic Control Weapons (“ECWs”) within the State of Maryland. With members
diverse in backgrounds and perspectives, members of the Task Force endeavored to
reach a meaningful consensus on policy through private and nonpartisan deliberations.
The Task Force is independent of the Attorney General and is solely responsible for the
content of this report. The Task Force unanimously endorses the general policy thrust
and judgments reached by the group with no dissenting opinions.
The Task Force was convened in November 2008 and its members worked
diligently to fulfill the Task Force’s charge. The Chair of the Task Force is Michael
Higginbotham, Professor of Law at the University of Baltimore, and the Vice-Chair of the
Task Force is Byron Warnken, Associate Professor of Law at the University of
Baltimore. Representing Attorney General Gansler on the Task Force is Carl Snowden,
the Director for Civil Rights in the Maryland Office of the Attorney General. In addition,
there are twelve other members of the Task Force, including active members of
Maryland’s law enforcement community and civil rights organizations.2 They are:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Donald W. Alves, M.D., M.S., FACEP, Attending Faculty, Emergency
Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine; Medical Director, Maryland
State Police;
Cindy Boersma, Legislative Director, ACLU of Maryland;
Carol A. Crawford, First Assistant State’s Attorney, Office of the State’s
Attorney for Montgomery County, Maryland;
Cary J. Hansel, III, Attorney, Joseph, Greenwald & Laake, P.A.;
Scott M. Hammack, Attorney, O’Melveny & Myers LLP;
Christy E. Lopez, Attorney, Independent Assessment & Monitoring, LLP;
James Johnson, Chief of Police, Baltimore County Police Department;
George K. McKinney, United States Marshal (Retired), Baltimore, Maryland;
Ken Meekins, Chief of Police, Town of Hampstead Police Department;
Carl R. Pelton, B.S., NREMT-P, UMBC Graduate Student, Emergency Health
Services; Consulting Paramedic and Law Enforcement;
Vernon H. Ricks Jr., State Chair on Law Enforcement, NAACP of Maryland;
and
Mark Warren, Major, Baltimore County Police Department.

This report of the Task Force makes recommendations to Maryland law
enforcement agencies and to elected officials. Each recommendation must be
evaluated independently to determine its appropriate application to a particular agency.
2

Members’ affiliations are listed for identification purposes only and do not imply institutional
endorsement.

7

While some of the recommendations should apply to all agencies, others may be more
appropriately assessed on an agency-by-agency basis.
It is important at the outset to say that the Task Force recognizes that there are
many constituencies that have an interest in the subject matter of this report, including
active law enforcement personnel, members of civil rights organizations, segments of
the medical and legal communities, individuals shocked by ECWs, and those civilians
who have interacted or may interact in the future with law enforcement officers, among
others. Relevant considerations regarding ECW use are not limited solely to the
spheres of science, policy, community concerns, or law enforcement desires. Rather, it
is important to identify the common ground shared by all of the various stakeholders
and to ensure the Task Force’s recommendations reflect those commonalities. The
Task Force has endeavored to properly balance the legitimate concerns that all
interested parties have expressed. Because of the many interests at stake, it was not
easy for the Task Force to arrive at a consensus. Yet at all times the Task Force has
strived to maintain an independent, inclusive, and objective process. This goal of
balance has been considered throughout the process, and the Task Force hopes it is
reflected in these recommendations.
Beginning in November 2008, the Task Force convened twice per month. The
first two meetings were devoted to selecting, vetting, and confirming members. The
Chair and Vice-Chair strove to make certain that the Task Force membership not only
was diverse in terms of race and gender, but also reflected constituencies that had
previously indicated interest or concern regarding the use of ECWs, such as active law
enforcement personnel and civil rights organizations. The Chair and Vice-Chair also
determined that the Task Force needed members with medical and legal expertise to
address areas of medicine and law that might arise during the investigation and
preparation of this report.
The next six meetings in January, February, and March of 2009 focused on
identifying and gathering information relevant to the use and deployment of ECWs.
Literature was surveyed and presentations were made by TASER International, Inc. and
the Baltimore County Police Department. The presentations included demonstrations of
ECWs.
In April, the Task Force held two public hearings. The Task Force sent more
than 1,000 invitations to elected officials, law enforcement personnel, civil rights
advocates, academics, educators, and manufacturers of ECWs. Additionally, the
hearings were announced on several radio stations and on the Attorney General’s
website. All persons who expressed an interest in attending or testifying at the hearings
were permitted to do so.
The first public hearing took place on April 23, 2009, at the Parks and Recreation
Building, 6600 Kenilworth Avenue, Riverdale, Maryland 20737, and consisted of two
separate panels. The first was composed of active law enforcement personnel and
included: Sergeant Angelo Giafes, Elkton Police Department; Captain Alan Goldberg,
Montgomery County Police Department; Captain Kenneth Hasenei, Department of
8

Maryland State Police; Police Officer III Joan Logan, Montgomery County Police
Department; Chief William McMahon, Howard County Department of Police; and
Richard Speake, Training Coordinator, Anne Arundel County Sheriff’s Office.
The second panel consisted of civil rights advocates and included: Terry Bohrer,
Mental Health Association of Maryland; Mike Mage, ACLU of Montgomery County;
Roger Copeland, Frederick County NAACP; Elbridge James, Montgomery County
NAACP; and June Dillard, Prince George’s County NAACP.
The second public hearing was conducted on April 30, 2009, at the Angelos Law
Center Building at the University of Baltimore, 1420 North Charles Street, Baltimore,
Maryland 21201, and consisted of four separate panels. The first panel was composed
of elected officials and included: Senator Delores Kelly, Maryland State Senate;
Reuben Collins, Charles County Commission; Edith Patterson, Charles County
Commission; Judy Cooper, Charles County Commission; and Delegate Talmadge
Branch, Maryland General Assembly. The second panel consisted of active law
enforcement personnel and included: Chief Deputy Douglas Dodd, Worcester County
Sheriff’s Office; 1st Sergeant Jason Pulliam, Maryland Transportation Authority Police
Department; 1st Sergeant Timothy Eikenberg, Maryland Transportation Authority Police
Department; Police Officer II Brian Brummitt, Maryland Transportation Authority Police
Department; Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld, III, Baltimore City Police
Department; and Chief Bernadette DiPino, Ocean City Police Department. The third
panel was composed of civil rights advocates and included: Guy Djoken, Frederick
County NAACP; Barry Kissing, Frederick County NAACP; Coleman Bazelon, ACLU of
Maryland; and Mark Shmueli, Law Office of Mark Shmueli.
Peter Holran, a
representative of TASER International, Inc., testified for the fourth panel.
The May meeting of the Task Force focused on medical and racial aspects of
ECW discharges. The meeting included a presentation by Dr. Mary Ripple, the Deputy
Chief Medical Examiner for the State of Maryland. The Task Force also discussed
concerns that minorities are disproportionately victims of ECW discharges by law
enforcement personnel. Based upon this discussion, the Task Force requested ECW
usage data from Maryland law enforcement agencies.
During the months of June and July 2009, the Task Force formed a drafting
subcommittee that was tasked with proposing recommendations to the full Task Force.
Once the full Task Force reached a consensus on these recommendations during
meetings in September and October, the recommendations served as the foundation of
this report. The drafting subcommittee then began to draft the report based on the
agreed upon recommendations. In November and December, the Task Force met on a
number of occasions to debate and clarify difficult issues and to finalize the report.

9

III.

Background

Over 14,200 law enforcement agencies in over 40 countries deploy ECWs.3 All
told, over 406,000 ECWs have been sold to law enforcement agencies and over
196,000 have been sold to civilians.4 A recent survey of Maryland law enforcement
agencies found that the use of ECWs is similarly widespread in Maryland.5 Of the 32
agencies that responded to the survey, 24 use ECWs.6
The growing availability of ECWs has led to countless examples of ECWs being
used in lieu of lethal force to safely subdue violent individuals with no resulting
significant injuries. Far less often, an individual has died or suffered serious injuries
after being shocked by an ECW. One medical study quantified the rate of serious
injuries associated with ECW use at 0.3%.7 Deaths are even less frequent. An
Amnesty International report identified approximately 350 deaths that occurred
“proximate” to the use of ECWs,8 which results in a rate of death of less than 0.05%.9 In
discussing deaths following ECW use, the Task Force did not determine that the
medical community has concluded that the ECW’s electrical impulse causes a lethal
3

See TASER Press Kit, available at http://www.taser.com/company/pressroom/Documents/TASER
Press Kit 06 11 09.pdf (hereinafter “TASER Press Kit”).
4
Id.
5
The ACLU of Maryland conducted the survey in conjunction with its role on this Task Force. The
survey sought information from law enforcement agencies in each of Maryland’s counties as well as some
of Maryland’s larger municipal jurisdictions. Thirty-two jurisdictions responded to the survey. See
Appendix C.
6
The following jurisdictions reported that they do not use ECWs: Annapolis Police Department;
Anne Arundel Police Department; Baltimore City Schools Police Department; Baltimore County Sheriff’s
Office; Carroll County Sheriff’s Office; Kent County Sheriff’s Office; Talbot County Sheriff’s Office; and the
University of Maryland at College Park Police Department. See Appendix C.
7
William Bozeman et al., “Safety and Injury Profile of Conducted Electrical Weapons Used by Law
Enforcement Officers Against Criminal Suspects,” [Multicenter study] 53 Annals Emergency Med. 480,
Apr. 2009, available at http://download.journals.elsevierhealth.com/pdfs/journals/0196-0644/
PIIS0196064408020611.pdf (hereinafter “Bozeman Study”). The Bozeman Study found the rate of minor
injuries was 21.6%. The study defined minor injuries to include “superficial puncture wounds,”
contusions, lacerations, “superficial burn marks, a finger fracture, a nasal fracture, a case of epistaxis,
and a chipped tooth.” Id.
8
Amnesty Int’l, “‘Less Than Lethal’?, The Use of Stun Weapons in US Law Enforcement,” p. 27,
Dec. 2008 (hereinafter “Amnesty Int’l Report”). The Amnesty International report did not purport to find a
causal relationship between the deaths and the ECW discharge, a fact that many have pointed to in
arguing that the report overestimates the number of deaths actually caused by ECWs. Others have
suggested that the Amnesty International report may have underestimated the number of deaths
associated with ECWs. See http://truthnottasers.blogspot.com/2008/04/what-follows-are-names-whereknown.html (listing 459 people “who died after they were tasered”). Simply put, the best available figures
may understate the risk of ECW exposure in the field by including subjects shocked in sterile and
controlled settings, but it may overstate the incidence of ECW-caused death by including deaths that are
merely proximate to and not unequivocally caused by an ECW. There appear to be valid quarrels on both
sides with these data. Nevertheless, these data are the best currently-available estimates of the
incidence of death from ECW discharge.
9
The rate of death was calculated comparing the number of “proximate” deaths identified by
Amnesty International to the approximately 660,000 times an ECW has been discharged in the field. See
TASER Press Kit, supra note 3, p. 6. If the approximately 880,000 volunteer exposures are included, the
rate of death falls even further to 0.02%. Id. Using the higher estimate of 459 deaths yields a rate of
death of .07% (field discharges) or 0.03% (including training discharges).

10

arrhythmia. However, the Task Force did find sufficient consensus that secondary
factors from the restraint and incapacitation caused by an ECW (e.g., a fall or stress
caused by being shocked) may cause serious injury or death.
While instances of death or serious injury following ECW use are rare, such
incidents nonetheless have given rise to concerns that the risks associated with ECWs
are not fully appreciated by those who use them. Every well-trained officer understands
that other force options, such as batons, OC spray, or physical strikes, have the
potential to kill or seriously injure a subject. However, because ECWs have been
widely-described as “a safer alternative to other uses of force,”10 not all law enforcement
officers and agencies fully understand the potential risks associated with using an ECW,
nor the circumstances that exacerbate those risks.11
Furthermore, when ECW-proximate deaths have occurred, they tend to receive a
high level of attention, and may give rise to community concerns and strain law
enforcement-community relations. For example, on November 18, 2007, Jarrell Gray, a
young African-American man, died after being shocked with an ECW during an
altercation with a Frederick County Sheriff’s Deputy.12 The deputy responded to a
report of an on-going fight between several males. When the deputy and other law
enforcement personnel arrived at approximately 5:00 a.m. at the parking lot of a
townhouse complex in Frederick, Maryland, they found four males, including Gray,
engaged in a fight. After trying unsuccessfully to break up the fight with verbal
commands for the suspects to raise their hands, the deputy discharged an ECW on
Gray. When the first discharge failed to result in Gray’s compliance with verbal
commands to raise his hands, the deputy discharged the ECW on Gray a second time.
Each discharge lasted five seconds with twenty-three seconds lapsing between the first
and second discharges. After the second discharge, Gray fell to the ground. Medical
10

See About TASER International, http://www.taser.com/company/Pages/AboutTASER.aspx.
Inquiries by other entities have reached findings consistent with the Task Force’s finding that
many law enforcement agencies do not sufficiently prepare their officers for the potential risks of ECWs.
A recent report by the American Medical Association found that “appropriate training and supervision of
ECW use is lacking in some jurisdictions.” American Medical Association, Council on Science and Public
Health, “Use of Tasers by Law Enforcement Agencies,” CSAPH Rep. 6-A-09, p. 9, June 2009, available
at http://www.policeone.com/policeone/data/pdfs/taser_ecd_resolution.pdf (hereinafter “AMA Report”).
There are many incidents indicating that the potential dangers of ECWs are not fully understood. For
example, correctional officers in Florida recently discharged ECWs in drive-stun mode against their own
children in three separate state prisons as part of “Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day.” Meg
Laughlin, “Corrections Sergeant Shocks Kids with Stun Gun During Prison Visit,” St. Petersburg Times,
May 2, 2009, available at http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/article997379.ece. In another
incident, police used an ECW to force a man to comply with a court order to provide a DNA sample. Rick
Pfeiffer, “TASER Use to Obtain DNA Not Unconstitutional,” Niagara Gazette, June 4, 2009, available at
http://www.niagara-gazette.com/breakingnews/local_story_154132251.html. Many officers may believe
that they understand the impact of ECW discharge because they have had an ECW discharged against
them during ECW training. As noted in Part V of this report, this training can be misleading.
12
The facts of this incident are taken from Steve Lash, “Maryland Task Force Looks at Taming the
Taser,” Daily Record (Baltimore), May 4, 2009; Keith L. Martin, “Taser Probe Nears End, But Doubt
Lingers,” Gazette (Maryland), May 15, 2008, available at
http://www.gazette.net/stories/051508/walknew173737_32356.shtml; and “Maryland Man Dies After
Being Tasered,” NBC4 Online News, Nov. 19, 2007, available at http://www.officer.com/web/online/
Careers-and-Recruitment/Maryland-Man-Dies-After-Being-Tasered/12$38952.
11

11

aid was administered immediately but Gray did not respond. After being taken by
ambulance to Frederick Memorial Hospital, Gray was pronounced dead three hours
later.
The Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner concluded that the cause of
Gray’s death was “[s]udden death associated with restraint and alcohol intoxication.”13
Although the only method of restraint specifically identified in the autopsy was “an
electronic control device (TASER),” the Medical Examiner did not specifically identify
the ECW as a cause of or as a contributing factor to Gray’s death.14 Rather, the
Medical Examiner concluded that “[t]he temporal relationship of the TASER deployment
associated with alcohol intoxication and the interaction with the natural anatomic
deviations to cause the sudden death of Mr. Gray is not clearly understood. Therefore,
the manner of death is UNDETERMINED.”15
Gray was 20-years old and deaf in one ear. In response to the initiation of a
grand jury investigation, the deputy’s attorney, Daniel Karp, indicated that “no
reasonable well-trained officer would have known that using [an ECW] under these
circumstances could have resulted in serious injury or death.”16 Guy Djoken, President
of the Frederick County Branch of the Maryland NAACP, indicated that Gray’s death
demonstrates the need for a further examination into ECW use by law enforcement
officers as well as the safety of the device.17 On May 9, 2008, the grand jury
investigating the case ruled that the deputy, in attempting to arrest Gray, was justified in
using an ECW. Civil litigation is pending.18

13

See Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, State of Maryland, Post Mortem Examination, Case
No. 07-8927, Apr. 23, 2008.
14
Id.
15
Id. In some of the other Maryland deaths proximate to ECW use, the Maryland Medical Examiner
has found that the method of restraint was a factor that contributed to the death. An ECW was one of the
restraints used, but was not singled out as a contributing factor. Further study, including review of the
autopsy reports, is necessary in order to draw any meaningful conclusions from these facts, however.
Further research into this area is warranted by the fact that the Task Force is concerned that, in some
states, although not in Maryland, TASER International has sued medical examiners in connection with
findings that its products were the cause of death. See Robert Anglen, “Judge Rules for Taser in Causeof-Death Decisions,” Arizona Republic, May, 2, 2008, available at http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/
2008/05/02/20080502taser0503.html. The National Association of Medical Examiners has taken the
position that these suits, are “dangerously close to intimidation,” and that the manufacturer is, “attempting
to send a message to medical examiners that if they elect to make that determination they may face a
civil suit.” Adrian Humphreys, “Taser Win in Court Puts Chill on Doctors,” The National Post, May 7,
2008, available at http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=499151 (quoting Jeff Jentzen,
president of the National Association of Medical Examiners). If medical inquiry anywhere is quashed, it
impacts decision making regarding ECWs here in Maryland, and is therefore a concern of this Task
Force.
16
Steve Lash, “Maryland Task Force Looks At Taming The Taser,” Daily Record (Baltimore), May
4, 2009.
17
See id.
18
On July 17, 2009, a Federal District Court denied the deputy and county commissioners’ motion
for summary judgment. An appeal of that ruling is currently pending. See Gray v. Torres, 2009 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 61994 (D. Md. July 17, 2009).

12

Mr. Gray is one of nine individuals in Maryland who have died after being
shocked by an ECW since 2004.19 Incidents similar to the death of Mr. Gray inspired
calls for more consistent ECW policies and training, and were the impetus for the
authorization of this Task Force by the Attorney General. The Task Force reviewed
Maryland law enforcement agencies’ ECW polices and found that ECW training, use,
and monitoring vary widely in many respects. While the Task Force recognizes that
agency approaches to ECWs may appropriately vary in some respects because of the
size and type of the agency, regardless of the particular approach an agency takes, the
use of ECWs should be respectful of civil rights and as safe and effective as possible.
With this in mind, and in accord with the Attorney General’s mandate, the Task Force
has developed recommendations for ECW best practices that should be implemented in
law enforcement agencies throughout Maryland.20
The Task Force’s recommendations reflect a belief that, when used appropriately
with a full understanding of their risks, ECWs can be a beneficial law enforcement tool
that can effectively resolve situations with fewer injuries to law enforcement officers and
civilians alike. At the same time, the Task Force’s recommendations reflect the
recognition by law enforcement officials and others appearing before the Task Force
that the use of ECWs poses serious risks to suspects, law enforcement agencies, and
the communities they serve. This risk is exacerbated when ECWs are used improperly
or proximate to serious injury or death.
The Task Force’s recommendations, listed at the end of this report and explained
below, are presented as guidance and best practices to law enforcement agencies to
assist them in their decision to reject or adopt the use of ECWs and, if they do elect to
use ECWs, to assist them in maximizing benefits while avoiding potential negative
consequences.

19

The other individuals are: Dwight Madison (6/13/09); Thomas Campbell (8/18/07); Marcus D.
Skinner (5/26/07); Terrill Heath (5/14/07); Uywanda Peterson (4/23/07); Ryan Lee Meyers (3/16/07);
Theodore Rosenberry (3/24/06); and Eric Wolle (4/27/04). See “Taser Inmate Dies in Hospital,” The
Washington Times, June 15, 2009 (Madison); Luke Broadwater, “Third Person Dies After Police Taser
Strike,” Baltimore Examiner, Aug. 23, 2007 (Campbell); Ruben Castaneda, “Tasers Used on Bound
Suspect: Sources Say Man Was Shocked Twice Before He Died,” Washington Post, May 31, 2007
(Skinner); Derek Valcourt, “Man Dies After Police Officer Uses Taser on Him,” WJZ CBS News, May 15,
2007 (Heath); Derek Valcourt, “Witnesses Contradict Police in Taser Death,” WJZ CBS News, Apr. 27,
2007 (Peterson); Adam May, “Man’s Death Prompts Call for Police Taser Review,” WJZ CBS News, May
20, 2007 (Meyers); Pepper Ballard, “Doctors Rule Heart Problem, Cocaine Cause Man’s Death,” The
(Hagerstown) Herald-Mail, April 27, 2006 (Rosenburry); David Snyder, “Md. Family Grieves for Mentally Ill
Man: Schizophrenic Died After Being Subdued by Officers; No Wrongdoing Found,” Washington Post,
June 26, 2004 (Wolle).
20
While this report was drafted primarily with police departments’ and sheriffs’ offices’ field
operations in mind, the recommendations and their reasoning generally apply to corrections departments
and the detention components of sheriffs’ departments.

13

IV.

Planning and Implementation

The Task Force’s review of ECW use by law enforcement agencies in Maryland
indicates that the success of adopting these weapons as a use-of-force option—in
terms of injury and complaint reduction, reduction of overall uses of force, and a
strengthening of police-community relationships—depends in significant part on whether
the law enforcement agency has carefully researched and evaluated the impact of using
ECWs, and whether it has involved the community in this process.
The Task Force found that a number of factors must be carefully considered
before a law enforcement agency decides whether to acquire ECWs.
Working with Internal and Community Stakeholders
Generally, law enforcement agencies with a history of forging positive
relationships with the larger community can expect less tension surrounding ECW
use.21 A law enforcement agency that works in partnership with the community it serves
will have less mistrust over the decision to use ECWs. This trust is earned by thorough
training, transparency, strict oversight, accountability, and the implementation of solid
policies. The process of considering whether to implement ECWs can benefit from a
close police-community partnership, and can help strengthen this partnership.
The more successful ECW programs seek the involvement of a broad range of
community stakeholders (e.g., civil rights and mental health advocacy groups, medical
professionals, lawmakers, and other interested persons and groups) in the decisionmaking process from the outset. This approach helps ensure community concerns are
understood and addressed in deciding how to implement an ECW program and
provides guidance on the safety and accountability mechanisms appropriate for the
community in which the program operates.22

21

Witnesses at Task Force hearings reported that the NAACP responded favorably to the Howard
County Department of Police’s decision to use ECWs after considerable efforts by the Police Department
to work with the community on this issue. Testimony of Chief William J. McMahon, Howard County
Department of Police, Apr. 23, 2009; Testimony of Terry Bohrer, Mental Health Association of Maryland,
Apr. 23, 2009. In contrast, witnesses testified that the death of a man after an ECW was discharged
against him by Frederick County Police exacerbated an already tension-filled relationship between the
community and this police department. Testimony of June Dillard, Prince George’s County NAACP, Apr.
23, 2009; Testimony of Guy Djoken, Frederick County NAACP, Apr. 30, 2009.
22
For example, the Howard County Department of Police reported to the Task Force the planning
process they undertook before deciding to acquire ECWs. The department consulted with their local
NAACP branch and other community organizations. They responded directly to community
representatives regarding their expressed concerns. They also explained to representatives of the
community why they wanted to acquire ECWs, how ECWs would be incorporated into their use-of-force
practices, and the oversight that would be provided. Finally, they started with a pilot program and
included the community in an evaluation of that program before expanding the number of officers issued
ECWs. As a result, the department reports that they have the support of their community leaders for their
ECW program. Testimony of Chief William J. McMahon, Howard County Department of Police, Apr. 23,
2009. As another example, the Montgomery County Police Department explained to the Task Force that
through their work with the mental health advocacy community, the department incorporated model crisis

14

Law enforcement coordination with representatives of racial and ethnic minority
groups is critical to ensure that agencies recognize these groups’ concerns and can
respond effectively. The Task Force did not find that ECWs are, in general, discharged
against African-Americans or Latinos with any discriminatory intent or animus.
However, the Task Force did not assess whether African-Americans or Latinos have
ECWs discharged against them at a rate inconsistent with their respective arrest rates.
A lack of complete data precluded such analyses. Nonetheless, the perception among
African-Americans and Latinos that the use of ECWs has a disproportionately high
impact on them compared to non-Latino white Marylanders is not without basis. As
data provided by 23 Maryland law enforcement agencies to the Task Force confirms,
African-Americans and Latinos are over-represented in the rate at which they are
shocked with ECWs, compared to their percentage of the population. These data show
that 45% of individuals who were shocked by ECWs were African-American, despite the
fact that African-Americans make up only 21% of the population of those jurisdictions.
Similarly, at least one jurisdiction reports that 36% of those shocked by ECWs were
Latino compared to their 20% representation in the general population in that
jurisdiction. The language barriers that exist with some communities further underscore
the importance of identifying and involving relevant community representatives in the
decision about whether to add ECWs and how to plan for their implementation if the
jurisdiction decides to move forward.
Coordination with mental health advocates is also critical. In testimony to the
Task Force, mental health advocacy organizations were united in urging law
enforcement agencies to consult with local mental health experts and advocates before
deciding to acquire ECWs. Law enforcement officers are increasingly the first
responders to situations involving a mental health crisis where confrontational or
dangerous behavior indicates a need for rapid medical attention and where a typical
“command and control” approach can dangerously escalate the situation. ECWs can be
an effective alternative to lethal force in situations involving persons in mental health
crisis.23 However, the introduction of ECWs without an adequate training or policy
foundation can result in their overuse in situations involving persons in mental health
crisis. This is particularly problematic since this population may be at a heightened risk
for serious injury or death after an ECW discharge. Law enforcement agencies should
work with mental health advocates to implement best practices for identifying and
effectively responding to these situations. Mental health organizations should also
educate law enforcement agencies about the particular population in the agency’s area,
providing information that may be important to the agency’s evaluation about the impact
ECWs may have in its community.

intervention/de-escalation techniques into their ECW training and certification. Testimony of Joan Logan,
Police Officer III, Montgomery County Police Department, Apr. 23, 2009.
23
See “Taser Tactical Conference,” Law & Order Magazine, Oct. 2007, available at
http://www.hendonpub.com/resources/articlearchive/details.aspx?ID=4132 (hereinafter “TASER Tactical
Conference”) (identifying 23 documented incidents involving mentally disturbed individuals with edged
weapons where despite lethal force being justified, an officer used an ECW instead, and as a result, none
of these 23 incidents resulted in an injury).

15

Other community stakeholders who should be involved beginning at the planning
stage are medical professionals and public officials. Medical professionals, in particular,
can help develop protocols for post-ECW medical care, and help coordinate with area
emergency medical services.
Law enforcement agencies should work closely with school officials and parents
to develop policies and protocols concerning whether and how ECWs will be used by
law enforcement personnel specifically assigned to schools. It should not be presumed
or required that officers assigned to schools will carry ECWs simply because other
officers in the department carry ECWs. Rather, communities, schools, and law
enforcement should decide together whether officers assigned to schools will carry
ECWs while on school assignment. For example, in 2005, the St. Paul (MN) Police
Department and School District discussed limiting when an ECW can be used against a
student in school. The school board held a public meeting in which the police
department participated. Following the meeting, the school board voted to allow ECWs
to be deployed only “when the officers are intervening in circumstances that could result
in substantial or great bodily harm or circumstances that would permit the use of deadly
force by a police officer.”24
ECW vendors can be consulted and may provide helpful information during the
law enforcement and community stake-holder decision making process. However,
officials should remember that ECW vendors might not fully understand or appreciate
the needs and values of the particular community when making recommendations about
whether and how an ECW program should be implemented or modified.
An agency considering whether and how to implement ECWs should include a
broad group of internal stakeholders in the decision-making process to ensure that all
perspectives can be considered. In addition to the chief law enforcement executive, the
planning team should include personnel responsible for the following functions:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Operations Command;
Planning;
Training;
Legal;
Professional Standards;
Media Relations;
Budget;
EMS; and
Detention/Corrections.

The internal stakeholder team’s purpose is to provide a comprehensive and
documented implementation plan that includes goals and objectives, timelines,
performance measures, evaluation processes, etc., related to ECW use.

24

Paul Strong, “Training Bulletin, Use of Taser in the Schools,” St. Paul Police Department, Dec.
20, 2005; see also Donna Leinwand, “Schools Restrict Use of Tasers,” USA Today, June 3, 2005.

16

Coordination with internal and community stakeholders should occur not only
during the planning process, but also following implementation if the jurisdiction elects
to use ECWs. When the program is about to be launched, the agency should share the
program with relevant stakeholders, explaining how the policy addresses issues related
to weapon use, medical aftercare, case prosecution, use-of-force reviews, etc.
Relevant stakeholders may include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Agency supervisors and commanders;
Professional standards (i.e., Internal Affairs) personnel;
Emergency responders and hospital personnel;
Public information personnel and media representatives;
Prosecutors and court personnel;
Booking and detention personnel;
Community groups; and
Advocacy groups.

Even after implementation of an ECW program, as technology and procedures
change, agencies should share the updated information with these stakeholders. This
will allow the stakeholders to understand the implications related to ECW use changes.
It will also provide an open line of communication with those who are already supportive
of the ECW program. Including community stakeholders in the agency’s ECW planning,
training and education programs can help create social capital for the agency within the
community, and strengthen the police-community partnership.
Planning for Policies, Training, and Accountability Systems that Address the Unique
Benefits and Challenges of ECWs
In deciding whether to add ECWs as a force option, the agency and community
must recognize that the inclusion of ECWs will have an impact on an agency’s use-offorce program beyond simply adding a new force option. Agencies and communities
that fully consider the many facets of adding ECWs will be in a better position to
determine if the tool is right for their community. If the decision is made to issue ECWs,
developing appropriate policies and training specific to ECWs, as well as implementing
systems for comprehensive and reliable reporting, investigation, and data collection and
analysis, will help maximize the benefits of ECWs, while minimizing the potential for
negative consequences.
The Task Force has included in this report detailed guidance on appropriate
agency policies, training, investigation, and oversight systems. In this section, the
report discusses some of the unique benefits and challenges of ECWs that agencies
should consider as they begin to plan development of these policies and systems.
Law enforcement agencies view ECWs as uniquely versatile and adaptable
because they are useful against a wide variety of threat levels and types. ECWs
provide law enforcement officers with an option to attempt verbal de-escalation
techniques while maintaining a safe distance. ECWs are easier to control, and
therefore limit the amount of force used, compared to some other intermediate-force
17

weapons, such as batons. Serialized identification tags, data downloads, and the
capability for audio and video recording facilitate force documentation and
accountability. The implementation of ECWs also has been associated with a decrease
in law enforcement use-of-force complaints.25 Law enforcement officers report that, at
times, just the display of an ECW is enough to gain compliance.26
Perhaps the most important basis for law enforcement agencies’ support of ECW
use is the belief that ECWs can reduce serious injuries to both officers and suspects.
ECWs appear less likely than batons (both fixed and collapsible), fists, and similar strike
weapons to break bones or cause deep tissue injuries. By allowing officers to use force
without fighting or wrestling suspects, injuries to officers and suspects alike potentially
can be decreased.27 Although the law enforcement community does not consider
ECWs an adequate substitute for lethal force, in certain situations, with appropriate
cover, officers may have the tactical opportunity to de-escalate a lethal situation through
ECW use rather than with a firearm.28 ECW policies and training should reflect these
unique benefits of ECWs. Agencies should examine whether, if ECWs are added, other
use-of-force tools may need to be added, modified, or dropped from their use-of-force
program altogether.
25

In the first six months after TASER deployment, one jurisdiction experienced a 25% drop in useof-force complaints. Columbus (OH) Police Intra-Divisional Correspondence, “Six Month TASER Study
Executive Summary,” July 5, 2005, available at http://www.taser.com/research/statistics/Documents/
Columbus TASER Exec Summary.pdf (hereinafter “Columbus TASER Study”). Another jurisdiction
experienced a 32% reduction in use-of-force complaints after TASER deployment. Austin (TX) Police
Department, “City Policy on TASER Use,” 2005 (hereinafter “Austin City Policy”), available at
http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/news/2005/downloads/taserfinal.pdf.
26
See, e.g., Russ Mitchell, “Lawson Gives City Council Taser Update,” Spencer Iowa Daily
Reporter, Feb. 7, 2009, available at http://www.spencerdailyreporter.com/story/1499993.html (“Since the
program began, officers have turned on the weapon and pointed it at a subject 36 times. In 26 instances,
the shining red guide dot was enough to get the citizen to comply.”).
27
In the first full year after the Cincinnati (OH) Police Department began using ECWs, the
department reported that injuries to officers decreased 56%, and injuries to suspects dropped 35%. See
“Cincinnati Police Department Report to the Community,” Fall 2005, pp. 4-5, available at
http://www.cincinnati-oh.gov/police/downloads/police_pdf13181.pdf. Similarly, in the first six months after
TASERs were first deployed in Columbus, Ohio, that department reported that officer injuries declined
23.4% and suspect injuries declined 24.1%. See Columbus TASER Study, supra note 25. In Austin, TX,
the police department reported that after TASER deployment, overall officer injuries decreased 53%,with
serious injuries to officers reduced from 13 to 0, and serious injuries to suspects decreased 80%. Austin
City Policy, supra note 25.
28
See Madison (WI) Police Department, “TASER Report,” 2005, available at
http://www.cityofmadison.com/police/documents/MPDTaserReport.pdf (citing six cases where the ECW
was used as an alternative to lethal force); Keith Upchurch, “TASER Use Aids Police,” Herald Sun, Aug.
19, 2009, available at http://www.heraldsun.com/pages/full_story/push?article-TASER+use+aids+police
&id=3247254-TASER+use+aids+police&instance=main_article (noting the Durham (NC) Police
Department cited four incidents where officers had justified use of lethal force but used the TASER
instead); TASER Tactical Conference, supra note 23 (citing 23 documented cases where lethal force
would have been justified but ECWs were used instead and there were no injuries); City of Houston,
“Conducted Energy Device Program Performance Audit Part I-Detailed Background and Audit
Methodology,” p. 2, 2009, available at http://www.houstontx.gov/controller/audit/Conducted Energy
Device Program 9.8.2008/Conducted Energy Device Program Performance Audit.htm (noting 53
occasions where officers used an ECW as alternative to deadly force even though they were not required
to do so).

18

It is equally important that ECW policies and training reflect the potential risks
involved in issuing ECWs. Much of the tension between communities and law
enforcement agencies’ ECW use involves the community perception that ECWs are
used too frequently and to counter low levels of resistance. Agencies should recognize
that this perception has some basis in reality.29 Even where any resulting injury is slight
or where no injury occurs, the sight of a law enforcement officer discharging a weapon
that knocks an individual to the ground and causes him or her obvious pain can be
difficult for those who witness it to understand and, sometimes, difficult for a law
enforcement agency to explain. The subsequent recording of these incidents by
observers and posting on the World Wide Web can cause untold problems for the law
enforcement agency and the community.
Another unique challenge of ECWs is that they can, in rare instances, be lethal,
even if there was no intent to use deadly force. When a death follows an ECW
discharge, especially where the use of the ECW is seen as undeserved or unnecessary,
the damage to the law enforcement agency’s reputation in the community can be
difficult to overcome.
The creation of strong partnerships during the implementation process can help
avoid this tension. But it is also critical that use-of-force policies and training address
the potential for overuse and educate officers about the risk of serious injury or death
following ECW discharge, as well as what officers can do to decrease that potential for
a negative outcome. In particular, law enforcement agencies should review or develop
de-escalation practices and policies to determine whether they are current and effective.
Regardless of whether it decides to use ECWs, an agency that does not have such a
crisis-intervention program should consider putting such a program in place, especially
if it ultimately elects to use ECWs.
Cost-Effectiveness
Law enforcement agencies have found that a well-coordinated and properly
implemented ECW program, including the training and oversight required to ensure their
proper use, can be cost-effective. ECWs can reduce litigation related to serious injuries
and officer-involved shooting deaths and can reduce overtime and workers’
compensation costs associated with serious injuries from the use of other types of
weapons such as long batons and telescoping batons.30 More importantly, ECWs can
reduce the incalculable human costs suffered when officers must use deadly force
because a less-lethal option is unavailable.
29

As stated by the AMA: “[ECWs] are used too frequently and at lower levels on the use-of-force
continuum than indicated.” AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 9.
30
In 2002, the Granite City (IL) Police Department incurred $740,000 in workers’ compensation
costs. After the department began using TASERs in December 2002, it had no workers’ compensation
costs for all of 2003 and the first nine months of 2004. Correspondence from Granite City (IL) Police
Department, Sept. 20, 2004, available at http://www.taser.com/research/statistics/Documents/Granite Ciy
IL Stats 09 04.pdf. The Durham (NC) Police Department’s workers’ compensation costs dropped from
$657,000 to $187,000 in the first fiscal year after ECWs were deployed. Keith Upchurch, “TASER Use
Aids Police,” Herald Sun, Aug. 19, 2009, available at http://www.heraldsun.com/pages/full_story/
push?article-TASER+use+aids+police &id=3247254-TASER+use+aids+police&instance=main_article.

19

Of course, if ECWs are used improperly, or their use results in serious injuries or
deaths, ECWs may not represent a cost savings. Thus, an agency must, at the
planning stage, ensure that it has the capacity for appropriate training and oversight if it
is to realize cost-savings related to ECWs.
In deciding whether ECWs are a cost-effective option, law enforcement agency
leadership should consider not only the purchase cost of each ECW, but also the costs
of training, supervision, oversight, potential liability, and device maintenance and
replacement. The latter cost issue may be particularly important over time if the ECWs
either require maintenance or no longer meet the manufacturer’s technical
specifications. Agencies should keep this in mind as they contract with an ECW vendor.
Selection of Officers To Be Equipped with ECWs
Not all law enforcement personnel should necessarily be permitted to use ECWs.
During a pilot period in particular, agencies may benefit from issuing ECWs only to
officers they have identified as having developed positive reputations within their
communities and having a particularly strong history of good judgment. Any personnel
selected to carry ECWs should be required to meet several criteria to ensure the
weapon will be used safely and with restraint. Factors that should be considered
include the officer’s tenure, performance ratings, training background, demonstrated
judgment skills, and complaint and disciplinary record, including previous uses of force.
Properly selecting which officers will carry ECWs encourages the appropriate and
effective use of the weapon.
Pilot Program Evaluation
Agencies may benefit from phasing in use of ECWs.31 A program this complex
will require a great deal of management oversight. Deploying ECWs in manageable
increments gives officers and supervisors the opportunity to obtain real-time experience
and training with ECWs with minimized risk. Phased deployment of ECWs to the field
via a pilot program will allow the law enforcement agency to get feedback from their
officers and community stakeholders who can assist and provide valuable input on the
adequacy of the agency’s policy and training. The resulting information will enable the
law enforcement agency to quickly modify the program and retrain its officers, rather
than suspending the program or recalling the weapons. This approach will also show
the community that law enforcement is committed to minimizing the use of force and
protecting civil rights.
Evaluation of an ECW program should occur throughout and after the pilot
phase. As a part of the evaluation process, a review of incident reports and medical
reports should be accompanied by interviews (or surveys) with both officers and
citizens, as well as (again) input from the relevant stakeholders. The agency should
32

31

International Association of Chiefs of Police Executive Brief, “Electro-Muscular Disruption
Technology: A Nine-Step Strategy for Effective Deployment,” p. 17, 2005 (hereinafter “IACP Executive
Brief”).
32
Id. at pp. 17-18.

20

determine if the previously established performance measures were met, and make
recommendations concerning modification or continuance of the ECW program. A
timeline should also be included to ensure that necessary changes are made and that
program evaluations are regularly scheduled, even after the program is fully
implemented.
V.

Training

Recent legislation requires the Maryland Police and Correctional Training
Commission (“MPCTC”) to develop guidelines for ECW training and certification. The
Task Force encourages the MPCTC to adopt a training curriculum, as well as
certification and recertification standards, that conform to the Task Force
recommendations contained in this report. This will ensure that uniform, quality training
is available to all agencies’ officers, regardless of the size of the agency or ECW
program and resources available to it. In addition, if necessary to augment training
provided by MPCTC, the Task Force encourages agencies using ECWs to adopt a
thorough and detailed training program requiring a high level of proficiency and
reflecting the need for restraint and good judgment. This approach to training will
prepare officers for appropriate ECW use and facilitate the use of minimal but effective
force.
To that end, an ECW training program should not simply be a one-time
introduction on the technical operation of the ECW. Rather, the training must be
regularly re-evaluated and updated, and must provide officers with regular training and
recertification with the weapon. Most importantly, ECW training must teach officers
when to use an ECW, not just how.
In drafting comprehensive recommendations, the Task Force examined many
model guidelines, including those put forth by the Police Executive Research Forum
(“PERF”)33 and the International Association of Chiefs of Police (“IACP”).34 This part of
the report examines each of the above issues in detail and makes recommendations to
guide law enforcement agencies in achieving a thorough and detailed training program.
Program Type and Certification Standards
An agency’s ECW training program should integrate the agency’s overall use-offorce standards.35 While it is necessary that the ECW training program utilize the
manufacturers’ training materials for the technical information, these materials alone are
insufficient.36 An agency must create its own training program that teaches its use-offorce standards, the proficiency standards of the State and the agency, and any other
community-specific concerns.
33

James Cronin and Joshua Ederheimer, Police Executive Research Forum (“PERF”), “Conducted
Energy Devices: Development of Standards for Consistency and Guidance Policy and Training
Guidelines for Consideration,” Nov. 2006 (hereinafter “PERF Guidelines”).
34
IACP Executive Brief, supra note 31.
35
PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 18.
36
Id. at No. 40.

21

To encourage a high level of expertise, officers assigned an ECW must not only
receive initial certification but should also receive, at a minimum, annual recertification.37
To meet the recommended level of high proficiency, initial certification should require
several components:
•
•
•
•

Written testing;
Performance-based testing (i.e., pull the trigger, hit a target, etc.);
Scenario- or judgment-based components, to include simulated
physical/mental stress (i.e., running in place then firing a weapon); and
Other tests and drills (i.e., reloading drills, weapon retention drills, etc.) as
required by the agency.38

ECW Exposure During Training
Officer exposure to ECW discharge should be voluntary and not required for
certification.39 There are several reasons many training programs currently require
officers to be shocked by an ECW during training: to give an officer an idea as to the
weapon’s effectiveness and limitations; to allow the officer to more credibly articulate
and testify as to the need to use an ECW; to encourage officers to show more restraint
in the use of the weapon; and to provide a better understanding of what to expect
should they be shocked by an ECW; and to articulate why lethal force may be
necessary when confronted by a subject with an ECW.
ECW exposure during training is not intended to mimic the experience of ECW
use in the field. For example, instead of exposing their officers to a full five-second
cycle of an ECW’s incapacitation mode via darts (probes) capable of penetrating skin,
some agencies use only alligator clips to attach the wires and expose the officers for a
shorter duration cycle. Most agencies also make sure that an officer receiving a shock
is supported by other officers to avoid a potential fall and resulting injury. Given the
controlled environment in which these training shocks are administered, they may
create a misleading impression of the risks associated with ECW exposure that
undermines other training goals. To prevent this, agencies permitting exposure during
training should explain the difference between being shocked during training and in the
field so that officers understand that their experience may not be representative of the
experience of those who have ECWs discharged against them in the field.40
37

Id. at Nos. 39 and 41.
The Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services’ proposed regulations
regarding electronic control devices include similar requirements. See 36-19 Md. Reg. 1468 (Sept. 11,
2009).
39
PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 42.
40
The ECW jolt during training frequently is of shorter duration and is not accompanied by the same
stressors associated with ECW use in the field. See Merrick Bobb et al., Police Assessment Resource
Center, “A Bad Night at Powell Library: The Events of November 14, 2006,” p. A2, Aug. 2007, available at
http://www.parc.info/client_files/UCLA/UCLA TASER Report August Final.pdf (hereinafter “UCLA Report”)
(training burst is a half-second rather than the five second burst received in just one standard ECW cycle
used in the field); see also AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 5 (“Although [ECW] activation in normal
volunteers appears to be very safe, these studies do not sufficiently reproduce the risks of TASER®
38

22

There may be some risk of injury in exposing the officers to ECW discharge, but
this risk may be reduced if certain proper precautions are taken.41 Prior to exposure,
there should be screening to determine if the officer has a pre-existing medical condition
that would prevent participation. In addition, trainers not only need to prevent injuries
from secondary falls, but have emergency medical personnel, if necessary, on hand to
monitor the participants.
If an agency allows voluntary exposure, it may also want to consider taking that
opportunity to conduct a recovery drill where the officer must recover from the shock
and utilize other weapons. This is particularly important in jurisdictions where the
general public is likely to have access to an ECW.
Training on Resistance Levels and ECWs’ Place in Use-of-Force Policies
Officers must be trained to understand when ECW use is appropriate pursuant to
the agency’s use-of-force policy. As discussed in Part VI below, there is wide variety in
how ECWs are incorporated into agencies’ use-of-force policies. Regardless of the type
of use-of-force policy an agency has, each officer must know where the ECW falls in
comparison to other use-of-force options, such as verbal control and control holds;
chemical (OC spray) and chemical/kinetic hybrids (pepper ball); strikes (fists, batons,
flashlights) and impact weapons (bean bag munitions); and firearms.
Complicating matters is the re-labeling of many of the weapons above as “lesslethal.” Previously many of these weapons had been considered “less-than-lethal” or
“non-lethal” but as deaths have occurred proximate to their use, the terminology has
transitioned to “less-lethal.” Regardless of the label used, ECWs are universally
considered to be an option above verbal control but below firearms.42 Outside of that,
there are a variety of opinions about the ECW’s perceived location in a use-of-force
model. In light of this varying terminology, scenario-based training can be invaluable in
providing a practical framework, because officers must be able to show their
understanding of the agency’s use-of-force model and demonstrate the ability to
determine the best method to de-escalate the situation; whether to use physical force or
to remain at a distance; whether to use an ECW or an alternate force option; the
appropriate ECW mode to use (i.e., display only, red dot compliance, incapacitation
exposure among criminal suspects, in whom coexisting medical and psychiatric conditions, alcohol and
drug use, and other factors are often present.”). The United States Department of Justice (“USDOJ”) Civil
Rights Division has noted that ECW training courses should be “conducted with the same level of
seriousness and professionalism as that of a firearms training course.” Letter from USDOJ Civil Rights
Division, Special Litigation Section to Orange County Sheriff’s Office, Florida, Aug. 20, 2008, p. 15,
available at http://www.justice.gov/crt/split/documents/orangecty_ta_ltr.pdf (hereinafter “USDOJ Letter”).
41
An Oswego County (NY) Sheriff’s Department deputy filed a federal lawsuit against TASER
International alleging that he suffered permanent injuries after being shocked by an ECW during a training
exercise. See Robert A. Baker, “Oswego County Deputy Says Training-Session Shock from Taser Left
Him Disabled, Sues Its Maker,” Syracuse City News, May 10, 2009, available at
http://www.syracuse.com/city/ index.ssf?/base/news-5/1241945796197090.xml&coll=1.
42
Police Executive Research Foundation, “Critical Issues in Policing Series: Strategies for
Resolving Conflict and Minimizing Use of Force,” Joshua A. Ederheimer ed., p. 110, Apr. 2007
(hereinafter “PERF: Critical Issues”).

23

mode, or pain-compliance mode); the best weapon to transition to if the ECW is
ineffective; and the safest transition method.
When trained to consider other weapons and techniques, officers may be less
prone to become over-reliant on ECWs in lieu of considering other potentially more
appropriate options. Scenario-based training also gives the officers the opportunity to
demonstrate their verbal de-escalation (aka “verbal judo”) skills—a key to de-escalating
a situation.
Scenario-based training also allows officers to be trained on how to respond
when threatened by a subject with an ECW. Since Maryland allows citizens in some
jurisdictions to purchase ECWs, officers are more likely to face this situation. Although
deadly force is a legitimate option in that scenario, other mitigating factors may exist.
For example, the presence of other officers on the scene may remove the need for
deadly force, as might the lack of a cartridge in the civilian’s ECW. Further, deadly
force may not be necessary against a civilian using the ECW in the pain compliance
mode or if the officer knows that he or she is outside of the maximum range of the ECW
cartridge.
Pre-Discharge Weapon Skills
There are many skills needed to effectively use an ECW. Officers trained
properly on the following skills are less likely to resort to ECWs precipitously:
•
•
•

•
•
•

43
44
45

Positioning: Officers should be trained in a variety of shooting positions to
include standing, kneeling, prone, and barricade (a key element of cover with
ECW use).
Sighting: Officers should be trained to aim with both the laser dot and sights
as a laser may not be functioning properly or it may be difficult to see the
laser dot during the daytime.
Aiming: In the incapacitation mode, aiming for areas of high muscle mass,
like the back, promotes weapon effectiveness. Officers should be trained to
avoid aiming at the groin area, chest, or head, which puts the eyes, face and
neck at risk.43 Further, officers should be trained on proper aiming to avoid
unnecessary burns or serious injuries.
Firing distances: Officers must be trained to fire at optimum distances which
increases the potential for effectiveness.44 Training at or beyond maximum
distances may result in ineffective discharges and unnecessary injuries.
Weapon draw: Officers should be trained to keep the ECW on the nonfirearms side to avoid drawing the firearm by mistake.45
Trigger pull: Officers should be trained to discharge the ECW with both
hands, just as they are with firearms.

PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 12.
Id. at No. 26.
Id. at No. 25.

24

•

Use of warnings: Officers should be trained to warn fellow officers that they
intend to discharge the ECW, not only for their safety, but as a cue to prepare
to take the suspect into custody. Further, it lets officers know that the ECW,
and not a firearm, is being drawn, which may avoid an unnecessary and
tragic firearm discharge by support personnel.46

Training on Risk Factors and Aftercare
Agencies should be diligent in updating their policies and training programs as
new information and best practices become available. As studies emerge, law
enforcement agencies have an obligation to evaluate them and determine their impact
on the agency’s ECW program.47 Because the health effects of ECWs on humans are
not yet fully understood, officers must not only be trained with regard to what is known,
but should be instructed about the uncertainty and risks involving the use of ECWs.
Due to this uncertainty regarding the effects of ECWs on human health,
particularly for some heightened-risk populations, the ability to recognize a suspect’s
medical condition plays an important role in an officer’s decision regarding whether or
how to use the ECW, as well as how to handle the suspect post-discharge. While the
Task Force recognizes that officers often may be unable to ascertain a suspect’s
physical or medical condition, officers must be trained to, where feasible, ask the right
questions and gather as much information as possible prior to making the decision to
discharge an ECW.
Specifically, officers must be trained to consider the following factors that may
indicate a subject’s heightened risk for serious injury or death, when apparent: 48
•
•
•
•
•
•

known heart conditions, including pacemakers;
old or young age;
frailty or small stature (i.e., may have thin chest walls);
pregnancy;
mental/medical crisis; or
under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

Officers should be trained in the appropriate response and levels of force to use
when these risk factors are presented. The Task Force’s recommendations for the
appropriate use-of-force policy for responding to persons in populations at heightened
risk for serious injury or death are discussed below in Part VI of the report.
In addition to the potential risks outlined above, ECWs carry risks of secondary
injuries or death (e.g., from falling, drowning, etc.). That is especially true when the
suspect is fleeing or operating a vehicle; restrained in handcuffs; in an elevated position;
or in close proximity to water or flammable objects (such as alcohol-based OC spray
46

Id. at Nos. 28 and 29.
The still-developing field of knowledge about the effects of ECW use, particularly on certain
populations, is discussed below in Parts VI and VIII of this report.
48
PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 33.
47

25

that may be used by some agencies).49 Officers must be trained not only to recognize
these risk factors, but to consider alternatives to ECW use when these factors are
present.50
The situation involving a fleeing suspect warrants particular emphasis in training,
due to risks of both secondary injuries and potential onset of “excited delirium.” In some
scenarios involving increased risk of secondary injury the ECW may still be effective,
assuming the suspect remains fairly stationary. However, law enforcement officers
frequently encounter suspects who are moving, which can limit an officer’s ability to use
the weapon in a safe and effective manner. For example:
•
•
•
•

In a foot pursuit, the suspect will be difficult to target and, if hit, may fall out of
the range of the cartridge, effectively rendering the weapon useless.
If an ECW is used against a suspect driving a vehicle (or riding a motorcycle
or bike), the vehicle may go out of control with a great potential to harm the
suspect or even innocent bystanders.
In a vehicle extraction, use of an ECW is difficult and may cause a stationary
vehicle to begin moving, with the same risk of injury mentioned above.
From a moving police vehicle, an officer cannot safely discharge an ECW and
control the vehicle, much less be able to safely take the suspect into custody.

Officers should be trained to not use an ECW against a subject who is fleeing
unless there are exigent circumstances because of the increased risk of serious injury
or death and the potential lack of effectiveness.51 As with the other heightened risk
scenarios where the risk of secondary injury is present, officers should be discouraged
from using an ECW unless circumstances justifying the risk of potentially lethal force
exist. Officers must also be trained to have a contingency plan in place when they do
choose to use an ECW when these risk factors are present. They should be trained not
only to attempt to take the suspect into immediate custody to minimize injuries but also
to provide immediate medical attention, when appropriate.
Regardless whether the suspect against whom an ECW is discharged is a
member of a heightened-risk population, officers must be trained about appropriate
aftercare for the suspect.52 Part VII of this report includes the Task Force’s
recommendations for the assessment, care, and referrals an officer should provide after
discharging an ECW.
Training on Response to Communication Barriers
Law enforcement officers must be trained to be aware of and to resolve
communication barriers. Many Maryland communities are culturally and linguistically
diverse and interactions between police and non-English speaking persons are
49

Id. at Nos. 9 and 17.
Id. at Nos. 7, 8, and 9.
51
PERF: Critical Issues, supra note 42, p. 120 (“Proximity death cases seems more likely to involve
. . . a subject . . . fleeing”); PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 23.
52
PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at Nos. 13 and 14.
50

26

common. Agencies must understand the specific needs of the community they serve
and train their officers, as practical, in language skills necessary to effectively
communicate basic information, including commands related to potential weapon
discharge. This may reduce not only the number of unnecessary or inappropriate ECW
uses, but also problematic uses-of-force in general. Officers should also be trained that
deafness, autism, and other disabilities may affect a suspect’s ability to understand and
comply with instructions. Officers should be trained to recognize that mere noncompliance because of an inability to communicate does not give rise to a threat of
imminent physical harm and, as such, does not warrant the use of an ECW or other
uses of force.
Simultaneous Use of Weapons, Repeated Discharge of an ECW, and De-escalation
after Discharge
Another tactic that should be discussed in training is the simultaneous use of
weapons, in general. Officers should be trained to holster one weapon before pulling
out another. This will prevent an officer from having an ECW in one hand and a firearm
in the other, with potentially fatal results. Similarly, officers should be trained to avoid
using multiple ECWs simultaneously, unless there is an articulable reason to do so.
Although multiple ECW discharges provide a redundancy should one of them fail, two
simultaneous successful discharges are difficult to attain and may provide no more
effectiveness than a single ECW discharge. Further, due to insufficient data, it is
uncertain whether there are any deleterious health effects from simultaneous ECW
discharges.53 For that reason, PERF has recommended that “[n]o more than one officer
at a time should activate an [ECW] against a person.”54
Once the ECW has been discharged, officers must then take action to deescalate the situation and take control of the suspect. Training should include the
following issues:
•
•

Cycle evaluation: Officers should be trained to quickly evaluate each ECW
cycle to determine its level of effectiveness.
Multiple cycles and cycle length: To minimize the force used and avoid
potential injuries officers must be trained to limit not only the number of cycles
used, but the length of each cycle.55

53

Research in this area is discussed further in Part VIII of this report. TASER International released
a Training Bulletin in June 2005, stating, “Repeated, prolonged, and/or continuous exposure(s) to the
TASER electrical discharge may cause strong muscle contractions that may impair breathing and
respiration, particularly when the probes are placed across the chest or diaphragm. Users should avoid
prolonged, extended, uninterrupted discharges or extensive multiple discharges whenever practicable in
order to minimize the potential for over-exertion of the subject or potential impairment of full ability to
breathe over a protracted period of time . . . . [People experiencing “excited delirium”] are at significant
and potentially fatal health risks from further prolonged exertion and/or impaired breathing.” TASER Int’l,
“Training Bulletin 12.0 Regarding Restraint During TASER System Application,” June 28, 2005, available
at http://www.charlydmiller.com/LIB06/2005JuneTASERIntTrainBulletin.pdf.
54
PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 2.
55
Id. at No. 3.

27

•

Weapon transition: Officers must be trained to move to another option within
the use-of-force continuum after multiple ECW cycles have been ineffective.56

To gain quicker control of a suspect, training must combine both ECW use and
physical control techniques, with an emphasis on the use of verbal commands. It
should also emphasize greater teamwork and multiple-officer scenarios, not only for the
purpose of cover, but for evaluating the subject’s compliance level. To that end, officers
should be trained to attempt to place the suspect in handcuffs as quickly as possible.
An officer should only administer an additional shock after an initial shock if the
officer has concluded that the subject still poses an imminent threat of physical harm
and other options are not appropriate. Repeated and prolonged discharges should be
avoided whenever possible. If the subject has not become compliant after multiple
cycles, officers should be trained to consider other use-of-force options (as noted
above) to quickly de-escalate the situation and minimize the potential for serious injury.
Other Training Considerations
Officers must be trained on additional areas related to ECW use, including critical
issues such as:
•
•
•
VI.

Communication of ECW use to the dispatcher and supervisor prior to and/or
immediately after ECW use;
Reporting and other accountability procedures; and
Preservation of ECW-related evidence.

Use-of-Force Policies

When Use of an ECW is Justified
The Task Force’s review of Maryland law enforcement agencies’ use-of-force
policies reveals that there is not a uniform approach to authorizing the use of an ECW.
Most agencies properly classify ECWs as “less-lethal” devices,57 but the standard for
when an ECW may be discharged is inconsistent. The most commonly applied
standard among the surveyed agencies is to permit ECW use against an individual who
either poses a physical threat to the officer or others, or who is “actively resisting” the
officer.58 The policies generally define “actively resisting” to include actions that fall
short of causing an imminent threat of harm, such as “bracing” or “tensing” one’s arms

56

Id. at No. 5.
While ECWs are not intended to be lethal, they are not non-lethal weapons and so should be
appropriately identified as “less-lethal” rather than “less-than-lethal.”
58
The following agencies that follow that policy include: Anne Arundel County Sheriff’s Office,
Baltimore City Police Department, Baltimore County Police Department, Bowie Police Department,
Caroline County Sheriff’s Office, Cecil County Sheriff’s Office, Dorchester County Sheriff’s Office, Howard
County Department of Police, Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, Queen Anne’s County Sheriff, St.
Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office, and Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office. See Appendix C.
57

28

to avoid being placed into handcuffs—even if the person is otherwise unthreatening.59
By allowing their officers to use ECWs against individuals who are “actively resisting”
without any imminent risk of harm, these agencies are authorizing their officers to use
ECWs solely as a device to coerce compliance with the officer’s orders. The risks
associated with ECW usage, from the potential for death or injury to straining policecommunity relationships, should preclude the use of ECWs as a device to merely
achieve compliance.
The remaining surveyed agencies allowed even more permissive use of ECWs.
These agencies have adopted use-of-force policies that contain vague standards that
can be read to permit use in a wide variety of situations, even when the individual is not
posing a threat to anyone. Among the standards employed by these agencies to
determine when ECW use is proper are the following: “to control the situation,” “to bring
an unlawful situation under control,” “to safely effect an arrest,” and against “noncompliant individuals.”60 Such exceedingly vague standards provide a law enforcement
officer with no meaningful guidance on when ECW use is reasonable and may therefore
facilitate inappropriate use. Instead, law enforcement agencies should provide their
officers with a use-of-force policy for ECWs that clearly articulates when ECW use is
warranted, taking into account the risks posed by ECWs, while allowing for reasonable
officer discretion.
While most injuries caused by ECWs are minor, there are a number of
documented cases finding that ECWs caused death or serious injury, and there is some
evidence that the number of deaths associated to ECW use has been underestimated.61
59

For example, the Gaithersburg City Police Department permits use of ECWs against a person
who is “bracing” or “tensing.” Some agencies distinguish active resistance from passive resistance (i.e.,
where the subject simply refuses to obey commands). The Baltimore County Police Department,
Caroline County Sheriff’s Office, Cecil County Sheriff’s Office, Howard County Department of Police and
Queen Anne’s County Sheriff’s Office expressly prohibit the use of ECWs against passive subjects. See
Appendix C. Likewise, the PERF Guidelines recommend that “ECWs should not be used against a
passive suspect.” PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 1.
60
Jurisdictions with vague ECW use-of-force standards include: Allegany County Sheriff’s Office
(“circumstances are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving”); Calvert County Sheriff’s Office (“when the
use-of-force is necessary to gain control of an individual for a lawful purpose”); Charles County Sheriff’s
Office (“to incapacitate a resistive person”); Frederick County Sheriff’s Office (“when . . . attempts to
subdue or control the subject by other conventional tactics have been, or will likely be, ineffective”);
Gaithersburg City Police Department (on “non-compliant individuals”); Garrett County Sheriff’s Office
(“circumstances are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving”); Harford County Sheriff (“to bring an unlawful
situation safely and effectively under control”); the Maryland State Police Tactical Assault Team (“to safely
effect an arrest”); Montgomery County Police Department (“to safely effect an arrest”); Prince George’s
County Sheriff’s Office (“effect an arrest”); Washington County Sheriff’s Office (“to safely effect an
arrest”); and Worcester County Sheriff’s Office (“to safely effect an arrest” or “to control the situation”).
See Appendix C.
61
TASER International reported that its products “are often used in aggressive confrontations that
may result in serious, permanent bodily injury or death to those involved. Our products may cause or be
associated with these injuries.” TASER Int’l, Inc. Form 10-K Annual Report for period ending December
31, 2005. A June 2009 report from the AMA noted a review of 2,002 arrest-related deaths between 2003
and 2005 in 47 states and the District of Columbia that showed that ECWs were involved in 36 arrestrelated deaths during this period. In 17 of these deaths, an ECW was causally linked to the death.
However, these numbers undercount the number of deaths involving ECWs and may not be accurate

29

Importantly, the full effect an ECW may have when deployed in the field or why its use
is associated with deaths in some circumstances is not yet fully understood.
Unfortunately, not all law enforcement officers and agencies fully understand the
potential risks associated with ECW deployment.62 Too often law enforcement agencies
mistakenly view ECWs as harmless, non-lethal devices that simply temporarily
incapacitate subjects with little or no risk of injury.
When practical, ECWs should be used instead of other force options, such as
batons or firearms, that would cause greater injury or even death. To help ensure they
are used in this manner, and given the risk, albeit slight, for serious injury or death
following ECW usage, an agency’s use-of-force policy should make clear that ECWs
should not be used merely to gain a suspect’s compliance, but should be discharged
only as tool to protect the officer or others against the risk of physical harm. To properly
use ECWs as a law enforcement tool, ECWs must be appropriately placed along a useof-force spectrum that both recognizes the value of ECWs as a less-lethal weapon but
also acknowledges the risks of injury and death created by the discharge of an ECW.
Use-of-force policies should strive to balance the risks of ECW use against the
actual threat of harm against an officer or another individual. To that end, the Task
Force recommends that ECW use should be permitted only when an individual’s actions
pose an imminent threat of physical harm to themselves or others. For the purposes of
this standard, “physical injury” should have the same meaning as it does in Maryland’s
regarding the number of deaths causally linked to ECWs: “This report acknowledges that the ability of
ECWs to cause death is a subject of debate, and that due to reporting gaps, these 36 cases do not
represent a complete count of all deaths in which the use of a ECW was involved.” AMA Report, supra
note 11, p. 7; see also Braidwood Commission on Conducted Energy Weapon Use, “Restoring Public
Confidence: Restricting the Use of Conducted Energy Weapons in British Columbia,” p. 14, June 2009,
available at http://www.braidwoodinquiry.ca/report/ (hereinafter “Braidwood Report”) (“Although there is
often a lack of physical evidence on autopsy to determine whether arrhythmia was the cause of death, if a
person dies suddenly and from no obvious cause after being subjected to a conducted energy weapon,
death is almost certainly due to an arrhythmia.”). A December 2008 report from Amnesty International
found that ECWs were listed as a cause or contributory factor in 37 of the 98 autopsy reports available,
as well as in two inquest transcripts. In 18 of the 37 cases, ECWs were listed as a cause of death,
“usually along with other factors such as heart disease or physiologic stress.” Amnesty Int’l Report, supra
note 8, p. 27.
62
Inquiries by other entities reach findings consistent with those of the Task Force’s finding that
many law enforcement agencies do not sufficiently prepare their officers for the potential risks of ECWs.
A recent report by the AMA found that “appropriate training and supervision of [ECW] use is lacking in
some jurisdictions.” AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 9. There are many incidents indicating that the
potential dangers of ECWs are not fully understood. For example, correctional officers in Florida recently
discharged ECWs in drive stun mode against their own children in three separate state prisons as part of
“Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day.” Meg Laughlin, “Corrections Sergeant Shocks Kids with
Stun Gun During Prison Visit,” St. Petersburg Times, May 2, 2009, available at http://www.tampabay.com/
news/publicsafety/article997379.ece. In another incident, police used an ECW to force a man to comply
with a court order to provide a DNA sample. Rick Pfeiffer, “TASER Use to Obtain DNA Not
Unconstitutional,” Niagara Gazette, June 4, 2009, available at http://www.niagara-gazette.com/
breakingnews/local_story_154132251.html. Many officers may believe that they understand the impact of
ECW discharge because they have had an ECW discharged against them during ECW training. As noted
in Part V of this report, however, this training can be misleading.

30

definition of second degree assault on a law enforcement officer.63 Specifically,
“physical injury” means “any impairment of physical condition, excluding minor
injuries.”64 A threat of such minor injuries does not ordinarily warrant the application of
a potentially lethal force option. Officers should not have to actually suffer an injury
before use of an ECW may be justified. As is the case with any decision to use force,
officers should consider the totality of the circumstances at hand, including the nature of
threatened physical harm as well as the risks associated with using the ECW against
the particular individual in the circumstances presented.
ECWs should not be used against a passive subject or otherwise to counter
passive non-compliance, absent an imminent threat of physical harm.65 For example, if
a group of protesters were obstructing traffic by linking arms and refusing to obey an
officer’s commands to disperse, an ECW should not be used to force them to comply.
The same is true for an individual engaged in so-called “active” resistance that does not
pose an imminent threat of physical harm, absent extraordinary articulable exigent
circumstances. As an example, an officer would not be justified to use an ECW on an
individual who was merely “bracing” or “tensing” his or her arms or moving evasively to
avoid being handcuffed, but who otherwise did not threaten physical harm. In this
situation, the risks associated with the ECW are disproportionate to the risk of harm
posed on the officer or others. If, on the other hand, an individual was not merely
bracing his or her arm to resist an officer’s instructions, but rather initiated a physical
struggle with an officer, the officer could determine that the threat to his or her safety
was substantial enough to justify using the ECW. When confronted with an unarmed
individual who does not comply with an officer’s orders, officers should attempt to
determine whether the individual actually received and understood the officer’s
commands. Often language barriers or hearing disabilities may make an individual
appear non-cooperative, when in reality they are unaware of the officer’s commands.
Using an ECW against such an individual simply because the subject did not
understand (and thus not comply with) the officer’s commands is especially
unwarranted.
Because subjects who are restrained presumptively are no longer a threat to
safety, ECWs should not be used against a restrained subject unless the subject,
despite being restrained, poses an imminent threat of physical harm. A number of
Maryland law enforcement agencies have already placed such restrictions on using
ECWs against persons in handcuffs.66 Similarly, because ECWs should only be used to
63

See MD. CODE ANN., CRIMINAL LAW § 3-203(c).
Id. § 3-203(c)(1).
65
See PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 1. At least one federal Court of Appeals has
concluded that using an ECW to shock a person who does not pose an immediate threat of harm violates
a clearly established constitutional right. In Landis v. Baker, 297 Fed. Appx. 453 (6th Cir. 2008), the court
held that it was unconstitutional to use an ECW against a person “who was resisting arrest but not
threatening anyone’s safety or attempting to evade arrest by flight,” and where there “is no immediate
threat to the safety of the officers or others . . . .” Id. at 464 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
66
The Baltimore City Police Department, Baltimore County Police Department, Bowie Police
Department, Caroline County Sheriff’s Office, Cecil County Sheriff’s Office, Charles County Sheriff’s
Office, Gaithersburg City Police Department, Howard County Department of Police, Prince George’s
64

31

prevent imminent physical harm, their use is not warranted by the mere fact that a
subject is fleeing, nor is their use warranted to prevent the destruction of evidence.67
By ensuring that an ECW is used only to prevent harm, and not merely as a tool
to obtain compliance, a law enforcement agency can avoid not only needlessly
exposing a subject to potential injury or death, but also can avoid alienating the
community, undermining the public’s confidence in the agency, and enduring costly and
disruptive litigation. Indeed, many of the ECW incidents that have generated the most
public outrage occurred when an officer used an ECW to force an uncooperative
individual to comply with an order, but where no harm was imminent. As just one of
many examples, in 2006, campus police repeatedly shocked a UCLA student when he
refused to leave a library. The student was uncooperative, but unthreatening. The
incident, a videotape of which gained national prominence, generated a widespread
outcry about the abusive use of ECWs. A university-commissioned review of the
incident concluded that the officer who shocked the student acted unreasonably
because he “did not take advantage of other options and opportunities reasonably
available to de-escalate the situation without the use of the Taser.”68 The university
overhauled its ECW use-of-force policies. A suit filed by the student was settled for
$220,000.
Integrating ECWs and De-Escalation Techniques into an Agency’s Use-of-Force Policy
As with any weapon, an agency’s policy on ECWs should be integrated into its
overall use-of-force policy.69 An integrated use-of-force policy should emphasize that
ECWs are one among several tools available to the officer and should not always be
used as a matter of first resort. In determining which of the available options to use,
use-of-force policies should emphasize that officers should use the least amount of
force necessary to bring a situation under control and to select the tool or technique that
best achieves this goal. Specifically, these policies should treat an ECW as a force
option considerably less lethal than a firearm, but one that, nonetheless, in certain
circumstances discussed in this report, can become lethal. As such, the policies should
instruct officers that when an individual does not present an imminent threat of physical
harm, the officer must select a force option lower than an ECW.
Use-of-force policies should also integrate de-escalation techniques and other
non-force options, which should be employed prior to any use-of-force—including
County Police Department, and Queen Anne’s County Sheriff’s Office prohibit the use of ECWs against a
person in handcuffs unless exigent circumstances exist. See Appendix C.
67
The PERF Guidelines recommend: “That a subject is fleeing should not be the sole justification
for police use of an ECW.” PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 6.
68
See UCLA Report, supra note 40, p. 64.
69
The PERF Guidelines recommend that ECW policies be integrated in an agency’s overall use-offorce policies. See PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 18 (“Agencies should create stand-alone
policies and training curriculum for ECWs and all less-lethal weapons, and ensure that they are integrated
with the department’s overall use-of-force policy.”); see also “Report of the Use of Force Working Group
of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania,” p. vi, Oct. 8, 2009, available at http://www.law.pitt.edu/files/harris/
Taser-Working-Group.pdf (hereinafter “Allegheny Report”) (recommending that an agency’s ECW “policy
should incorporate, reference, and form a part of the department’s overall policy on the use of force”).

32

ECWs—unless doing so would be ineffective or would place the officer or another
individual under a threat of physical harm. De-escalation techniques specific to
situations involving persons in mental health crisis, or “crisis intervention” techniques,
including containment, should also be part of an agency’s use-of-force policy and
training program. The role of such techniques in deciding whether to use ECWs in
situations involving persons in mental health crisis is discussed below in the section on
ECW Use in Response to Medical or Mental Health Crisis.
Restriction on Use in Circumstances Where an Increased Risk of Indirect Injury or
Death Exists
By momentarily depriving a person of control of his or her muscles, ECWs
frequently lead to falls, some of which may cause injury or even death. For example, in
June 2009, a man being held at the Harford County Jail in Maryland became combative
while correctional deputies were seeking to fingerprint him. An ECW was discharged
against him and he fell, striking his head on the floor and dying later that same day.70 In
another example, a man died after he was subjected to ECW discharge while he was
standing on a storefront ledge, causing him to fall two stories and hit his head on the
sidewalk. The police department found that officers had violated guidelines prohibiting
the use of ECWs in such circumstances.71 Because ECWs render individuals unable to
stop themselves from falling or to protect vital parts of their body if they do, there is a
likelihood of a dangerous fall when an ECW is discharged against persons in elevated
positions.
ECWs may indirectly contribute to injuries or death in other ways.72 ECWs
discharged against a person in the water may cause that person to drown, and the
spark from an ECW can fatally ignite flammable materials (e.g., gasoline; some types of
OC (pepper) spray).73 ECWs used against a person driving a motor vehicle (or bicycle),
or fleeing on foot, also may result in serious injury or death.74

70

Harford County Sheriff’s Office News Release: Prisoner Death at Detention Center, June 13,
2009, available at http://www.harfordsheriff.org/_application/files/press_releases/2009/hcso.press_
release.2009-06-13_1.pdf.
71
Kareem Fahim & Christine Hauser, “Taser Use in Man’s Death Broke Rules, Police Say,” New
York Times, Sept. 25, 2008.
72
Braidwood Report, supra note 61, p. 266 (discussing the increased risk that various “external
circumstances” such as heights, water, or operating machinery entail).
73
TASER, Inc., “Product Warnings-Law Enforcement,” Apr. 28, 2009 (noting that risks of TASER
discharge include falling, ignition of flammable materials, injury to sensitive areas such as the eyes or
groin, and burns or scars); see also Lorie A. Fridell, “Sample Policy with Commentary: Electronic Control
Devices (ECD’s) or ‘Tasers,’” p. 8 (hereinafter “Fridell Sample Policy”) (ECWs will not be used: [1] When
the subject has come in contact with flammable liquids or is in a flammable atmosphere; [2] In areas
where compressed oxygen is present, such as Medical Facilities and Emergency Rooms; [3] Houses
where ether or methamphetamine labs are suspected; [4] When the subject is in a position where a fall
may cause substantial injury or death; [5] When the subject is in water deep enough to cause drowning in
the event the subject falls into it; [or 6] Against an individual who has his/her finger on the trigger of a
firearm.); PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 9 (ECWs should not be used where falls may cause
injury or death); id. at No. 17 (ECWs should not be used in presence of combustible vapors and liquids or
other flammable substances like OC spray); id. at No. 23 (ECWs should not be used against persons

33

Because of the risk that using an ECW could unintentionally cause serious injury
or death, they should be used only where deadly force is otherwise authorized in these
situations:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Against persons in elevated positions who might be at risk of a dangerous fall;
Against persons operating vehicles or machinery;
Against persons who are fleeing on foot;
Against persons already restrained in handcuffs;
Against persons who might be in danger of drowning;
In environments in which combustible vapors and liquids or other flammable
substances, including but not limited to alcohol-based OC spray, are present;
or
In other situations involving heightened risk of serious injury or death to the
subject.

Although exigent circumstances infrequently may justify the use of an ECW in
one of these heightened risk situations, the decision to use the weapon must always be
a reasoned and proportionate one,75 with the risks of injury or death balanced against
the need to subdue the subject.
Restrictions to Minimize Risk of Direct Injury or Death
Aside from the indirect injuries described above, ECWs can directly injure a
subject. While serious injuries are relatively rare, injuries following ECW use include
puncture wounds, burns and abrasions, and seizures. Puncture wounds in some areas
of the body could be particularly damaging. For example, an ECW dart (probe) in the
eye can cause loss of vision.76 There are also documented incidents of ECWs
discharged into the head/scalp area causing full-blown seizures with long-term effects in
otherwise healthy people.77
Recently, TASER International modified its usage recommendations to
discourage ECW discharge on a subject’s upper chest. Finding that “a close distance
between the ECW dart (probe) and the heart is the primary factor in determining

operating motor vehicles); “TASERed Homeless Man Catches on Fire,” CBS News, Aug. 19, 2009,
available at http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/08/19/national/main5251739.shtml.
74
See the discussion of dangers and potential ineffectiveness of ECWs when used against fleeing
persons above in Part V of this report.
75
But see Allegheny Report, supra note 69, p. vii (recommending that ECWs never be used in the
above situations because of the “very high risks of danger due to fire, explosion, falls or other
circumstances”).
76
National Institute of Justice, “Study of Deaths Following Electro Muscular Disruptions: Interim
Report,” p. 3, June 2008, available at http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/222981.pdf (hereinafter “NIJ
Interim Report”).
77
See discussion in Part VIII of the report.

34

whether an ECW will affect the heart,”78 TASER International now recommends that
officers should avoid chest shots when possible.79
Agency use-of-force policies and training should reflect the fact that ECW use
may result in direct injury and that in a small number of cases these injuries can be
serious. Model policies, and agencies reflecting such policies, prohibit ECW discharge
at sensitive areas of the body, including the head, eyes, mouth, neck, chest, and
genitalia.80
Restrictions on Use Against Certain Populations Subject to a Heightened Risk of Injury
or Death
While additional research is necessary, the risk of serious injury or death from
ECWs may be increased when used against certain populations.81 Recognizing this,
best practices require that the use of ECWs against persons at heightened risk of injury
be avoided whenever reasonably possible.82
Research indicates that ECWs may be more likely to cause cardiac
complications in certain populations, including elderly people and people with heart

78

TASER Int’l, “Training Bulletin 15.0 Regarding Medical Research Update and Revised Warnings,”
Oct. 15, 2009, available at http://www.taser.com/legal/Documents/Training Memo with Training Bulletin
and Warnings.pdf (hereinafter “TASER Training Bulletin”).
79
Id.
80
See, e.g., Fridell Sample Policy, supra note 73 (“Never aim the TASER at sensitive tissue areas
such as the eyes, face, or groin.”); PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 12 (“Officers should avoid
firing darts at a subject’s head, neck and genitalia.”); American Bar Association, “Proposed ABA
Standards for Criminal Justice (Third Edition) Volume 23: The Treatment of Prisoners,” June 12, 2009
(hereinafter “Proposed ABA Standards”) (Standard 23-5.8(a)(iv) proposes to prohibit the use of electronic
weaponry directly on vital parts of the body, including genitals and, for electronic weaponry, eyes, mouth,
and neck).
81
See NIJ Interim Report, supra note 76 (“The purported safety margins of [ECW] deployment on
normal healthy adults may not be applicable in small children, those with diseased hearts, the elderly,
those who are pregnant and other at-risk individuals. The effects of [ECW] exposure in these populations
are not clearly understood and more data are needed. The use of a [ECW] against these populations
(when recognized) should be avoided but may be necessary if the situation excludes other reasonable
options.”); see also UK Defense Scientific Advisory Council’s Subcommittee on the Medical Implications
of Less-lethal Weapons, “Statement on the Comparative Medical Implications of Use of the X26 Taser
and the M26 Advanced Taser,” p. 4, Mar. 7, 2005, available at http://police.homeoffice.gov.uk/
publications/operational-policing/police-taser-DOMILL-statement?view=Binary (hereinafter “UK Defense
Scientific Advisory Council’s Statement”) (risk of serious injuries or deaths from TASERs very low but “the
possibility that other factors such as illicit drug intoxication, alcohol abuse, pre-existing heart disease, and
cardioactive therapeutic drugs may modify the threshold for generation of cardiac arrhythmias cannot be
excluded”). Part VIII of the report further discusses the medical literature supporting the Task Force
recommendation that ECW use against certain populations be restricted.
82
See, e.g., IACP Executive Brief, supra note 31, p. 15 (Officers should be aware of the greater
potential for injury when using a ECW against “persons with pacemakers, persons in a drug induced state
of delirium, women who are known to be pregnant, persons of small stature irrespective of age, and the
very old and very young”); PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 7 (“[ECWs] should not generally be
used against pregnant women, elderly persons, young children, and visibly frail persons unless exigent
circumstances exist.”).

35

conditions or cardiovascular disease.83 Also, certain populations are even more at risk
of being seriously injured by a fall than others.84 Persons generally suspected to be at
higher risk from injury or death due to ECW include: (1) persons of small stature and
slight build (including children and small adults);85 (2) persons with cardiovascular
disease or otherwise diseased hearts, including those with pacemakers; (3) elderly
persons; (4) pregnant women;86 (5) persons with known heart conditions;87 (6) persons
in mental/medical crisis; and (7) persons under the influence of drugs or alcohol.88
In Maryland and elsewhere, individuals from these populations have died after
officers used ECWs against them.89 As discussed at the beginning of this report, in
November 2007, Jarrell Gray, who was small and slightly built, died after being shocked
by an ECW.90 In April 2007, an ECW was discharged against Uwyanda Peterson. Ms.
Peterson, who was slightly built, fell on the ECW probe. The ECW probe passed
through her chest wall and into her lung and heart. According to emergency medical
personnel, her heart was in ventricular fibrillation when first recorded.91 Ms. Peterson
lost consciousness at the scene and was pronounced dead a half an hour later.92
According to the American Medical Association, the impact of ECWs when used
against individuals in actual law enforcement scenarios is unknown:
Although [ECW] activation in normal volunteers appears to be very safe,
these studies do not sufficiently reproduce the risks of TASER® exposure
83

See AMA Report, supra note 11, pp. 4-6 (discussion of ECW cardiac effects). Part VIII of this
Report further discusses the medical literature supporting the Task Force recommendation that ECW use
against persons with known heart conditions be restricted.
84
AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 5 (“The strong muscle contractions induced by [ECWs] cause falls
and impact-related injuries (e.g., fractures and head injuries), particularly in elderly individuals or pregnant
women.”).
85
See, e.g., TASER Int’l, “Volunteer Warnings, Risks, Liability Release and Covenant Not to Sue,”
Oct. 28, 2009 (hereinafter “TASER Liability Release”) (“ECD use on a . . . low body-mass index (BMI)
person could increase the risk of death or serious injury.”); IACP Executive Brief, supra note 31, p. 15
(Officers should be aware of the greater potential for injury when using a ECW against “persons of small
stature irrespective of age”).
86
See, e.g., TASER Liability Release, supra note 85 (“ECD use on a pregnant, infirm, elderly, small
child, or low body-mass index (BMI) person could increase the risk of death or serious injury.”); IACP
Executive Brief, supra note 31, p. 15; PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 7 (“[ECWs] should not
generally be used against pregnant women, elderly persons, young children, and visibly frail persons
unless exigent circumstances exist.”); NIJ Interim Report, supra note 76, p. 4 (“The purported safety
margins of ECW deployment on normal healthy adults may not be applicable in small children, those with
diseased hearts, the elderly, those who are pregnant and other at-risk individuals. The use of ECWs
against these populations (when recognized) should be avoided, but may be necessary if the situation
excludes other reasonable options.”).
87
AMA Report, supra note 11, pp. 4-5.
88
Id. at p. 5.
89
The outside parameters of the populations at heightened risk of injury are unknown. It has been
reported, for example, that some fatalities after ECW discharge involved persons who had asthma or
epilepsy. See Amnesty Int’l Report, supra note 8, p. 45.
90
Sarah Fortney, “Man Dies After Being Struck by Taser,” Frederick News Post, Nov. 19, 2007,
available at http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/archives/display_detail.htm?StoryID=75587.
91
Amnesty Int’l Report, supra note 8, p. 73.
92
Id.

36

among criminal suspects, in whom coexisting medical and psychiatric
conditions, alcohol and drug use, and other factors are often present.
Human volunteers report that [ECW] exposure is an extremely unpleasant
experience, inducing both physiologic and psychological stress. Some
experimental studies have begun to address these confounding factors....
Such studies cannot fully evaluate the responses of individuals who are
confrontational, have taken drugs, or are desperate for escape, highly
agitated, and combative.93
Thus, the challenge for law enforcement in avoiding ECW use against persons at
heightened risk of injury is twofold. First, more research is needed to determine which
populations are at a heightened risk of death or injury and the extent of that risk.
Second, in many situations it may not be readily apparent to a law enforcement officer
faced with a rapidly evolving situation whether an individual falls within one of these
groups. Taken in combination, these challenges mean that a law enforcement officer
making the decision whether to use an ECW is sometimes faced with a unique and
difficult conundrum: a use-of-force option that normally is not deadly, may in some
instances be lethal even where the officer had no intention of using lethal force, did not
believe lethal force was necessary, and used the force tool in a manner that normally
would not increase the risk of death.
Given this conundrum, unless and until research demonstrates that ECWs are as
safe for the individuals against whom they are used in real life law enforcement
scenarios as they are for individuals in training or experimental contexts, law
enforcement agencies’ use-of-force policies should not permit ECW use to combat
lower level resistance, and officers must be trained to stage medical assistance prior to
ECW use where possible and to recognize indicia of medical crisis after ECW use. This
is true even where the person is not a recognized member of a known heightened-risk
population. In addition, until further research clarifies ECW risks related to heightened
risk populations, law enforcement agencies should ensure that agency use-of-force
policies and training: (1) inform officers of the uncertainties and potential dangers of
ECW use against heightened risk populations; (2) educate officers in identifying
heightened risk individuals where possible;94 and (3) emphasize alternatives to ECW
use for heightened risk populations.

93

AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 5.
Where circumstances permit, this information can sometimes be obtained from family members
or other persons if the individual is unable to provide it. Forthcoming ABA standards addressing the use
of ECWs in jails and prisons require assessments to determine whether the individual is particularly
vulnerable to harm by ECW or whether ECW discharge would be contraindicated by the individual’s
medical condition. Standard 23.2.1 addresses considerations at intake related to ECWs. Standard
23.2.1(b)(iii) requires an “initial assessment whether any characteristic of the prisoner makes use of
chemical agents or electronic weaponry against that prisoner particularly risky, in order to facilitate
compliance with Standard 23-5.8(d).” Standard 23.5.8(d) requires: that “[w]hen practicable, before using
either chemical agents or electronic weaponry against a prisoner, staff should determine whether the
prisoner has any contraindicated medical conditions, including mental illness and intoxication and make a
contemporaneous record of this determination.” See Proposed ABA Standards, supra note 80.
94

37

ECW Use in Response to Medical or Mental Health Crisis
ECW use against persons in medical or mental health crisis warrants particular
focus because law enforcement officers increasingly are using ECWs on subjects
displaying symptoms of a medical or mental health crisis, including those with
symptoms that are sometimes referred to as “excited delirium.”95 As noted above, there
are numerous accounts of incidents where the use of lethal force against such
individuals would have been justified, but ECWs were used instead and no injuries
resulted. There is also concern, however, that ECWs are sometimes used precipitously
against persons in medical or mental health crisis and that in some circumstances the
use of the ECW does more harm than good.
Some argue that ECWs should never be used against persons already exhibiting
signs of high stress, such as those in a manic state or drug induced psychosis,96
because some research indicates that ECWs may have contributed to the stress
experienced by a person who ultimately died of stressors related to the arrest.97 Other
reports have noted a temporal association between fatalities and the use of ECWs
against persons exhibiting symptoms termed “excited delirium.”98

95

This term is used to refer to acute physical and emotional changes that are often seen during
police confrontations. There are differing views of what constitutes “excited delirium,” and even whether
“excited delirium” exists. According to a recent AMA report:
Although not a validated diagnostic entity in either the International Classification of
Diseases or the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, “excited delirium” is
a widely accepted entity in forensic pathology and is cited by medical examiners to explain
the sudden in-custody deaths of individuals who are combative and in a highly agitated
state. Excited delirium is broadly defined as a state of agitation, excitability, paranoia,
aggression, and apparent immunity to pain, often associated with stimulant use and certain
psychiatric disorders. The signs and symptoms typically ascribed to “excited delirium”
include bizarre or violent behavior, hyperactivity, hyperthermia, confusion, great strength,
sweating and removal of clothing, and imperviousness to pain. Speculation about
triggering factors include sudden and intense activation of the sympathetic nervous system,
with hyperthermia, and/or acidosis, which could trigger life-threatening arrhythmias in
susceptible individuals. Biochemical studies have shown alterations in the function of
dopamine neurons and specific gene activation products in the central nervous system of
such individuals. The intense pain associated with [ECW] exposure, the psychological
distress of incapacitation, and hazards associated with various restraint methods also could
contribute.
AMA Report, supra note 11, pp. 6-7 (internal citations omitted).
96
Braidwood Report, supra note 61, p. 309 (“The unanimous view of mental health presenters was
that the best practice is to de-escalate the agitation, which can best be achieved through the application
of recognized crisis intervention techniques.”).
97
See NIJ Interim Report, supra note 76, p. 3 (“[ECW] technology may be a contributor to ‘stress’
when stress is an issue related to cause of death determination.”).
98
Amnesty International reports that “[t]he most common cause of death given by coroners or
medical examiners (more than 30 [percent] of cases where information was available [i.e., 111 of 250])
was heart failure caused by the ingestion of cocaine or other stimulant drugs, often together with a
conditions described as excited delirium. In some cases excited delirium alone was given as a cause of
death.” Amnesty Int’l Report, supra note 8, p. 26.

38

In certain circumstances, individuals experiencing mental health- or drug-induced
crises, or similar episodes, may be experiencing a dire medical emergency that needs
to be quickly treated.99 In some of these circumstances, law enforcement officers,
sometimes with the assistance of mental health professionals, may be able to take the
individual into custody without resorting to force. However, in other circumstances, nonforce strategies may not be an option or will be ineffective.
The decision whether to use ECWs or another type of force to restrain an
individual when non-force options have failed or are not feasible should be left to the
discretion of properly trained and supervised law enforcement officers on the scene.
However, this discretion must be properly informed. ECWs may allow the individual to
be taken into custody with less stress and harm to all involved than would a possible
protracted hands-on struggle or resort to long batons or similar weapons.100 However,
law enforcement officers should understand that the use of ECWs in such
circumstances poses risks. Aside from the general risks associated with ECW usage,
research has been unable to ascertain the effect of an ECW use on individuals
experiencing a medical or mental health crisis.101 A recent AMA report appears to
acknowledge the possibility that medical symptoms associated with “excited delirium”
may be exacerbated by any attempts to restrain an individual, including restraint by an
ECW.102 The United States Department of Justice has warned a local jurisdiction under
investigation that there is a risk of ECW discharge leading to sudden death when used
against persons who are under the influence of drugs, or who present behaviors
associated with the condition of “excited delirium.”103
With these risks in mind, use-of-force policies should make clear that an
individual’s apparent mental health or medical crisis (including any display of symptoms
that are considered by some to constitute “excited delirium”) should not in itself justify

99

“Excited delirium” is often cited as such an emergency. In one widely cited example, doctors at
an emergency room at Vanderbilt University hospital in Nashville, Tennessee tranquilized three people
whose heart rates and body temperatures were soaring. All three recovered. Laura Sullivan, “Death by
Excited Delirium: Diagnosis or Cover-up?,” National Public Radio, July 11, 2007, available at
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7608386. Others argue that persons experiencing
excited delirium are not particularly treatable after a certain point, obviating the need to quickly restrain
them for any medical purpose. See Samuel J. Stratton et al., “Factors Associated with Sudden Death of
Individuals Requires Restraint for Excited Delirium,” 19 Am. J. Emergency Med. 187 (May 2001) (study of
18 cases in which persons with excited delirium were put in an ambulance after being restrained and
monitored by paramedics, and finding that all 18 died).
100
This belief is widely held and has intuitive appeal. See, e.g., Testimony of Bernadette DiPino,
Chief of Ocean City Police Department, Apr. 30, 2009; Testimony of Alan Goldberg, Captain,
Montgomery County Police Department, Apr. 23, 2009. Whether ECWs in fact cause less dangerous
physical stress than other methods of restraint in such circumstances has not been determined.
101
See AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 5 (noting that the research to date “cannot fully evaluate the
responses of individuals who are confrontational, have taken drugs, or are desperate for escape, highly
agitated, and combative”).
102
Id. at p. 6 (“The intense pain associated with [ECW] exposure, the psychological distress of
incapacitation, and hazards associated with various restraint methods also could contribute [to triggering
excited delirium].”).
103
See USDOJ Letter, supra note 40, p. 9.

39

the use of an ECW against that individual.104 Instead, officers on the scene should
consider policies and training on dealing with persons in mental health/medical crisis to
determine whether non-force options—including de-escalation techniques and
containment—are feasible.
Maryland mental health advocates urged in testimony to the Task Force that
priority should be placed on integrating crisis intervention and de-escalation techniques
into law enforcement use-of-force policies and procedures.105 Mental health experts
noted that police are often called as first responders by family members to deal with
emotionally disturbed individuals who display extreme behaviors. In such crisis
situations, emotionally disturbed individuals are often at an impaired level of
consciousness; they may not know who or where they are; they may be delusional,
anxious, or frightened; and they may be unable to process or comply with an officer’s
commands. When police arrive, such individuals can become even more anxious and
appear even more dangerous.
The unanimous position of mental health experts is that the best practice in such
situations is to de-escalate the agitated suspect with a crisis intervention approach
instead of a typical command-and-control approach.106 This type of crisis intervention
approach is used safely and effectively in numerous police departments nationwide and
a few Maryland jurisdictions. Both the Maryland Mental Health Association and the
National Alliance on Mental Illness of Maryland in their testimony to the Task Force
urged that all Maryland jurisdictions incorporate this approach in their use-of-force
policies; and that in departments that use electronic weapons, those policies should
make it clear that de-escalation techniques should be invoked before resorting to an
electronic weapon.
If de-escalation techniques or containment are not feasible or are ineffective, and
the decision is made to arrest or otherwise restrain a person in a mental health or
medical crisis, use-of-force policies should direct the officers to consider whether there
are means to quickly and safely restrain the individual without resort to an ECW.
Policies should also require that, where possible, the restraint of a person who is in
mental health or medical crisis should be made in conjunction with mental health and
medical personnel to help minimize the chance of injury to officers, the subject, or
bystanders and to ensure the prompt provision of appropriate medical or mental health
care. An ECW should be used to restrain an individual in mental health or medical
crisis only if the officer determines that alternative means of restraint are unavailable

104

See generally AMA Report, supra note 11, pp. 6-7.
Testimony of Terry Bohrer, Mental Health Association of Maryland, Inc., Apr. 23, 2009; Written
Testimony submitted by National Alliance of Mental Illness of Maryland, Apr. 23, 2009.
106
See id.; see also British Columbia Division, Canadian Mental Health Association, “Study in Blue
and Grey,” 2003, available at http://www.cmha.bc.ca/files/policereport.pdf; Braidwood Report, supra note
61, pp. 248-61 (summarizing the testimony of Dr. Shaohu Lu, Dr. Joseph Noone, Dr. Maelor-Vallance, Dr.
John Butt, and Dr. Michael Webster).
105

40

and that the individual’s condition poses an imminent threat of physical harm to the
individual or another person.107
It is critical that agencies have policies and training related to medical and mental
health crises that are thorough and accurate. Officers who have a complete
understanding of the complexities of this scenario may be more willing to first attempt
lower force options where feasible and to better understand the restrictions against
repeated or prolonged ECW discharge, especially in these circumstances. Agencies
that understand this may better recognize the need to train their officers and community
mental health and medical personnel to develop strategies that can help restrain
persons using less force, even while they increase safety for all concerned.108
Restrictions Against Multiple or Prolonged Discharges
Many of the deaths following ECW use, including some in Maryland, are
associated with repeated or continuous discharges.109 Research of this phenomenon to
date has been insufficient to resolve why these deaths occur.110 A TASER International
“product warning” notes that “muscle contractions may impair a subject’s ability to
107

Braidwood Report, supra note 61, p. 310 (recommending that officers be “required to use deescalation and/or crisis intervention techniques before deploying a conducted energy weapon, unless
they are satisfied, on reasonable grounds, that such techniques will not be effective in eliminating the risk
of bodily harm.”).
108
Many agencies, including Montgomery County, have in place their own versions of the widely
influential “Memphis Model” of developing Crisis Intervention Teams to respond to persons with mental
illness, including training for officers on how to deescalate potentially violent incidents. One recognized
attribute of the model is that the risk of injury can be significantly reduced. See e.g., Presentation by Bob
Kurtz, NC-NAMI Conference, Mar. 9, 2007, available at http://www.naminc.org/dihoff_documents/
Conference_2007/recap/presentations/Bob Kurtz CIT Presentation.ppt (slide on “Outcomes for Memphis
CIT Model”) (noting the reduced officer and consumer injury rate, the reduced need for lethal force, and
the improved officer de-escalation skills).
109
Eric Wolle died in 2004 after an ECW was discharged against him four times. See David
Snyder, “Maryland Family Grieves for Mentally Ill Man,” Washington Post, June 26, 2004. Jarrel Gray
died in November 2007, several hours after an ECW was discharged against him twice, 23 seconds
apart. See Keith L. Martin, “Family Files $145 Million Lawsuit in Taser-Related Death,” Gazette
(Maryland), May 29, 2008, available at
http://www.gazette.net/stories/053008/polinew202517_32370.shtm. While most deaths associated with
repeated or prolonged ECW discharges involve only a few discharges, in one death actually attributed
directly to ECW, the decedent had an ECW discharged against him nine times in 14 minutes. The
coroner in that case found that the death was due to those repeated ECW discharges. See Patrik
Jonsson, “Are Stun Guns Too Deadly? Louisiana Case Adds to Debate,” Christian Science Monitor, Aug.
12, 2008.
110
See NIJ Interim Report, supra note 76, p. 4 (“The medical risks of repeated or continuous [ECW]
exposure are unknown and the role of [ECW]s in causing death is unclear in these cases. There may be
circumstances in which repeated or continuous exposure is required but law enforcement should be
aware that the associated risks are unknown. Therefore, caution is urged in using multiple activations of
[ECW] as a means to accomplish subdual.”) A study commissioned by the U.S. Department of Defense
recently expressed concern that “the effects of multiple simultaneous exposure” to ECW shocks on the
heart required additional evaluation. Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program, U.S. Department of Defense,
“Human Effectiveness and Risk Characterization of the Electromuscular Incapacitation Device—A Limited
Analysis of the TASER,” p. 28, Mar. 1, 2005, available at http://www.taser.com/research/Science/
Documents/The Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Human Effects Center of Excellence.pdf (hereinafter “Joint
Non-Lethal Weapons Program Report”).

41

breathe” and that “in some circumstances, in susceptible people, it is conceivable that
the stress and exertion of extensive, repeated, prolonged, or continuous application(s)
of the TASER device may contribute to cumulative exhaustion, stress, and associated
medical risk(s).”111 While the TASER International warning singles out “susceptible”
people, such discharges are also associated with deaths of even healthy adults.
According to a recent AMA report, studies indicate that heart rhythms usually can be
disrupted with “prolonged discharges and electrode placements that bracket the
heart.”112
Many governmental and law enforcement reports have concluded that multiple
and prolonged ECW shocks may increase the risk of death or serious injury.113
Furthermore, studies indicate that people who are shocked by an ECW frequently are
dazed after the shock and may be unable to immediately obey an officer’s commands.
Given the apparent risks, use-of-force policies should make clear that repeated
or prolonged discharges should be avoided wherever possible and that an officer should
only administer an additional shock if the officer has concluded that the subject still
poses an imminent threat of physical harm and other options are not appropriate.114 If
111

TASER Int’l, “Volunteer Warnings, Risks, Liability Release and Covenant Not to Sue,” Apr. 12,
2006, available at http://www2.taser.com/SiteCollectionDocuments/Controlled Documents/Warnings/LGFORM-VOLUNTER-001 REV A Volunteer Exposure Release Form.pdf.
112
AMA Report, supra note 11, p. 4.
113
For example, in reviewing the results of two national surveys it conducted, PERF found that “the
results indicated that multiple and continuous activations of ECWs may increase the risk of death or
serious injury, and that there may be a higher risk of death in people under the influence of drugs.” PERF
Guidelines, supra note 33, at p. 7. As a result, PERF concluded that “multiple activations and continuous
cycling of a [ECW] appear to increase the risk of death or serious injury and should be avoided where
practical.” Id. at No. 4. PERF therefore recommends that officers should use an ECW “for one standard
[five-second] cycle and stop to evaluate the situation. If subsequent cycles are necessary, agency policy
should restrict the number and duration of those cycles to the minimum activations necessary to place the
subject in custody.” Id. at No. 3; see also PERF: Critical Issues, supra note 42, p. 120. The AMA has
similarly recommended that “[t]raining protocols should emphasize that multiple activations and
continuous cycling of ECWs appear to increase the risk of death or serious injury.” AMA Report, supra
note 11, p. 9. Courts have held that multiple applications can amount to excessive force. See, e.g., Lee
v. Metro. Gov't of Nashville & Davidson County, 596 F. Supp. 2d 1101, 1117 (M.D. Tenn. 2009) (“[U]nder
appropriate circumstances, gratuitous, repeated applications of the TASER over a short period of time
can amount to excessive force.”). TASER International’s September 30, 2009 product warning also
recommends minimizing ECW use where practical. TASER Int’l, “Important ECD Product Safety and
Health Information,” p. 5, Sept. 30, 2009, available at http://www.taser.com/legal/Documents/Training
Memo with Training Bulletin and Warnings.pdf (hereinafter “TASER Product Warning”) (“Reasonable
efforts should be made to minimize the number of ECD exposures.”). The USDOJ Civil Rights Division
has also provided detailed guidance on the length and number of ECW cycles that should be allowed.
See USDOJ Letter, supra note 40, pp. 11-12. Numerous Maryland law enforcement agencies prohibit or
restrict officers from discharging multiple shocks against subjects. These include the Anne Arundel
County Sheriff’s Office, Baltimore County Police Department, Bowie Police Department, Calvert County
Sheriff’s Office, Gaithersburg City Police Department, Harford County Sheriff’s Office, Howard County
Department of Police, and St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office. See Appendix C.
114
See Allegheny Report, supra note 69, p. vi (recommending “that officers activating a TASER™
should use it once, for one five-second standard cycle, and then pause to evaluate whether further use
might be necessary. If subsequent cycles are necessary, agency policy should restrict the number and
duration of those cycles to the minimum necessary to place the subject in custody”). Several Maryland

42

no such threat is present, no further ECW shocks should be permitted. Policies should
require that where an officer administers additional shocks, the officer’s use-of-force
report of the incident should explain why each additional shock was necessary. For the
same reasons, use-of-force policies should permit simultaneous ECW use only when
there is a specific, articulable reason to do so.115 Further guidance regarding multiple
and simultaneous use of ECWs is provided in the Part V of this report.
Warnings and Display of ECWs
Before an officer discharges an ECW, the officer should provide a suspect with
an opportunity to comply with the officer’s instructions unless delaying discharge would
be unsafe or the element of surprise is necessary to minimize the risk of harm.
Because the mere threat of being shocked by an ECW often causes an individual to
cease his or her potentially dangerous behavior, providing a warning may eliminate the
need to actually discharge the ECW. In addition, the display of an ECW itself may be
considered a use of force. Thus, officers should not aim or threaten to use an ECW
unless they reasonably believe that doing so will de-escalate the situation.
A warning is also useful to prevent other officers on the scene from mistaking the
ECW discharge for firearms discharge. Some ECWs look very much like firearms, and
when an ECW is discharged it produces a noise that sounds similar to a shot from a
firearm. Issuance of a verbal warning before discharging an ECW will help avoid any
confusion about the type of weapon used and will help ensure that a tense situation is
not mistakenly escalated.116
Use of Drive-Stun (Pain Compliance) Mode
Use-of-force policies should treat the ECW’s drive-stun (pain compliance) mode
differently than the ECW’s conventional incapacitation (probe) mode. Whereas the
probe mode is capable of incapacitating an individual’s muscle movements, the drivestun mode is designed to gain compliance solely through the administration of pain.117
law enforcement agencies already prohibit or restrict officers from discharging multiple shocks against
subjects along these lines. These include the Anne Arundel County Sheriff’s Office, Baltimore County
Police Department, Bowie Police Department, Calvert County Sheriff’s Office, Gaithersburg City Police
Department, Harford County Sheriff’s Office, Howard County Department of Police, and St. Mary’s County
Sheriff’s Office. See Appendix C.
115
The PERF model guidelines provide, “No more than one officer at a time should activate a [ECW]
against a person.” PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 2.
116
The Anne Arundel County Sheriff’s Office, Baltimore County Police Department, Bowie Police
Department, Calvert County Sheriff’s Office, Cecil County Sheriff’s Office, Charles County Sheriff’s Office,
Gaithersburg City Police Department, Howard County Department of Police, Maryland Police Tactical
Assault Team, Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, Prince George’s County Sheriff’s Office, Queen
Anne’s County Sheriff’s Office, St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office, Washington County Sheriff’s Office, and
Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office all require that barring exigent circumstances, officers must issue a
warning before discharging an ECW. See Appendix C. Similarly, the PERF Report recommends that “[a]
warning should be given to a person prior to activating the [ECW] unless to do so would place any other
person at risk,” and “[w]hen applicable, an announcement should be made to other officers on the scene
that a [ECW] is going to be activated.” PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 29.
117
Braidwood Report, supra note 61, p. 133.

43

Because the officer must be in direct contact with an individual to use the drive-stun
mode, using it places the officer at a higher risk of harm. To avoid this risk, ECWs
should only be used in drive-stun mode when necessary to complete the incapacitation
circuit or when the probe mode has been ineffective and use of drive-stun mode is
necessary to prevent imminent physical harm to the officer or others. The drive-stun
mode should not be used merely to gain compliance from a subject.
VII.

Medical Care

Agency policies should delineate the obligation of officers to provide a basic
assessment for medical needs following the discharge of an ECW. Training should
reinforce the importance of the officer initiating first aid to the suspect as soon as the
situation is safely controlled, and officers should have standard first aid items, gloves,
and resuscitation equipment available to them. Training should address the use of this
equipment, as well as emphasize the appropriate utilization of EMS to provide
advanced life support (“ALS”) and stabilization, when medically necessary. Every
officer should be able to perform a basic assessment of an individual in their custody to
determine if there is reasonable concern that a serious or potentially life threatening
medical condition exists. In situations where the use of an ECW was based upon a
need for medical intervention, such as with an individual displaying signs and symptoms
that may represent presentation of “excited delirium,” then the rapid transition to
paramedics for continuous monitoring and care is essential. In those situations, if
possible, EMS should be alerted in advance of engaging the subject, in order to
expedite ALS care and transport to an emergency department.
Once an individual is taken into custody, he or she should be restrained in a
fashion that assures the safety of both the subject and those around him or her. This
includes restraining and positioning the person in a manner that does not interfere with
breathing. The decision as to who removes the electrical probes from the subject and
when they may do so should be predetermined by the agency, taking into consideration
that the probes should be treated as “sharps” contaminated by body fluids, whether or
not fluids are visible, and treated appropriately to reduce the risk of injury and disease
transmission.
Law enforcement agencies deploying ECWs should meet with local EMS and
emergency department representatives in order to understand the capabilities and
limitations of these resources. This will allow the information to be included in the
training of officers who will carry ECWs, and will help prevent delays in patient care or
disagreements in the field. Officers who understand EMS protocols and the limitations
of field providers will have more realistic expectations of what can be done in the field,
and what is more appropriately handled in an emergency department. Additionally,
working with medical staff at the local emergency department, in conjunction with
planning meetings with booking and jail representatives, will allow for the creation of
reasonable guidelines for evaluation of the subject in custody, as well as the
determination of where such evaluations should take place. Once an evaluation is
completed, a subject should be housed in a fashion to allow some form of monitoring in
order to speed the identification of any late-presenting medical complications. These
44

expectations and agreements should be documented in writing in order to minimize
confusion or misunderstanding among parties.
VIII.

Medical Support

The recommendations of this Task Force are strongly supported by the medical
literature. As an initial matter, the Task Force endorses law enforcement deployment of
ECWs under appropriate circumstances. This recommendation is founded, in part, on
the fact that the medical literature generally recognizes the relative safety of ECWs
when compared with other force options, such as firearms.118 The Task Force
acknowledges the fact that ECWs are less lethal than certain of the other alternatives
available to law enforcement officers in the field.
Equally important to recognizing the efficacy and relative safety of ECWs,
however, is understanding their potential risk. The medical literature is replete with
research and reports regarding both direct and indirect injury resulting from ECW

118

See, e.g., G.J. Ordog et al., “Electronic Gun (Taser) Injuries,” [Comparative Study] 16 Annals
Emergency Med. 73, Jan. 1987. Some have raised concerns about reliance on information from
researchers who either are or were on the TASER International external medical and scientific review
board, or who own stock in that company, or who have previously been paid to speak as a subject matter
expert on ECWs. In fact, one medical journal editor has noted his personal opinion that, “despite . . .
scientific demonstration of potentially lethal effects in animals and humans” and “overwhelming
circumstantial evidence” of the risks associated with ECWs, the major ECW manufacturer has “sponsored
research to prove the taser’s safety.” “Just about all the research, as it turns out.” Matthew B. Stanbrook
et al., eds., “Editorial: Tasers in Medicine: An Irreverent Call for Proposals,” 178 Can. Med. Ass’n J. 1401,
2008, available at http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/178/11/1401. The editor continues, “[t]he scientific
literature bears witness to a small group of dedicated researchers who diligently write letters to journals
pointing out flaws in studies reporting harm from [ECW]s,” which are then published by other journals’
editors who are under no obligation to do so. Id. “Unfortunately, some of these researchers occasionally
neglect to mention their participation on TASER International’s medical advisory board or board of
directors.” Id. Likewise, he notes that, the ECW manufacturer, “sometimes goes further, to the extent of
suing a researcher for publishing scientific results critical of [ECWs] in a peer-reviewed journal and a
medical examiner for the ‘error’ of listing [ECW] exposure on a death certificate as the cause of death.”
Id. This strongly-worded opinion from the editor of a peer-reviewed journal certainly gives rise to
concerns about research funded or performed by the manufacturer, members of its board, or those it
routinely employs, even though his comments are not peer reviewed. However, as the editor notes,
much of the available research falls into this category and this is not uncommon with at least the initial
reports on any new drug or medical device. Readers of the scientific literature must make their own
evaluation of the study, its methods, its results, and the conclusions based upon those results. The
researchers are required to identify and address any potential conflicts of interest, and all submissions
are subject to blinded review by peers in the field who likewise must report any potential conflicts. If a
paper passes the review process by two or more unrelated professionals, then it is published and
becomes part of the medical literature. In order to facilitate the reader’s interpretation of the authors of
the works cited in the medical section, a literature review and Internet search identified the following
persons as serving, or previously serving, in an external review board position, or as having
acknowledged stock ownership in or receipt of honoraria from TASER International: Jeffrey D. Ho,
William Bozeman, Donald M. Dawes, Mark W. Kroll, Hugh Calkins, Charles Swerdlow, Michael Graham,
William Heeggard, and James Sweeney. As a means to try to assure the integrity of the materials
presented in the medical section, letters to the editor and other non-peer-reviewed works from any of
these individuals are not cited as sole support for a claim.

45

discharge.119 The Task Force makes significant recommendations in each of these
areas, all of which are directly supported by the reports of ECW-related risks in the
medical literature.
To begin with, every successful ECW discharge results in some degree of injury
if the darts enter the human body and if the individual is incapacitated and falls to the
ground. This injury can range from extremely minor to catastrophic. On the relatively
minor end of the spectrum, some of the lesser possible complications associated with
ECW discharge include contusions, abrasions, lacerations, and mild muscle tissue
damage.120
Much more significant injuries, including those requiring hospitalization, are also
reported in the literature. The use of ECWs may also lead to cardiovascular,
respiratory, obstetric, ocular and traumatic injuries as well as potentially biochemical
abnormalities.121 In a case series of four patients subdued with ECWs, researchers
identified injuries including: (1) a fracture at the base of the skull and intracranial
bleeding, necessitating brain surgery; (2) a concussion, facial laceration, multiple nasal
fractures, and orbital floor fracture; (3) penetration completely through the skull by an
ECW probe with seizure-like activity reported by the officer when the ECW was
discharged; and (4) a forehead bruise and laceration.122 Although no dates were
provided, it appears that these cases may have been gathered over as long a period as
two years. The same authors concluded that, although seemingly rare, individuals
against whom ECWs are discharged may be exposed to the potential for significant
injury and that trauma surgeons and law enforcement agencies should be aware of the
potential danger of significant head injuries as a result of loss of neuromuscular
control.123
ECW barbs are particularly dangerous to a subject’s eyes. The medical literature
includes at least four cases in which ocular injuries were sustained by impalement with
an ECW dart, resulting in serious ophthalmic injuries.124 ECWs have led to retinal
detachment secondary to blunt trauma and cataract formation, both serious eye
injuries.125 Another case study discusses the perforation of a man’s eye by an ECW

119

ECW injuries reported in the literature fall, very broadly, into two categories. The first is direct or
primary injury. This category includes all injuries from the ECW acting alone, whether due to the entry of
darts into the body or the electrical current discharged. The second category of injuries is indirect or
secondary injury. Secondary injuries include ECW-induced falls. Both types of injury are causally related
to ECW discharge given that absent the ECW, the injury would not have occurred.
120
G.J. Ordog et al., “Electronic Gun (Taser) Injuries,” 16 Annals Emergency Med. 73, Jan. 1987
121
M. Robb et al., “Review Article: Emergency Department Implications of the TASER,” 21
Emergency Med. Australasia, Aug. 2009.
122
B.E. Mangus et al., “Taser and Taser Associated Injuries: A Case Series,” [Case Study] 74 Am.
Surgeon 862, Sept. 2008.
123
Id.
124
J.S. Han, A. Chopra & D. Carr, “Case Report: Ophthalmic Injuries from a TASER,” 11 Can. J.
Emergency Med. Care 90, Jan. 2009.
125
R.K. Seth, “Case Report: Cataract Secondary to Electrical Shock from a Taser Gun,” 33 J. of
Cataract & Refractive Surgery 1664, Sept. 2007.

46

dart, causing iris, lens, and retinal injury and later, retinal detachment.126 Another
medical case study concluded that any ECW-dart injury around the orbits should raise
the suspicion of a penetrating ocular injury.127 In such cases, the authors concluded
that removal of the dart should be performed in an operating theater under general
anesthesia.128
There is at least one reported case in which a patient developed pharyngeal
perforation following the use of an ECW.129 The fact that ECW use may inadvertently
result in the penetration of an individual’s throat provides additional support for the Task
Force and manufacturer recommendation to avoid ECW discharge against vulnerable
parts of the body.
ECW discharge can lead to seizures. In a case reported in the medical literature,
during a police chase on foot, a previously well police officer was hit mistakenly by an
ECW shot meant for the suspect.130 Within seconds, the officer collapsed and
experienced a generalized seizure with loss of consciousness and postictal
confusion.131 More than one year after receiving the ECW shock, the officer’s
“symptoms of anxiety, difficulties concentrating, irritability, nonspecific dizziness and
persistent headaches have not completely resolved.”132 The authors stated that their
report “shows that a taser shot to the head may result in a brain-specific complication
such as generalized seizure. It also suggests that seizure should be considered an
adverse event related to taser use.”133
These reports strongly support the Task Force’s call for appropriate training prior
to ECW deployment as well as its recommendations to obtain proper post-discharge
medical treatment when necessary, and to avoid ECW discharge towards sensitive
areas of the body such as the head, eyes, and groin.

126

S.L. Chen et al., “Perforating Ocular Injury by Taser,” 34 Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology
378, May – June 2006.
127
W. Ng et al., “Case Report: Taser Penetrating Ocular Injury,” 139 Am. J. Ophthalmology 713,
Apr. 2005 (discussing the case of a 50-year-old man who suffered impalement by an ECW dart 1.5 cm
below the right lower eyelid margin, causing a full-thickness wound adequately large for vitreous to
escape from the eye when the TASER was removed).
128
Id.
129
M. Al-Jarabah et al., “Case Report: Pharyngeal Perforation Secondary to Electrical Shock from a
Taser Gun,” 25 Emergency Med. J. 378, June 2008.
130
Esther T. Bui, Myra Surkes & Richard Wennberg, “Case Report: Generalized Tonic-Clonic
Seizure After a Taser Shot to the Head,” Canadian Medical Association Journal, Mar. 17, 2009, available
at http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/180/6/625 (hereinafter “CMAJ Case Report”). TASER International
responded that it was “aware of a few incidents during training in which an officer experienced a seizure
following a hit by a TASER device.” Sue Bailey, “Medical Journal Article Says Taser Stun to the Head
Can Cause Seizures,” Canadian Press, Mar. 16, 2009. A TASER International product warning notes
that the risk of seizure “may be heightened if electrical stimuli or current passes through the head region.”
See also TASER Product Warning, supra note 113, p. 6.
131
CMAJ Case Report, supra note 130.
132
Id.
133
Id.

47

In addition to injuries to superficial body structures or those sustained in the postdischarge fall, complications from ECW use include injury to deep structures of the
abdomen and chest.134 For instance, while currently rare in the medical literature, there
is at least one case report of a 16-year old male patient who suffered a collapsed lung
after an ECW discharge.135 This report strongly supports the recommendation to avoid
ECW use against very thin individuals given the risk of piercing the chest wall and
causing serious injury internally. It also forms a medical basis to avoid ECW use
against those who are running and at risk of falling on the darts, forcing them further into
the body.
A case report in the Annals of Emergency Medicine found that the fall due to an
ECW discharge caused a thoracic spine compression fracture in the victim.136 It is
recognized elsewhere that ECW discharge may result in spinal fractures, and it has
been suggested that “physicians consider obtaining back radiographs to rule out a
vertebral compression fracture in any individual who has sustained a TASER discharge
and has ongoing or persistent back pain.”137 Here again, the medical literature supports
the recommendation for officers to seek medical assistance for subjects against whom
ECWs are discharged, when necessary.
The medical literature reviewed includes one case report of a woman losing her
child to miscarriage seven days after an ECW was discharged against her.138 This
report underpins the Task Force recommendation to avoid ECW discharge against
women known to be pregnant.
There are theoretical concerns expressed in the literature related to the effects of
ECWs on respiration. One study found that repeated or long-duration discharges of
ECWs may result in more potentially harmful effects (as reflected in blood factor
changes), including a lack of effective respiration, as compared to shorter discharges.139
This study concludes that it is not known if all human subjects exposed to ECW
discharges in the field (often “on drugs” or exhibiting a set of symptoms sometimes
called “excited delirium”) would be able to maintain adequate breathing. This study
strongly supports the Task Force recommendations regarding repeated or long-duration
ECW discharges as well as the Task Force recommendations regarding the discharge
of ECWs against individuals who are known to be under the influence of drugs, or who
are experiencing “excited delirium.”

134

P.R. Hinchey & G. Subramaniam, “Pneumothorax as a Complication After TASER Activation,” 13
Prehospital Emergency Care 532, Oct. – Dec., 2009.
135
Id.
136
J.E. Winslow et al., “Thoracic Compression Fractures as a Result of Shock from a Conducted
Energy Weapon: A Case Report,” 50 Annals Emergency Med. 584, Sept. 2007.
137
C.M. Sloane, “Case Report: Thoracic Spine Compression Fracture after TASER Activation,” 34 J.
Emergency Med. 283, Apr. 2008.
138
L.E. Mehl, “Case Report: Electrical Injury from Tasering and Miscarriage,” 71 Acta Obstetricia et
Gynecologica Scandinavica 118, Feb. 1992.
139
J.R. Jauchem, “Repeated or Long-Duration TASER® Electronic Control Device Exposures:
Acidemia and Lack of Respiration,” Forensic Sci., Med. & Pathology, Nov. 20, 2009.

48

There are theoretical concerns raised in the literature and elsewhere regarding
the interaction of ECWs with the heart. ECWs can acutely alter cardiac function in
swine, including by inducing ventricular fibrillation, a dangerous condition which can
lead to cardiac arrest and death.140 In fact, one study found two deaths in 11 swine
immediately after ECW discharge from acute onset ventricular fibrillation.141 In another
study of 25 pigs shocked with ECWs, fatal ventricular fibrillation was induced in one.142
These cardiac concerns provide a medical basis for the recommendation to avoid ECW
use against those with known heart conditions.143
ECW deployment and discharge have also been associated in the medical
literature with the risk of death from non-cardiac causes. After finding that the rate of incustody sudden death increased 6.4-fold in the first full year after ECW deployment
compared with the average rate in the 5 years before deployment, one study concludes
that, “TASER deployment was associated with a substantial increase in in-custody
sudden deaths in the early deployment period.”144
TASER International noted in a submission to the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission that their products “are often used in aggressive confrontations that may
result in serious, permanent bodily injury or death to those involved. Our products may
cause or be associated with these injuries.”145
One case series identified 75 “TASER-related deaths” occurring over four years
beginning in January 2001 and noted that use of an ECW was considered a potential or
contributory cause of death in 27% of these cases.146 This research provides further
support of the finding that ECWs should, in certain circumstances, be considered deadly
weapons.
In assessing this data, it is important to consider that approximately 60% of the
discharges at issue were in a sterile training environment and may not represent realworld circumstances. However, conducting a field-based study would be technically
140

D.J. Valentino et al., “Taser X26 Discharges in Swine: Ventricular Rhythm Capture Is Dependent
on Discharge Vector,” 65 J. Trauma 1478, Dec. 2008.
141
A.J. Dennis et al., “Acute Effects of TASER X26 Discharges in a Swine Model,” 63 J. Trauma
581, Sept. 2007.
142
R.J. Walter, “TASER X26 Discharges in Swine Produce Potentially Fatal Ventricular
Arrhythmias,” 15 Acad. Emerging Med. 66, Jan. 2008.
143
See also Kumaraswamy Nanthakumar, et al., “Case Report: Cardiac Stimulation with High
Voltage Discharge from Stun Guns,” Canadian Medical Association Journal, p. 1451, May 20, 2008,
available at http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/178/11/1451 (“Despite theoretical analyses and animal studies
which suggest that stun guns cannot and do not affect the heart, 3 independent investigators have shown
cardiac stimulation by stun guns. Additional research studies involving people are needed to resolve the
conflicting theoretical and experimental findings and to aid in the design of stun guns that are unable to
stimulate the heart.”); see also id. pp. 1456-57 (“In our view, it is inappropriate to conclude that stun gun
discharges cannot lead to adverse cardiac consequences in all real world settings.”).
144
Byron K. Lee et al., “Relation of Taser (Electrical Stun Gun) Deployment to Increase in InCustody Sudden Deaths,” 103 Am. J. of Cardiology 877, Mar. 2009.
145
TASER Int’l, Inc., Form 10-K Annual Report for period ending December 31, 2005, p. 15.
146
J. Strote et al., “Taser Use in Restraint-Related Deaths,” 10 Prehospital Emergency Care 447,
Oct.− Dec. 2006.

49

and ethically difficult, since it involves an unpredictable occurrence rate, and the study
would be of persons in uncooperative or altered states of mind, who at least in theory,
are at elevated risk of serious injury or death from the device to be studied (ECW).
Institutional review boards would be extremely unlikely to approve such field studies of
ECW use for these reasons. So, despite obvious differences between research
subjects, and persons in states of psychiatric crisis, often with intoxication by illegal
stimulant drugs, for the foreseeable future, available research will be limited to
retroactive review of uncontrolled uses by law enforcement in the field and controlled
studies of human volunteer research subjects. This limitation applies to all of the
research, including that cited immediately above.
Given their widespread deployment, and an incidence of death of 0.02% to
0.07% associated with ECW use, deaths are likely to occur in Maryland following ECW
discharge. Based on these figures, as the Task Force has found, ECWs are “less
lethal” than some other force options. They are not “non-lethal,” however. While the
rates of ECW-related death are very low, and the benefits still outweigh the risks of
deployment, it is important to keep the high value of human life in perspective when
addressing ECW deployment and discharge.
The statistical figures above related to deaths do not include primary or
secondary injuries caused by ECWs. The incidence of primary or secondary injury from
ECW discharge is even more difficult to quantify than the risk of death. First, deaths are
reported more broadly and studied more closely. Second, there are definitional and
other difficulties in isolating ECW injuries. For instance, some primary injury is inherent
in every successful ECW discharge (the mere entry of the darts into the body, for
example). A recent study that attempted to quantify the incidence of injuries associated
with ECWs found a significant injury rate of 0.3% and a minor injury rate of 21.6%.147
In reviewing the literature, it is important to keep in mind that while individual
reports of any particular injury (e.g., the very rare penetration of the skull reported once
in the literature) may be extremely rare complications on an individual basis, when the
individual risks of each type of potential injury are compounded, the total risk of ECW
discharge is greater than the specific risk of any particular injury. However, a review of
the reported medical literature does suggest that the risk per discharge of serious long-

147

A 2009 study by Wake Forest Medical Center claims to be the first published large independent
study of injuries from ECWs. The study reports that 99.7% of subjects had no injuries or mild injuries
following ECW use. Skin punctures bruises and cuts comprised 95.5% of the mild injuries. The
“significant” injury rate (i.e., moderate or severe injuries) in this study was 0.3%. These injuries included a
cerebral contusion (bruise of the brain tissue); an indirectly caused epidural hematoma (a collection of
blood between the skull and the brain); and a case of rhabdomyolysis (the destruction of skeletal muscle
tissue which can be caused by thermal or electrical injury, among other things) that developed two days
after ECW use. Two persons died after the ECW use, although not immediately and both deaths were
determined to be unrelated to ECW use. It is unclear whether the cause of death determination was
made at the time and/or by persons conducting the study. The study found the rate of minor injuries was
21.6%. The study defined minor injuries to include “superficial puncture wounds,” contusions, lacerations,
“superficial burn marks, a finger fracture, a nasal fracture, a case of epistaxis, and a chipped tooth.” See
Bozeman Study, supra note 7.

50

term injuries associated with the ECW is relatively low when compared with other force
options.148
Nevertheless, as demonstrated herein, injuries do occur with sufficient frequency
to warrant careful consideration. In addition, even though some of the more serious
complications from ECW use reported in the literature are relatively unusual, the
severity of these events requires that they be examined here and understood by officers
in the field.
In addition to serving as training guides for law enforcement personnel and
providing background and context for the Task Force’s recommendations, these and
other examples throughout this report are meant to raise awareness of the seriousness
of an agency’s decision to deploy ECWs and an officer’s decision to discharge one.
Nonetheless, the Task Force is in favor of appropriate ECW deployment and use within
the context of the risks outlined herein.
Finally, this report also calls for additional research in a variety of areas. This is
supported by the recognition, in the medical literature, that there is only limited research
into the overall safety or efficiency of ECWs currently available.149
It is important to note that numerous bodies similar to this Task Force have
reached strikingly similar conclusions about the state of the medical research and the
potential risks associated with ECWs. For instance, the Canadian Police Research
Centre noted that “police officers need to be aware of the adverse effects of multiple,
consecutive cycles of a [ECW] on a subject” because “the issue related to multiple
[ECW] applications and its impact on respiration, pH levels and other associated
physical effects, offers a plausible theory on the possible connection between deaths,
[ECW] use and people exhibiting symptoms of [ECW].”150
Likewise, the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Human Effects Center of Excellence,
which produced a study for the United States Department of Defense, found that, “[d]ue
to the absence of specific threshold information in young children, the elderly,
individuals with underlying heart conditions, or individuals with concurrent drug use, it is
not known whether there are sensitive individuals in these groups that could experience
[ventricular fibrillation] under normal use of an [ECW] device.”151
The UK’s Defense Scientific Advisory Council’s Subcommittee on the Medical
Implications of Less-lethal Weapons released a statement in March 2005 stating that
148

See, e.g., id.; Police Executive Research Forum, “Comparing Safety Outcomes in Police Use-ofForce Cases for Law Enforcement Agencies that Have Deployed Conducted Energy Devices and a
Matched Comparison Group that Have Not: A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation,” p. 7, Sept. 2009, available
at http://www.policeforum.org/upload/CED outcomes_193971463_10232009143958.pdf (hereinafter
“Comparing Safety Outcomes”).
149
D.J. O’Brien, “Electronic Weaponry—A Question of Safety,” 20 Annals Emergency Med. 583,
May 1991.
150
D. Manojlovic, “Review of Conducted Energy Devices: Technical Report TR01-2006,” Can. Police
Res. Centre, p. 18, Aug. 2005.
151
Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program Report, supra note 110, at p. 42.

51

“[t]he possibility that other factors such as illicit drug intoxication, alcohol abuse, preexisting heart disease and cardioactive therapeutic drugs may modify the threshold for
generation of cardiac arrhythmias cannot be excluded.”152
The Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board developed standards for
ECW use across Wisconsin and, on June 7, 2005, recommended that ECWs not be
used against suspects who are running away, children, the elderly, and those engaged
in civil disobedience.153 The Board also recommended that officers be trained to
recognize medical conditions that might precipitate death if an ECW is used, especially
“excited delirium.”154
The Braidwood Inquiry, sponsored at a national level by the Canadian
government, studied ECW use, and found as follows:
in deaths proximate to use of a conducted energy weapon, there is often a
lack of physical evidence on autopsy to determine whether arrhythmia was
the cause of death, which opens the door to debate about whether the
weapon or some preexisting medical condition was responsible. While
alcohol or drug intoxication may complicate the pathological analysis in
some cases, other explanations must be found in cases where alcohol or
drugs were not involved.155
A broad array of law enforcement and military agencies have also recognized the
legitimate concerns raised in the literature. A Customs and Boarder Protection
spokesman stated that there were “enough questions about the safety of the [ECW]
device” to preclude the agency from deploying them and Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (“ICE”) similarly banned the use of ECWs on December 10, 2003, after a
review by their Firearms and Tactical Training Unit. An ICE spokesman said that “the
decision [to ban ECWs] was made out of an abundance of caution related to safety.”156
A February 2005 memorandum from the Aberdeen Proving Ground, a United
States Army weapons test site in Maryland, discouraged shocking soldiers with ECWs
in training. Although the Army’s occupational health sciences director affirmed the
ECW’s effectiveness, the director warned that “the practice of using these weapons on
U.S. Army military and civilian forces in training is not recommended, given the potential
risks.”157

152

UK Defense Scientific Advisory Council’s Statement, supra note 81.
See Law Enforcement Standards Board, Wisconsin Department of Justice, “Advisory Committee
Recommendations for Training for Employment of an Electronic Control Device by Law Enforcement
Officers in Wisconsin,” June 7, 2005, available at https://wilenet.org/html/taser/TSReport.pdf.
154
Id.
155
Braidwood Report, supra note 61, p. 228.
156
Kevin Johnson, “Federal Bureaus Reject Stun Guns,” USA Today, Mar. 17, 2005.
157
Department of the Army, “The U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine’s
Position on Whether TASER Electro Muscular Incapacitation Launched Electrode Stun Weapons are
Safe to Use on U.S. Army Military and Civilian Personnel During Training,” p. 4, Feb. 7, 2005, available at
http://mcdetflw.tecom.usmc.mil/INIWIC 05/Reference Docs/03MQ-05 TASER.PDF.
153

52

The National Institute of Justice issued an Interim Report in 2008 consistent with
many of the findings of this report. It provides:
The potential for moderate or severe injury related to [ECW] exposure is
low. However, darts may cause puncture wounds or burns. Puncture
wounds to an eye by a barbed dart could lead to a loss of vision in the
affected eye. Head injuries or fractures resulting from falls due to muscle
incapacitation may occur.
[ECW]s can produce secondary or indirect effects that may result in death.
Examples include deploying a device against a person who is in water,
resulting in drowning, or against a person on a steep slope resulting in a
fall, or ignition risk resulting from deployment near flammable materials
such as gasoline, explosives or flammable pepper spray that may be
ignited by a spark from a device.
There is currently no medical evidence that [ECW]s pose a significant risk
for induced cardiac dysrhythmia when deployed reasonably. Research
suggests that factors such as thin stature and dart placement in the chest
may lower the safety margin for cardiac dysrhythmia.158
Likewise, PERF has endorsed training in connection with many of the same
issues for which we recommend specific officer guidance:
Another training issue is the inappropriate use of the [ECW]. Misuse can
range from outright abusive or illegal use of the weapon to less obvious
cases of officers turning to a [ECW] too early in a force incident. These
problems can be managed with policies, training, monitoring and
accountability systems that provide clear guidance (and consequences) to
officers regarding when and under what conditions [ECW]s should be
used and when they should not be used.159
In addition to wide consensus in the field at large regarding many of the
recommendations of this report, others have also concluded, as the Task Force does,
that more research is necessary in certain areas. “The peer review and open literature
[on ECWs] contains very limited objective scientific research data on mechanism of
action, efficacy, safety, and acute and long term effects of these devices.”160 This group
also found that “key data gaps and uncertainties preclude the development of
effectiveness and risk probabilities.”161
The Potomac Institute for Policy Studies prepared a report based on information
gathered at a conference that sought to bring together experts and professionals in the
field to “offer insights and suggestions on filling the current gaps in knowledge”
158
159
160
161

NIJ Interim Report, supra note 76, p. 3.
Comparing Safety Outcomes, supra note 148.
Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program Report, supra note 110, p. 25.
Id. at p. 73.

53

surrounding the efficacy and safety of ECWs. The report concluded by “strongly
recommend[ing] that additional research be conducted at the organism, organ, tissue
and cell levels.”162
The law enforcement response to the medical literature, like the response of this
Task Force and others like it, has also been to recognize certain inadequacies and call
for additional research. “Independent data does not yet exist concerning in-custody
deaths, the safety of [ECWs] when applied to drug or alcohol-compromised individuals,
or other critical issues.”163
In short, the Task Force’s findings and recommendations are in keeping with and
supported by the medical literature, the work of similar bodies, and the conclusions of
many law enforcement groups. This Task Force recognizes that the benefits of ECWs
justify the risks involved in deploying them. However, the Task Force also agrees with
the many authorities cited above that there are substantial risks associated with ECWs.
The Task Force’s mission requires that these risks be acknowledged so that: (1)
agencies may take them into account in deciding whether to adopt this tool and where
to place it in use-of-force training; and (2) potential ECW operators can be educated
about the risks so that they have the tools necessary to make appropriate judgments
about when and why to discharge this weapon.
IX.

Reporting and Investigation

To maintain community confidence, agencies must vigilantly investigate and
document ECW use. The Task Force believes that a use-of-force investigation should
occur in operational settings regardless of whether an ECW discharge is accidental or
intentional. In addition, investigations should be conducted regardless of the weapon
mode used. Even when the weapon is merely cycled or the laser dot is used to gain
compliance, investigation and documentation are crucial to ensure the weapon is being
used appropriately. Reporting and investigating weapon cycling and laser dot aiming
not only allows law enforcement to justify use and demonstrate restraint when
allegations of abuse arise, but such efforts also provide a rare instance where a
prevented outcome can reasonably be measured.
The foundation for that investigation starts with supervisory engagement.
Supervisors have a role prior to ECW discharge, and once force is used they need to
respond immediately to ensure the investigation is thorough and detailed and that
evidence is properly gathered.164
The Task Force recognizes that the actual supervisor may not always be able to
respond immediately to the scene of the use of force. The supervisor may instead go to
the hospital where the suspect is located, or may be unavailable for any number of
162

Dennis K. McBride et al., Potomac Institute for Policy Studies, “Efficacy and Safety of Electrical
Stun Devices (Report No. 05-04),” p. 5, Mar. 29, 2005, available at http://www.potomacinstitute.org/
images/stun_devices_report_final.pdf.
163
See, e.g., IACP Executive Brief, supra note 31, p. 5.
164
PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at Nos. 30 and 31.

54

reasons. If the supervisor cannot personally respond to the scene, he or she should
direct someone other than the officer who discharged the ECW to respond to the scene
to conduct the investigation and ensure evidence is properly gathered.
That
165
investigation should include, at a minimum:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Collection of information from officer(s), suspect(s) and witnesses;
Photographs of the scene and all evidence;
Photographs of injuries to the officer(s) and/or suspects;
Collection of physical evidence, including cartridges, probes/prongs,
confetti/identification tags, video from vehicle/weapon, etc.;
Documentation of data downloads from the ECW;
Radio transcripts, if necessary;
Test results for the weapon’s operability and electrical output, for cases
involving life-threatening injury or death; and
Complete documentation of the incident, including standard incident reports
and use-of-force reports.

The Task Force also recognizes that typical ECW uses that involve either no
injury or minor injury and involve no apparent policy deviance can be investigated within
the discharging officer’s chain-of-command, subject to a command review. In more
serious cases, however, the review should be conducted by an independent unit such
as Internal Affairs or other Professional Standards-type unit for law, policy, and training
compliance. The cases necessitating an independent investigation include those where
an ECW:
•
•
•
•
•

resulted in serious injury or death of a suspect;
was used against a heightened-risk individual (e.g., elderly, young, pregnant,
etc.);
was used in a high-risk situation (e.g., elevated areas, in water, etc.);
was discharged multiple times or for a duration exceeding standard
policy/training standards; or
was otherwise potentially misused.

Entities investigating and reviewing ECW use should not only assess whether the
officer’s actions were in compliance with law and policy, but should also take the
opportunity to determine whether the incident indicates any need for changes to the
agency’s policies, training, or equipment. To that end, agencies should also consider
conducting periodic reviews and critiques of ECW cases to learn from these situations.
For cases involving death, the State Medical Examiner should determine and
document whether ECW use may have contributed or did contribute to that death. Due
to fluctuating interpretations, “excited delirium” should not be cited as the cause of death
if another direct cause is known. In addition, when “excited delirium” is listed as either
the cause of death or a contributing factor, the Medical Examiner should list the cluster
of symptoms that lead to that finding. While the Task Force commends the State
165

Id. at No. 35.

55

Medical Examiner’s Office for their efforts up until this point, the Task Force hopes that
providing more specific information will better assist law enforcement agencies,
researchers, and communities in general in understanding the effects of ECWs.
X.

Monitoring, Data Collection, and Evaluation

Accountability is fundamental to a law enforcement agency’s successful use of
ECWs.166 Without accountability, both at an individual officer and agency level, ECWs
can be abused and misused in ways that could undermine the legitimacy of the officer,
the agency, and the use of ECWs. While many Maryland agencies already collect
extensive data regarding ECW use, few compile such data or make it easily accessible
to the public. Nor do agencies collect data in a comparable format, hindering accurate
statewide assessment of ECW benefits and risks. The lack of any centralized statewide repository for such information further complicates the public’s ability to review
ECW usage data. To the extent such data is currently available, it would have to be
obtained in a piecemeal fashion from each individual agency. Thus, to further ensure
that law enforcement agencies are properly utilizing ECWs and to inform future policy
judgments regarding the regulation or promotion of ECWs, the data regarding ECW
discharges collected by Maryland agencies should be uniform and collected,
maintained, and made available to the public via a state-wide process. Many law
enforcement agencies and best practices support these objectives, including PERF,
IACP, the Braidwood Commission on Conducted Energy Weapon Use,167 the Allegheny
Working Group,168 and the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board.169
Sufficient data collection is also necessary for law enforcement agencies and the
broader community to assess the costs and benefits of ECWs, especially as compared
to other tools available. One of the most significant problems in developing this report—
and as noted by most other organizations and task forces that have researched the
appropriate role of ECWs170—is the paucity of objective data, which places law
enforcement agencies and policymakers at a disadvantage when making policy choices
concerning ECWs.
166

See Allegheny Report, supra note 69, p. 12-13; Braidwood Report, supra note 61, p. 61.
Braidwood Commission on Conducted Energy Weapon Use, “Restoring Public Confidence:
Restricting the Use of Conducted Energy Weapons in British Columbia, June 2009, available at
http://www.braidwoodinquiry.ca/report/.
168
Report of the Use of Force Working Group of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, convened by
Stephen A. Zappala, District Attorney (Oct. 8, 2009), available at http://www.law.pitt.edu/files/harris/TaserWorking-Group.pdf.
169
Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board, “Policy Development Guidelines for
Deployment of Electro-Muscular Disruption Devices,” available at http://www.ptb.state.il.us/pdf/EMD
Policy Guidelines.pdf (hereinafter “Illinois Law Enforcement Guidelines”).
170
See, e.g., Allegheny Report, supra note 69, pp. 17-18 (“The Working Group believes that the
goals of accountability and public education can be served by basic statistical tracking of all TASER™
uses, along with data tracking important contextual factors. All uses of TASERs by any police officer that
would constitute a use-of-force should be tracked, and appropriate data on the situation should be
tracked along with it. That data should be gathered systematically, and analyzed rigorously by a neutral
third party such as a university or a think tank, to insure public confidence. Further, any system of data
tracking should make the data and the analysis available to the public in convenient, widely available
forms, such as on the internet.”); Braidwood Report, supra note 61, pp. 329-34.
167

56

Because of their role in incidents that have led to deaths or serious injuries,
ECWs are subject to intense scrutiny as indicated by the number of studies
commissioned to examine the propriety of their use. This scrutiny is likely to become
even greater in the wake of TASER International’s recent recommendation that
TASERs should not be aimed at the chest.171 As the scrutiny of ECWs increases, it is
especially important that comprehensive and reliable data be available to accurately
assess the actual risks and benefits associated with ECW use. It is difficult to credibly
evaluate claims about ECWs without such data—both with respect to their benefits and
their risks. For instance, proponents of ECWs often claim that their use leads to a
decrease in fatalities, while opponents of ECWs claim that they lead to an increase in
the overall incidences of use of force. Neither claim can be reliably assessed without
accurate, uniform, and comprehensive data collection and compilation.
Agency Collection of Data
One of the advantages of ECWs is that most devices, including those devices
most commonly used by Maryland law enforcement, create an electronic record of each
discharge, which details a variety of information, including the time that the discharge
occurred, the number of times the ECW was discharged, and the duration of each
discharge. Law enforcement agencies should require regular downloading of this data
from all ECWs. In addition to the data automatically recorded by ECWs, other data
related to ECW use is routinely recorded in arrest and use-of-force reports. Uniform
data from all sources should be timely collected and maintained and should include:172
•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

The date, time, and location of incident;
Whether the ECW was displayed and if the display alone gained compliance;
Identifying and descriptive information of the suspect (including weight,
height, age, membership in an at-risk population and the race, ethnicity, and
gender of the subject), all officers firing ECWs, all officer witnesses, and all
other witnesses;
The type and brand or model of ECW used;
The number of ECW cycles, the duration of each cycle, the duration between
cycles and the duration that the subject was actually shocked;
The level of aggression encountered;
Any weapons possessed by the subject;
The type of crime/incident the subject was involved in;
The type of clothing worn by the subject;
The range at which the ECW was used;
The type of mode used (display only, red-dot compliance, incapacitation, pain
compliance, or combinations thereof);

171

See, e.g., “Heart-Stopping,” Frederick News Post, Nov. 1, 2009, available at
http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/opinion/display_editorial.htm?StoryID=97224&section=ed
(editorial criticizing TASER International for recent revelations regarding safety of TASERs).
172
See generally PERF Guidelines, supra note 33; see also International Association of Chiefs of
Police, “Electronic Control Weapons: Concepts and Issues Paper,” p. 5, rev. Aug. 2005 (offering similar
guidance on what should be included in reports after ECW use).

57

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

The point of impact of probes on a subject (when ECW was used in
incapacitation mode;
The point of impact on a subject (when ECW was used in drive-stun (pain
compliance) mode);
The location of missed probe(s), if any;
Terrain and weather conditions during ECW use;
Lighting conditions;
Medical care provided to the subject;
Any injuries incurred by an officer or subject;173
The serial number from Anti-Felon Identification (“AFID”) “confetti” from the
discharged cartridge;
The serial number of all cartridges used in the discharge;
The results of any toxicology tests administered;
The results of any medical evaluations conducted;
The purpose of discharge and how or if the discharge complied with the useof-force standards, especially if a discharge occurred under exigent
circumstances; and
A determination of whether deadly force would have been justified.

All information should be immediately collected and timely reported. Some
information may not be immediately available (e.g., toxicology results) but should be
provided when it does become available.
Agency Review of Data
Agencies should regularly analyze the data collected in order to observe the
distribution of discharges among officers and geographic areas, to track trends over
time, and to determine whether some officers or agencies are using ECWs at a different
rate or in a different manner than similarly situated peers. In utilizing an Early Warning
System or other procedure for identifying potential misuse of the ECW, it is important
that comparisons of ECW usage across officers and departments take into account
what portion of officers in a given shift carry ECWs, the differences in the jurisdictions
(e.g., rural vs. urban), and any other differences that might skew the comparisons. For
instance, in a precinct where only a small number of officers are equipped with ECWs,
an agency should consider that the ECW-equipped officers may be specifically
summoned to other officers’ calls by a supervisor, and may thus artificially appear to be
overusing the ECW. Regular audits of this data are essential to ensure compliance with
the agency’s policies and to ascertain whether any changes to policy or training are
advised. Agencies should also regularly compare the data recorded by the ECW to the
filed use-of-force reports to ensure there are no discrepancies.

173

PERF Guidelines, supra note 33, at No. 28; see also Illinois Law Enforcement Guidelines, supra
note 169, p. 3.

58

Evaluation and Recertification
As described in the training section above, officers who carry ECWs should
undergo an annual recertification process. As part of this process, an agency should
review an officer’s downloaded data and use-of-force reports to determine if the officer’s
past history of ECW use indicates that he or she is not using the device appropriately.
In analyzing the relevant data, it is important that the officer be compared to other
similarly-situated officers. Based on the officer’s past history of ECW use, an agency
can recommend the officer take additional training or decline to renew an officer’s
certification. Pursuant to an audit of an officer’s ECW usage history outside of the
recertification process, an agency may also elect to suspend or withdraw an officer’s
ECW certification if the data suggests the officer is not using the ECW properly or could
benefit from additional training.
State-Wide Collection and Aggregation of ECW Data
To allow effective tracking of long-term usage statistics and trends, the State
should require state-wide collection, compilation, and analysis of uniform and
comprehensive agency data regarding ECW use. The data collected should include all
data listed above, as well as the Medical Examiner’s report for any death for which an
ECW is listed as a cause of death or a contributing factor. This data should be
collected, compiled and annually published by the Governor’s Office of Crime Control
and Prevention (“GOCCP”) (or other appropriate state agency). Each individual law
enforcement agency should also make its reported data available to the public upon
request to ensure that citizens can be informed about the use of ECWs in their
communities.
ECW Inspection and Testing
To facilitate safety and effectiveness, ECWs should be tested regularly for proper
operation and output. At the start of each shift, officers should inspect and test their
ECWs. Each inspection should be recorded in a log book. Supervisors should also
conduct random inspections of ECWs during roll call or other times that they inspect the
officers. Further, all ECWs should be taken for quarterly inspection and maintenance to
qualified personnel who can ensure that each weapon is operating within the
manufacturer’s recommended parameters.
XI.

Research

During the course of the Task Force’s work, including receiving testimony,
reviewing the literature related to ECWs, reviewing law enforcement agencies’ policies
and training materials related to ECWs, and listening to presentations from industry
representatives, Maryland stakeholders, and others, the Task Force has become
convinced that additional research into various aspects of ECW use is urgently needed.
Much of the in-depth inquiry about how ECWs work and what impact they have when
used has taken place in court rooms in the form of competing, and often contradicting,
expert testimony. Many areas have not yet been studied in a rigorous manner.
59

Research in other areas lacks credibility because it has been based on very small
studies, has used questionable methodologies, or was conducted by entities funded by
or affiliated with TASER International, the primary vendor of ECWs. The Task Force
recommends that independent, peer-reviewed research in the following areas be
conducted.
Physiological Effects of ECWs, Especially When Used Repeatedly, for Prolonged
Periods, Simultaneously, or on Persons in Heightened-Risk Populations
There has been insufficient independent, peer-reviewed research on the
physiological effects of ECWs. In particular, more research is needed to understand the
extent to which ECWs pose a greater risk of injury to certain groups of persons, and
how and why this greater risk exists. Deaths and serious injuries have been associated
with certain groups of persons, including children, the elderly, pregnant women, persons
with thin chest walls, small persons (regardless of age), persons with serious heart or
other medical conditions, and persons in mental health or medical crisis.
There have been multiple deaths associated with multiple and prolonged ECW
discharges. More research is also needed to determine any increase in risk when
ECWs are discharged repeatedly, simultaneously, or for longer than five seconds.
Additional independent, peer-reviewed research in these areas should help law
enforcement agencies and the communities they serve make safer and more informed
decisions about when and how ECWs are used.
Physiological Effects of ECWs When Discharged Against Certain Areas of the Body
Deaths and serious injuries have been attributed to ECW discharge in a person’s
chest area, neck, and head, but there is insufficient research to determine conclusively
whether the relationship is one of cause and effect and whether any harm caused by
dart/probe placement is independent of, or exacerbated by, the impact of using an ECW
on a person at heightened risk for injury.
There are accounts of deaths that appear related to where the ECW
barbs/probes strike an individual’s body. The neck and chest area appear to be two
such sensitive areas. One ECW-proximate death in Maryland occurred after an ECW
barb pierced the heart of the woman against whom it was discharged. The Amnesty
International report on ECWs similarly recounts a number of deaths or serious injuries in
which the ECW barbs/probes were implanted in vulnerable areas.174
TASER
International recently released guidelines recommending that chest shots with ECWs be

174

For example, Amnesty International recounts an incident that occurred in April 2007, where a
TASER was discharged against the slightly built Uywanda Peterson who then fell on the TASER probe. It
is reported that the TASER probe passed through her chest wall and into her lung and heart, and that
according to emergency medical personnel, her heart was in ventricular fibrillation when first recorded.
Ms. Peterson lost consciousness at the scene and was pronounced dead half an hour later. Amnesty Int’l
Report, supra note 8, pp. 73-74.

60

avoided in order to “avoid[] the controversy about whether ECWs do or do not affect the
human heart.”175
The head also appears to be a higher-risk target. An Ontario, Canada, law
enforcement officer “collapsed and went into a full-blown seizure—foaming at the
mouth—for about one minute,” after being accidently hit with an ECW by his partner.
He was still experiencing headaches and has difficulty concentrating over a year
later.176 TASER International responded to this incident by stating that it was “aware of
a few incidents during training in which an officer experienced a seizure following a hit
by a TASER device.” A TASER Product Warning notes that the risk of seizure “may be
heightened if electrical stimuli or current passes through the head region.”177
Additional research is needed given the apparent links between some ECWproximate deaths with where the ECW struck the body.
Comparison of Incidents of Deadly Force Used in Agencies with and without ECWs
More research is needed to help determine the extent to which the use of ECWs
may decrease law enforcement agencies’ use of lethal force, and the deaths and
injuries associated with such force. One of the most persuasive arguments in favor of
adopting ECWs as a use-of-force option in a law enforcement agency is that ECWs
reduce the use of deadly force by the agency. However, in most cases in which deadly
force is used, the officer had determined that a less-lethal force option was not feasible,
raising the question of how often an ECW can be used to counter significant threats.
Moreover, the argument goes, without reducing the use of lethal force, the perceived
safety of ECWs may encourage officers to quickly resort to the ECW rather than first
trying the non-force options available to the officer, thus increasing the overall number
of uses-of-force by the agency.
Researchers are beginning to compile large independent studies into the relative
rates of injuries (including serious injuries) in law enforcement agencies that have
ECWs and those that do not.178 The Task Force is aware of only one large-scale study
directly investigating the extent to which deadly force is used less in agencies that have
ECWs than those that do not, or used less in agencies after the adoption of ECWs as a
force option. This study found no difference in suspect deaths in agencies that had
adopted ECWs.179 Further research in this area is needed to assist jurisdictions in
deciding whether and how to adopt ECWs.

175

TASER Training Bulletin, supra note 78.
CMAJ Case Report, supra note 130 (noting that more than one year after receiving the ECW
shock, the officer’s “symptoms of anxiety, difficulties concentrating, irritability, nonspecific dizziness and
persistent headaches [had] not completely resolved”).
177
TASER Product Warning, supra note 113, p. 6.
178
A recent Wake Forest University study claims to be the first published large independent study of
injuries from ECWs. See Bozeman Study, supra note 7.
179
See Comparing Safety Outcomes, supra note 148. The main thrust of the report is the significant
and encouraging finding that the agencies under review had better outcomes in six of the nine criteria
studied (e.g., fewer or less severe injuries). In addition to finding no difference in suspect deaths, the
176

61

Feasibility of Having Automatic External Defibrillators Readily Available to Officers
Studies have found that providing police with automatic external defibrillators
(“AEDs”) improves survival of persons in ventricular fibrillation.180 While AEDs are
beneficial in a broad array of scenarios, the medical community has not conclusively
determined whether ECWs cause ventricular fibrillation. Should additional research
show a correlation between ECWs and ventricular fibrillation, law enforcement agencies
may have an additional reason to consider equipping police vehicles with AEDs.
Recognizing the high cost of AEDs, as well as the fact that incidents involving
ECW discharge are only a fraction of those in which AEDs could save lives, the Task
Force recommends that the State conduct further directed inquiry into whether law
enforcement agencies should equip squad cars with automatic external defibrillators.
Medical and Operational Impacts of New and Developing ECW Weapons
TASER International is continually developing and marketing new weapons
based on ECW technology. Recently, for example, they have introduced the TASER
X3, which can engage multiple targets (i.e., shock three people simultaneously using
one device); and a TASER XREP wireless shocking “shotgun.” The benefits and risks
of these new weapons are not known and the findings of current and developing
research based on the TASER X26 and similar weapons are likely not valid for these
weapons. The Task Force recommends that research into the functions, physiological
effects, and operational uses of each ECW be evaluated as they are developed. Of
equal importance, new weapons may present new risks and law enforcement agencies
and other stakeholders should not automatically rely upon research based on previously
developed weapons sold by ECW vendors when deciding whether and how to adopt
new weapons based on the same technology.
XII.

Civilian Use of Electronic Control Weapons

Recent legislation has highlighted the ability of citizens to purchase ECWs in
most jurisdictions,181 and the Task Force is concerned that manufacturers will seek to
increase their sales of ECWs to civilians in Maryland. One ECW manufacturer
advertises civilian ECW models in magazines and has a price point significantly lower
than the law enforcement costs for similar weapons. In addition, it is unknown whether
the manufacturer will make available to citizens new technology like ECW shotgun
rounds or cartridges that have multiple sets of probes.
Law enforcement has great concern about civilian purchase and use of ECWs,
and whether the existing legislation will adequately cover either current or emerging
report found no difference in severe officer injury or in officer injury resulting in an officer being taken to a
hospital. (There were no officer deaths so no analysis could be made.)
180
See, e.g., V. Mosesso, Jr., et al., “Use of Automated External Defibrillators by Police Officers for
Treatment of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest,” [Prospective Controlled Trial] 32 Annals Emergency Med.
200 (1998).
181
MD. CODE ANN., CRIMINAL LAW § 4-109.

62

ECW technology. That concern was also shared by the vast majority of those who
testified at the Task Force hearings.
Screening
ECWs are not classified as firearms by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and
Firearms (“BATF”). Civilians purchasing ECWs are therefore exempt from typical
federal firearms regulations, such as background checks and waiting periods, which are
designed to screen out persons of questionable character, those with significant criminal
backgrounds, or those who may be mentally instable. In Maryland, civilian ECW
purchasers are also exempt from an application process for use or wear-and-carry
permit requirements.
Maryland’s current law requires a record check, but places that burden on the
ECW manufacturer. Under the law, what constitutes a record check is not clearly
defined, and there is little in the way of criteria or standards to apply to the record check
results. Moreover, it is an open question whether an out-of-state manufacturer can be
forced to comply with a Maryland law.
Conversely, police officers are screened to ensure that only the most qualified
are certified to use an ECW.
Law enforcement agencies sometimes assess
performance ratings, firearms proficiency, use-of-force incidents, and the demonstrated
ability to exercise good judgment under stress. Civilians, however, simply do not face
such scrutiny.
Training
Police officers receive a great deal of ECW training, must pass knowledge and
proficiency testing, and are subjected to periodic recertification. On the other hand,
citizens receive little, if any, training, none of which is regulated or mandated. There is
no testing on their knowledge or proficiency and no recertification mandates. This
breeds the potential for mishaps, misuse, or abuse.
The importance of such training is demonstrated by the technology differences
between law enforcement versions and civilian versions of the ECW. Law enforcement
must go through a great deal of mandated training for a weapon that typically delivers a
five-second cycle of current. Although civilian versions of the ECW have slightly less
power, they are considered equally effective and deliver up to a 30-second cycle of
current. Despite having a cycle almost six times longer than the law enforcement
version, civilians will receive little or no training prior to use of their weapon.
Accountability
Police officers must follow standards and procedures for ECW use that are
based on best practices and subjected to periodic refinement for operational and legal
sufficiency. In addition, each ECW use is evaluated to determine if standards were
followed and remedial action is taken when they are not. Conversely, civilians are not
bound by or subjected to such safeguards and restrictions.
63

Dealer Regulation, Secondary Sales and Other Regulations
There are no regulations regarding ECW dealers, and once a civilian has
purchased an ECW, there are no regulations governing the re-sale of the ECW to
another individual. In addition, there is no limit to the number of ECWs that may be
purchased by a civilian. This lack of regulation allows those legally able to purchase the
weapon to sell them to those who cannot meet the State’s minimum standards.
Furthermore, the current law mandates that ECW manufacturers provide investigatory
information to law enforcement, but again, it may not be enforceable for out-of-state
manufacturers.
Criminal Use
Accessibility to ECWs will provide yet another weapon for use during the
commission of a crime. There have already been reports of ECW use in crimes where
other citizens have been victims. For example, in June 2009, a suspect entered a
check-cashing establishment in Silver Spring, Maryland. According to the statement of
charges, while the clerk was distracted by her work activities, she was assaulted and
shocked with an ECW by the suspect. She was allegedly incapacitated and lost
consciousness for several seconds. When she regained her faculties, she discovered
that the suspect had stolen $14,000 and fled the scene.182
Part of the reason for an expected increase in criminal use is that some ECWs
are similar in size, shape, and color to standard firearms. Law enforcement officers
report a similar trend with other look-alike weapons such as “Airsoft” non-lethal toy
guns, which have been used in the commission of crimes. Unlike “Airsoft”-type toy
guns, however, ECWs actually have the ability to incapacitate the persons against
whom they are used.
Criminals may also be drawn to ECWs because, as noted above, they aren’t
considered a firearm as defined by the BATF. Therefore, its use in the commission of a
crime may mean that juveniles are not tried as adults, and that adults may not receive
mandatory sentencing or enhanced penalties that usually occur when a firearm in used.
In addition, the ECW is a newer technology, and it is unknown as to what type of
criminal charge will be filed when an ECW is used in the commission of a crime (e.g.,
felony or misdemeanor, first degree assault or second degree assault, etc.).
Another reason criminals may choose to use an ECW is the weapon’s utility. As
a result, subjects who had not done so in the past may now elect to arm themselves.
For example, a suspect committing a robbery may not use a firearm, but to be effective
in the commission of that offense, the suspect had to face the victim and imply having
the weapon. With an ECW, however, the suspect could easily sneak up on the victim
and commit the crime in a stealth manner, with the potential to cause injuries. Not only
would this limit the victim’s ability to identify the suspect, but the suspect would not fear
being charged with homicide or, arguably, aggravated assault.
182

See Case No. 3d00231199 (Dist. Ct. Montgomery County, 2009).

64

Potential for Other Abuse and Misuse
Lack of training poses a risk of self-harm to the civilian ECW user, as well as the
risk of injuries to the ECW user’s family, friends, or even animals. Since the ECW is not
considered as dangerous as a firearm, civilians might not make the same efforts to limit
ECW access to children and others, resulting in both accidental and intentional injuries.
While there are laws controlling access to firearms, these laws do not apply to ECWs.
As a result, many children and adults may view the ECW as a toy and injuries will
occur while simply playing with the ECW, or in other situations like hazing, drinking
games, etc. More importantly, civilians may use the ECW to intentionally abuse family
members or even pets out of anger or for other reasons.
Officer Safety
Civilian use of ECWs will be yet another threat to the safety of police officers.
Unfortunately, citizens may not understand the ramifications for the use of an ECW
against a police officer. For example, citizens understand that threatening a police
officer with a firearm may be met with lethal force. They may not, however, realize that
the same result may occur should they threaten an officer with an ECW. Their
assumption may be that an ECW is a non-lethal weapon, and that law enforcement
cannot therefore respond in a lethal fashion.
However, because officers may not be able to determine at the time of a critical
incident that the suspect has an ECW, they must assume that it is a conventional
firearm. Even if it can be determined that the weapon is, in fact, an ECW, the officer
may still use lethal force. For if an officer is momentarily incapacitated, he or she may
lose control of the police service firearm, creating an even more dangerous and
potentially tragic situation.
XIII.

Task Force Recommendations

Planning and Implementation Recommendations:
1.

Agencies should recognize that the inclusion of a new use-of-force tool such
as an ECW will have an impact on an agency’s use-of-force program beyond
the simple addition of a new force weapon. Among other things, ECWs may:
reduce the need for other weapons; provide the opportunity to increase the
use of other skills such as verbal de-escalation techniques; cause an increase
in the use of force; lower rates of injury; and in some instances put too many
weapons on an officer’s belt, encumbering an officer’s movement.

2.

To ensure community concerns are understood and addressed before
deciding whether to implement an ECW program and, if implemented, what
safety and accountability mechanisms should be put in place, the decisionmaking process should involve community stakeholders (e.g., civil rights and
mental health advocacy groups; medical professionals; lawmakers; and other
interested parties).
65

3.

Agencies should develop and adopt comprehensive policy and training
specific to ECW use prior to implementation to provide as much guidance as
possible for officers armed with ECWs.

4.

Systems for comprehensive and reliable ECW reporting, investigation, data
collection, and analysis must be fully developed.

5.

A plan for providing training in crisis intervention techniques, including deescalation techniques, should be provided to officers so they have alternative
tools to deploy in situations involving persons experiencing mental health
crisis and to help avoid over-reliance on ECWs and help ensure that ECW
use does not unnecessarily alienate communities.

6.

Law enforcement agencies should consider many factors when selecting
which officers will be permitted to use ECWs. These factors may include the
officer’s:
•
•
•
•
•

Time on the job;
History of use of force;
Weapon proficiency history;
Demonstrated level of judgment; and/or
Overall job performance.

7.

Law enforcement agencies should phase in and periodically evaluate the use
of ECWs to: (1) ensure proper management of the program; (2) ensure goals
and objectives are being met; and (3) identify and remedy any policy or
training deficiencies.

8.

When determining whether and how to adopt or continue the use of ECWs,
officials should closely consider the specific needs and values of their agency
and their community. Officials should remember that ECW vendors might not
fully understand or appreciate those needs and values when making
recommendations about whether and how an ECW program should be
implemented or modified.

9.

Each law enforcement agency should work closely with its community and
school system to develop policies and protocols for whether and how ECWs
will be used by law enforcement personnel specifically assigned to schools.
Communities, schools, and law enforcement should decide whether officers
assigned to schools will carry ECWs while on school assignment. It should
not be automatically presumed or required that officers assigned to schools
will carry ECWs simply because other officers in the department carry ECWs.

66

Training Recommendations:
10.

The Maryland Police and Correctional Training Commission should
incorporate the Task Force’s recommendations into ECW training
requirements for Maryland public safety agencies that use ECWs.

11.

The training program must emphasize the need for restraint and good
judgment.

12.

ECW training and use programs must supplement any materials provided or
presented by an ECW vendor to ensure that training comprehensively
addresses all aspects of ECW operations covered by these recommendations
(e.g., when use is warranted, how to provide pre-discharge warnings in
languages commonly spoken in the community, risk factors, de-escalation
techniques, reporting requirements, etc.).

13.

An agency’s training program must be mandatory for all officers authorized to
use ECWs and should include provisions for certification and recertification,
and have components for knowledge and proficiency testing, as well as
scenario-based training.

14.

Each agency must decide whether to expose officers to an ECW discharge.
Exposure need not be a part of the training. Agencies that do permit
exposure to ECW discharge as part of training should explain the difference
between exposure during training and an ECW discharge in the field so that
law enforcement officers understand that their experience may not be
representative of the experience of those who have ECWs discharged against
them in the field.

15.

Officers must be trained that the ECW is a less-lethal weapon, and not a nonlethal or less-than-lethal weapon.

16.

Officers must be trained in where ECW use falls in the agency’s use-of-force
model. This training should include when and how de-escalation techniques
can be used instead of ECWs.

17.

Officers must be trained in identifying and responding to subjects whose
ability to understand, respond to, and comply with officer orders may be
impaired due to language, physical disability, or cognitive impairment.
Officers must be trained to recognize that mere non-compliance stemming
from a communication breakdown does not warrant ECW use absent an
imminent threat of physical harm.

18.

Officers must be trained about the medical complications that may occur after
ECW use, and that certain individuals may be at a heightened risk for serious
injury or death when an ECW is discharged. Populations currently believed to
be at a heightened risk for serious injury or death include pregnant women,
elderly persons, young children, visibly frail persons or persons with thin
67

stature, persons with known heart conditions, persons in medical/mental
crisis, and persons under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
19.

Officers must be trained about the heightened risk of injury and/or death
associated with ECW discharge in some circumstances, due to the subject’s
loss of muscle control and other factors related to ECW technology.
Research is evolving and such circumstances include, but may not be limited
to:
•
•
•
•
•
•

persons in elevated positions;
persons operating vehicles or machinery;
persons who are fleeing on foot;
persons who are already restrained in handcuffs;
persons who might be in danger of drowning; and
environments in which combustible vapors and liquids or other flammable
substances including but not limited to alcohol-based Oleoresin Capsicum
(“OC”).

20.

ECW training programs must integrate training on how to recognize and deescalate incidents involving persons in mental health crisis, including the
application of recognized crisis intervention techniques, and how to call on
any available mental health resources. Officers must be trained on what
actions may unnecessarily escalate or aggravate a mental health crisis and
the risks of doing so.

21.

Officers must be trained to understand ECW technology so that they
understand how they work and what they are capable of, including functions,
situations when they may not be effective, and the risks associated with the
technology.

22.

Officers must be trained to understand that repeated discharges and
continuous cycling of ECWs appear to increase the risk of death or serious
injury and should be avoided wherever possible.

23.

Officers must be trained to understand the weapon’s limitations and how to
transition to other force options when the ECW is not effective after a
discharge.

24.

All relevant personnel must be trained in post-ECW use evidence collection,
reporting, and maintenance, as well as how to arrange for the care of persons
against whom ECWs are discharged.

25.

Knowledge of ECWs is changing rapidly. ECW recertification should occur at
least annually and should include a review of each officer’s ECW history.
Certification and recertification training materials should be updated regularly
to incorporate changes in technology, research, law, information from reviews
of ECW use within the agency, and community concerns.
68

26.

Law enforcement supervisors and commanders who may be asked to review,
investigate, or report on ECW use, or to conduct or approve policies or
training related to ECW use, must be trained in the appropriate tactical use
and potential risks of ECW use.

27.

To encourage good community-agency relations, law enforcement agencies
should conduct community outreach programs to educate civilians about
ECWs, their advantages to other weapons used by the agency, the risks
posed by their use, how the agency intends to use them, and the public
oversight that will be available.

Use-of-Force Recommendations:
28.

ECWs should not be used against a passive or restrained subject, or
otherwise to counter passive non-compliance, absent an imminent threat of
physical harm.

29.

The act of fleeing or destroying evidence, in and of itself, should not justify the
use of an ECW.

30.

Officers should be permitted to use ECWs only when an individual poses an
imminent threat of physical injury to themselves or others. For the purposes
of this standard, “physical injury” should have the same meaning as it does in
Maryland’s definition of second degree assault on a law enforcement officer.
Specifically, “physical injury” means “any impairment of physical condition,
excluding minor injuries.” A threat of such minor injuries ordinarily does not
warrant the application of a potentially lethal force option.

31.

An agency should adopt a use-of-force policy that integrates ECWs and all
other available force options. The policy should recognize that, as less-lethal
(but not less-than-lethal) weapons, ECWs have the potential to result in a
fatal outcome even when used in accordance with policy and training. The
policy should also integrate de-escalation techniques and other non-force
options, which should be employed prior to any use of force unless doing so
would be ineffective or would place the officer or another individual under a
threat of physical harm. Non-force options should be tried where feasible
before using an ECW or other force options.

32.

Agencies should adopt a use-of-force model that recognizes that in the
following situations involving a heightened risk of serious injury or death,
ECWs should only be used when deadly force is otherwise legally permitted:
•
•
•
•
•

persons in elevated positions, who might be at a risk of a dangerous fall;
persons operating vehicles or machinery;
persons who are fleeing on foot;
persons who are already restrained in handcuffs;
persons who might be in danger of drowning;
69

•
•
33.

environments in which combustible vapors and liquids or other flammable
substances including but not limited to alcohol-based Oleoresin Capsicum
(OC); or
similar situations involving heightened risk of serious injury or death to the
subject.

Agencies should adopt a use-of-force model that recognizes that the
populations listed below may be at a heightened risk of serious injury or
death. When deciding whether to discharge an ECW, the officer should
consider the heightened risk of serious injury or death for these groups and
be able to articulate the justification for exposing a person to increased risk:
•
•
•
•
•
•

persons with known heart conditions, including pacemakers;
elderly persons or young children;
frail persons or persons with very thin statures (i.e., may have thin chest
walls);
women known to be pregnant;
persons in mental/medical crisis; or
persons under the influence of drugs or intoxicated by alcohol.

Agencies should adopt a use-of-force model that recognizes that unless
articulated exigent circumstances exist justifying the increased risk, ECWs
should not be discharged at sensitive areas of the body, including the head,
neck, chest, or genitals.
34.

An individual’s apparent mental health or medical crisis (including any display
of symptoms that are considered by some to constitute a syndrome called
“excited delirium”), should not in itself justify the use of an ECW. The
officer(s) at the scene should consider policies and training on dealing with
persons in mental health/medical crisis to determine whether non-force
options—including containment—are feasible. If the decision is made to
arrest or otherwise restrain a person in mental health or medical crisis, the
officer(s) should consider whether there are means to quickly restrain the
individual without resort to ECW. When possible, the restraint of a person
who is in mental health or medical crisis should be made in conjunction with
mental health and medical personnel to help minimize the chance of injury to
officers, the subject, or bystanders, and to help ensure the prompt provision
of appropriate medical or mental health care. As with any individual, an ECW
should not be used against a person in apparent mental health or medical
crisis unless the person poses an imminent threat of physical harm to self or
others.

35.

Officers should not aim or threaten to use an ECW unless they believe the
threat of using an ECW would itself help de-escalate the situation.

70

36.

Before using an ECW an officer should warn a subject and give the subject a
chance to comply with verbal orders, unless delaying discharge would be
unsafe or the element of surprise is necessary to minimize the risk of harm.

37.

Multiple ECWs should not be simultaneously discharged against a person
unless there is a specific articulable reason for doing so and should be
avoided when possible.

38.

An officer should only administer an additional ECW discharge after an initial
discharge if the officer has concluded that the subject still poses an imminent
threat of significant physical harm and other options are not appropriate.
Repeated or prolonged (i.e., beyond the 5-second standard cycle) discharges
should be avoided whenever possible.

39.

ECWs should not be used in pain compliance (drive-stun) mode except when
necessary to complete the incapacitation circuit, or when the probe mode has
been ineffective and use of drive stun-mode is necessary to prevent imminent
harm to the officer or others.

40.

ECW use by officers while off duty should be regulated in the same manner
as service firearms.

Medical Care Recommendations:
41.

Agency policies and training should reflect the responsibility to ensure the
rapid provision of medical care, particularly where the need for medical
intervention was cited as a reason for the ECW discharge.

42.

Law enforcement agencies and local medical personnel should work together
to establish protocols for providing medical care subsequent to ECW use and
for persons in mental health or medical crisis.

43.

When possible, emergency medical personnel should be notified when it is
anticipated that an ECW may be used against an individual, especially those
in apparent mental health crisis or exhibiting symptoms of “excited delirium,”
and emergency medical units should be on-scene prior to the discharge of the
ECW.

44.

Persons who have had an ECW discharged against them should receive an
evaluation conducted pursuant to appropriate agency and medical protocols.

45.

When medical necessity (including “excited delirium,” etc.) is cited as the
reason to quickly restrain a person, whether using an ECW or another force
option, law enforcement should request that the individual is provided medical
care on scene by first responders, then quickly transported to a hospital for
additional medical care, and should carefully monitor the individual’s well
being until transport occurs.
71

46.

After receiving medical care, persons who have had an ECW discharged
against them should be monitored while in custody so that any medical
complications might be more quickly identified.

47.

Following an ECW discharge, officers should use a restraint technique that
does not impair respiration.

48.

ECW probes (darts) should be treated as a biohazard and should be removed
only by individuals trained to remove them.

49.

Agencies using ECWs should ensure that officers carry basic resuscitation
equipment.

Reporting and Investigation Recommendations:
50.

Comprehensive use-of-force reports should be completed when an ECW is
discharged or aimed (e.g., the subject is targeted with the ECW’s “laser” or
“red dot”). Information recorded on use-of-force reports should include data
required for consistent, state-wide reporting.

51.

In the event of an ECW discharge, a supervisor should respond to ensure the
collection of evidence and to initiate a prudent investigation.

52.

A post-discharge investigation should be conducted of all discharges,
including accidental discharges. This investigation should include interviews
with the participants and other witnesses, a review of the use-of-force report,
and collection and review of evidence, including cartridges, ECW data, and
photographs.

53.

When there is a serious injury or death following the use of an ECW,
evidence of (including complaint of) misuse of the ECW, or when the ECW
was used against a person from a heightened-risk population or in precarious
situations, the agency’s chief law enforcement executive should ensure the
completion of a timely investigation and review of the incident and
determining whether the ECW use was in compliance with policy and whether
the outcome indicates the need for any training or policy changes. In the
case of death or a life-threatening injury, the investigation should be
presented to an entity outside the agency for independent review.

54.

In cases of death or serious injury, the ECW used should be tested for proper
operation and output.

55.

When a death occurs in temporal proximity to an ECW discharge, the State
Medical Examiner should specifically indicate whether the use of the ECW
may have or did contribute to the death. “Excited delirium” should not be
cited as the cause of death where there is a known direct cause. The Medical
Examiner should explain in the autopsy and death certification the cluster of
symptoms that led to the finding of “excited delirium.”
72

Monitoring and Data Collection Recommendations:
56.

Agencies should maintain comprehensive data (identified in this report)
regarding use of ECWs for the purpose of tracking trends over time and
determining whether some officers are using ECWs at a different rate or in a
different manner than similarly situated peers. This data should be
considered when determining whether to recertify or decertify officers for
ECW use.

57.

Early warning systems should incorporate data regarding ECW usage to track
trends over time and to determine whether some officers are using ECWs at a
different rate or in a different manner than similarly situated peers.

58.

The Governor’s Office of Crime Control and Prevention or other appropriate
State agency should require state-wide collection and analysis of the
comprehensive agency data regarding ECW use to track trends and identify
emergent concerns and should make such data publicly available.

59.

ECWs should be regularly tested for proper operation and output. Agencies
should consider contracting with their ECW provider to repair or replace any
devices that no longer meet manufacturer specifications.

60.

Agencies should routinely audit ECW use and ECW training to ensure
compliance with the agency’s policies and determine whether any changes to
policy or training are advised.

XIV.

Proposed Research Suggestions:

1.

Additional research should be conducted on the physiological effects of
ECWs, especially when used repeatedly, for prolonged periods,
simultaneously, or on persons in heightened-risk populations or in mental
health or medical crisis.

2.

Additional research should be conducted on the physiological effects of
ECWs when discharged against certain areas of the body, including a
person’s chest area, neck, and head.

3.

There should be a comparison of incidents of deadly force used in agencies
with and without ECWs.

4.

Additional research should be conducted on the feasibility and utility of having
automatic external defibrillators (“AEDs”) readily available to officers.

5.

Additional research should be conducted on the medical and operational
impacts of new and developing ECW weapons as they emerge.

73

XV.

Proposed Legislative Agenda for the Maryland General Assembly

1.

A requirement that the Maryland Police and Correctional Training
Commission (“MPCTC”) incorporate through regulation this report’s training
recommendations into the Commission’s law enforcement ECW certification
and training program regulations instituted pursuant to Chapter 320, Laws of
Maryland 2009. Chapter 320 requires a law enforcement officer to complete
MPCTC training before being issued an ECW and requires MPCTC to provide
such training and related certification and recertification. As noted in this
report, best practices reflect the need for such training to include important
components to address officer safety and public safety priorities to
accomplish the goals of Chapter 320. Such legislation would ensure
fulfillment of the legislative intent expressed in Chapter 320.

2.

A requirement for state-wide collection, compilation, and analysis of uniform
and comprehensive agency data regarding ECW use. The data collected
should include all data listed in the report above, as well as the Medical
Examiner’s report for any death for which an ECW is listed as a cause of
death or a contributing factor. This data should be collected, compiled and
published annually by the Governor’s Office of Crime Control and Prevention
(or other appropriate state agency). The legislation should also require that
each individual law enforcement agency make its reported data available to
the public upon request to ensure that the public can be informed about use
of ECWs in their communities.

3.

A requirement that civilians who intend to purchase an ECW complete an
MPCTC-approved ECW training program and meet certification and
recertification standards which demonstrate knowledge and proficiency with
the weapon.

4.

A requirement for a uniform state-wide ECW application/permit process for
purchase and ownership as well as for wearing, carrying, and transporting an
ECW. The process should include provisions for:
•
•
•
•

•

Applications being made under oath and subject to the penalty of perjury;
Collection of specific identifying information on the applicant and the
weapon to be obtained;
A background check, to include national and local criminal history;
Denial of the application if the individual is under the age of 21, is a
fugitive from justice or a habitual drunkard, is addicted to or habitually
uses controlled dangerous substances, or has spent more than 30
consecutive days in a medical institution for treatment of a mental
disorder;
A designated waiting period from the time of application submission to the
time the applicant may obtain the ECW; and

74

•

Seizure of the ECW as contraband by a law enforcement agency when
obtained in violation of the above process.183

5.

A requirement that ECW dealers must conform to the ECW application
process noted above.

6.

A prohibition regarding persons or dealers knowingly selling or transferring an
ECW to a person prohibited from owning one.

7.

A provision for enhanced criminal penalties for the use of an ECW in the
commission of a crime, especially when used against law enforcement
officers, similar to the statutory crime of “Use of Handgun in the Commission
of a Crime or Violence or a Felony,”184 recognizing the unique attributes of the
ECW in comparison to other weapons.

183

These recommendations closely track Maryland’s restrictions on handgun ownership. See MD.
CODE ANN., PUB. SAFETY § 5-117 et seq.
184
MD. CODE ANN., CRIM LAW § 4-204.

75

Appendix A
Witness List for Task Force Hearings
•

Coleman Bazelon, ACLU of Maryland

•

Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld, Baltimore City Police Department

•

Terry Bohrer, Mental Health Association of Maryland

•

Del. Talmadge Branch, Maryland House of Delegates

•

Police Officer Bryan Brummitt, Maryland Transportation Authority Police
Department

•

Reuben Collins, Charles County Commission

•

Judy Cooper, Charles County Commission

•

Roger Copeland, Frederick County NAACP

•

June Dillard, Prince George’s County NAACP

•

Chief Bernadette DiPino, Ocean City Police Department

•

Guy Djoken, Frederick County NAACP

•

Chief Deputy Douglas Dodd, Worcester County Sheriff’s Office

•

1st Sergeant Tim Eikenberg, Maryland Transportation Authority Police
Department

•

Sergeant Angelo Giafes, Elkton Police Department

•

Captain Alan Goldberg, Montgomery County Police Department

•

Captain Kenneth Hasenei, Maryland State Police Agency

•

Peter Holran, TASER International, Inc.

•

Elbridge James, Montgomery County NAACP

•

Sen. Delores Kelly, Maryland State Senate

•

Barry Kissing, Frederick County NAACP

•

Police Officer Joan Logan, Montgomery County Police Department

•

Mike Mage, ACLU of Montgomery County

•

Chief William McMahon, Howard County Department of Police

•

Edith Patterson, Charles County Commission

•

1st Sergeant Jason Pulliam, Maryland Transportation Authority Police
Department

•

Mark Shmueli, Law Office of Mark Shmueli

•

Richard Speake, Training Coordinator, Anne Arundel County Sheriff’s Office

76

Appendix B
ECW Discharges in Maryland

Jurisdiction
Anne Arundel County Sheriff
Baltimore City Police Dept.
Baltimore County Police Dept.
City of Bowie Police Dept.
Caroline County Sheriff
Cecil County Sheriff
Charles County Sheriff
Dorchester County Sheriff
Frederick County Sheriff
Garrett County Sheriff
Gaithersburg City Police Dept.
Harford Co. Sheriff
Howard County Police Dept.
Montgomery County Police Dept.
Montgomery County Sheriff
Prince George's County Police Dept.
Queen Anne’s Co. Sherriff
St. Mary's County Sheriff
Washington County Sheriff
Wicomico County Sheriff
Worcester County Sheriff

Yrs. of
Total
Discharge/Y
Data Discharges
R
1.00
1
1.0
1.58
195
123.2
2.75
219
79.6
3.00
8
2.7
2.17
12
5.5
1.25
3
2.4
5.75
124
21.6
2.00
3
1.5
6.75
111
16.4
3.75
10
2.7
5.00
36
7.2
5.00
161
32.2
2.33
37
15.9
0.50
111
222.0
6.75
31
4.6
1.08
78
72.0
4.75
45
9.5
3.83
117
30.5
3.75
63
16.8
1.00
1
1.0
2.75
13
4.7

White
Male Female Total
0
28
94
4
8
2
36
3
68
10
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
2

0
6
7
0
1
1
7
0
6
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
1

0
34
101
4
9
3
43
3
74
10
11
n/a
17
30
15
4
n/a
59
50
0
3

%
0%
17%
46%
50%
75%
100%
35%
100%
67%
100%
31%
n/a
46%
27%
48%
5%
n/a
50%
79%
0%
23%

% of
Pop.
75%
32%
66%
63%
79%
89%
52%
69%
80%
98%
58%
81%
64%
54%
54%
18%
88%
78%
85%
70%
81%

Black
Male Female Total
1
144
90
3
2
0
67
0
23
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
1
6

0
6
5
1
1
0
6
0
4
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
0

1
150
95
4
3
0
73
0
27
0
11
n/a
18
64
15
66
n/a
53
13
1
6

%
100%
77%
43%
50%
25%
0%
59%
0%
24%
0%
31%
n/a
49%
58%
48%
85%
n/a
45%
21%
100%
46%

% of
Pop.
15%
64%
25%
31%
14%
6%
39%
28%
9%
1%
15%
12%
17%
17%
17%
66%
8%
15%
10%
24%
14%

Hispanic
Male Female Total %
0
0
7
0
0
0
4
0
5
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
0
n/a

0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
n/a
n/a
n/a
0
0
n/a

0
0
7
0
0
0
5
0
5
0
13
n/a
2
11
0
7
n/a
0
0
0
0

0%
0%
3%
0%
0%
0%
4%
0%
5%
0%
36%
n/a
5%
10%
0%
9%
n/a
0%
0%
0%
0%

All demographic data derived from the latest U.S. Census data, available at http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/24000.html
Note: The Baltimore County Sheriff responded that it has not deployed any ECWs. The Calvert County Sheriff and Allegany County Sheriff did not respond to the Task Force's requests for data.

% of
Pop.
5%
2%
3%
3%
5%
2%
4%
2%
6%
1%
20%
3%
5%
15%
15%
13%
2%
3%
3%
3%
2%

Appendix C
Summary of Survey of Maryland Law Enforcement Agencies’ Policies on Electronic
Control Weapons
This Appendix summarizes the different approaches taken by law enforcement
agencies throughout Maryland to regulating the use of ECWs by their officers.
Specifically, this summary focuses on seven key areas addressed in virtually all
policies: (1) training of law enforcement officers in ECW usage; (2) restrictions on ECW
usage for certain vulnerable classes of people; (3) restrictions on ECW usage in
situations that could lead to secondary injuries; (4) the role of ECWs in an agency’s useof-force policy; (5) permissible methods of deploying ECWs; (6) medical treatment
required following ECW use; and (7) procedures for reporting and monitoring ECW
deployments.
The policies included in this analysis were collected via informal and formal requests
under the Maryland Public Information Act, sent by the ACLU in conjunction with its role
on the Task Force. Pursuant to these requests, the ACLU obtained ECW policies from
twenty-four agencies, including county police departments, county sheriff’s offices, and
police departments of independent cities.1 Eight other agencies informed the ACLU that
they do not permit their officers to carry or use ECWs.2 Two agencies declined to
provide materials.3
The policies’ rules and guidelines are summarized in a chart that follows this summary.
Training
Fourteen agencies4 provided information specifically detailing their training policies, and
of those, nine appear to rely exclusively on training materials provided by TASER
1

The following agencies provided ECW policies: Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office, Anne Arundel
County Sheriff’s Office, Baltimore City Police, Baltimore County Police, Bowie Police, Calvert County
Sheriff’s Office, Caroline County Sheriff’s Office, Cecil County Sheriff’s Office, Charles County Sheriff’s
Office, Dorchester County Sheriff’s Office, Frederick County Sheriff’s Office, Gaithersburg Police, Garrett
County Sheriff’s Office, Harford County Sheriff’s Office, Howard County Department of Police, Maryland
State Police Tactical Assault Team, Montgomery County Police, Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office,
Prince George’s County Police, Queen Anne’s County Sheriff’s Office, St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office,
Washington County Sheriff’s Office, Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office, and the Worcester County Sheriff’s
Office.
2
The following jurisdictions do not use ECWs: Annapolis Police, Anne Arundel Police, Baltimore
City Schools Police, Baltimore County Sheriff’s Office, Carroll County Sheriff’s Office, Kent County
Sheriff’s Office, Talbot County Sheriff’s Office, and the University of Maryland at College Park Police.
3
The Prince George’s County Sheriff’s Office and the Somerset County Sheriff’s Office did not
provide materials in response to our requests.
4
The agencies that provided or identified training materials were: Allegany County Sheriff’s Office,
Baltimore County Police, Calvert County Sheriff’s Office, Charles County Sheriff’s Office, Dorchester
County Sheriff’s Office, Frederick County Sheriff’s Office, Gaithersburg Police, Harford County Sheriff’s
Office, Howard County Department of Police, Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, Queen Anne’s County
Sheriff’s Office, St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office, Washington County Sheriff’s Office, and Worcester
County Sheriff’s Office.

International.5 TASER International’s curriculum consists of a PowerPoint presentation,
videos, a written test, and sometimes live training. The training materials describe
various “tactical considerations” that cover matters similar to use-of-force policies, but
TASER International does not adopt a specific use-of-force policy, and instead instructs
officers to follow their department’s policies regarding appropriate use-of-force
standards. TASER International’s materials do not provide guidance on where ECWs
fall in the use-of-force continuum and do not advise officers about when deploying an
ECW would be excessive. The TASER International training materials also warn
officers about secondary injuries that could result from ECW use and suggest that
caution should be exercised when deploying an ECW against pregnant women and
people who are particularly frail. Finally, TASER International employs ECW practice
scenarios and written tests that are designed to promote technical proficiency with
ECWs, but that do not focus on when and whether it is appropriate to use an ECW in
the first place.
The remaining five jurisdictions that provided information about their training programs
have created their own training or recertification programs. The Baltimore County
Police Department has created a proprietary training program, while the Charles County
and Howard County Sheriffs have each created training courses for recertifying ECW
users.6 Both the Queen Anne’s County Sheriff and the Gaithersburg City Police
Department use training materials derived from the Maryland Police and Correctional
Training Commission (“MPCTC”), with modifications of their own. The Gaithersburg
City Police Department also incorporates a video and PowerPoint presentation used in
the TASER International training program.
Limitations on Use Against Vulnerable Groups
Of the 24 law enforcement agencies that provided use-of-force policies, seventeen
restrict the use of ECWs against classes of people who may be subject to an increased
risk of injury. These agencies typically place heightened restrictions on ECW use
against children, the elderly, the infirm, pregnant women, and individuals who the officer
knows suffer from heart problems. Of these jurisdictions, only the Baltimore City Police
Department, Cecil County Sheriff, and Queen Anne’s County Sheriff appear to
completely ban ECW use on certain vulnerable classes of individuals. The majority of
other agencies require only that the officer have “additional justification” or give “careful
consideration” to deploying an ECW against individuals in these groups, or that such
5

For the identity of the jurisdictions that rely on TASER International’s training materials, please
see the chart summarizing ECW policies and the end of this appendix. The attached chart can be used
throughout this memorandum to identify the agencies that have adopted a specific approach discussed
herein. Where the identity of the jurisdictions is not clear from the chart, such information will be included
in a footnote.
6
Charles County and Howard Police both use TASER International material for initial training, but
have created their own material for re-training their officers. Charles County created its own training
presentation along with a multiple-choice recertification exam covering maintenance, proper use, use-offorce continuum guidelines, and other restrictions on use. Howard County provides a PowerPoint
presentation of the use-of-force guidelines for ECWs and requires that each officer assigned an ECW
must pass an exam demonstrating proficiency in loading, unloading, deploying, and discharging the
prongs of the weapon on an annual basis.

2

use is warranted by “exigent circumstances.”
Children: Sixteen jurisdictions restrict use of ECWs against “children” or “young
people.” Most policies with such restrictions mention “children” in general, without
further definition, though a few departments have specified that the restrictions apply to
young children. The Baltimore County Police Department, for example, specifies that
children should be given “special consideration” according to their age, size, and weight,
and the Cecil County Sheriff specifies that ECWs should not be used against “very
young” children.
Pregnant Women: Seventeen agencies restrict use of ECWs against pregnant
women, or “obviously” pregnant women.
Elderly: Twelve agencies restrict use of ECWs against elderly persons and individuals
who appear frail or infirm. Some agencies simply note that using an ECW against
elderly persons involves “increased risk,” while others require “exigent circumstances”
to justify the use of an ECW. The Baltimore County Police Department, in addition to
restricting ECWs use against the elderly and frail, restrict use of ECWs against persons
who are physically handicapped. The Wicomico County Sheriff restricts use against
persons known to have neuromuscular disorders or epilepsy.
Heart Problems: Eight agencies specifically restrict the use of ECWs against persons
known to have heart problems. None of the surveyed agencies impose outright bans,
though the Garret County Sheriff bans outright using a “stun cuff” against inmates
known to have heart conditions. (A stun cuff is an ECW cuff designed to control
prisoners.)
Limitations on ECW Use to Avoid Secondary Injuries
Most agencies restrict officers from deploying ECWs in certain situations where the use
of ECWs is likely to cause secondary injuries. Thus, agencies often prohibit using
ECWs around flammable materials, noting in particular that some police pepper sprays
are flammable and could be ignited by an ECW, as could materials in
methamphetamine labs. To avoid injuries caused by falling, many agencies restrict
using ECWs against subjects in elevated positions and subjects who are running. Many
agencies also restrict use of ECWs against subjects in water due to the risk of
drowning. Some agencies further restrict use of ECWs against individuals driving motor
vehicles or operating machinery. A few agencies impose additional restrictions. The
Baltimore County Police Department, for instance, prohibits use of ECWs against
persons holding firearms and against persons who are suicidal.
Many agencies impose at least some of these restrictions categorically, especially the
Other agencies note that
restrictions on use around flammable materials.7
7

The following agencies categorically ban use of ECWs around flammable materials: Allegheny
County Sheriff’s Office; Baltimore City Police; Calvert County Sheriff’s Office; Caroline County Sheriff’s
Office; Charles County Sheriff’s Office; Gaithersburg Police; Howard County Department of Police;
Montgomery County Police; Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office; Prince George’s County Police; Queen

3

circumstances increasing the likelihood of secondary injuries are extremely dangerous,
and simply caution officers to exercise caution and use their judgment before deploying
ECWs in these situations.
Use-of-Force Policies
The use-of-force policies of Maryland law enforcement agencies generally classify
ECWs as “less lethal” devices, and locate them on the use-of-force continuum below
deadly weapons. Beyond this similarity, use-of-force policies regarding when ECWs
may be used differ substantially among the Maryland law enforcement agencies.
Twelve agencies permit an officer to use an ECW if the suspect poses a physical threat,
or if the person is “actively resisting” the officer. The policies generally define “actively
resisting” to include actions that do not give rise to an imminent threat. For example, a
person who is “bracing” or “tensing” his or her arms to avoid being placed into handcuffs
is considered to be “actively resisting.” The policies appear to distinguish “actively
resisting” from “passive” resistance, in which a person is simply refusing to obey
commands, and five agencies specifically forbid ECW use against passive resisters.
Another twelve agencies’ use-of-force policies contain vague standards that can be
read to permit use in a wide variety of situations, even when the person is not offering
“active resistance” of any kind. For instance, several policies permit officers to use
ECWs to “control the situation” or to “bring an unlawful situation under control,” and to
“safely effect an arrest.”8 The Gaithersburg City Police Department policy allows ECWs
to be used on merely “non-complaint individuals.”
Some law enforcement agencies use very specific hierarchies of increasing force based
on the level of resistance presented by the suspect and the threat to the well-being of
persons involved in the incident. For example, the Allegany County Sheriff places
ECWs on the continuum before the use of pepper spray or a baton, and the Garrett
County Sheriff places the use of ECWs above verbal commands, but below “firm grip
pain.”
A few other specific provisions are worth noting here:

Anne’s County Sheriff’s Office; St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office; Washington County Sheriff’s Office; and
Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office.
8
The jurisdictions that have vague standards that allow for the use of ECWs include: Allegany
County Sheriff’s Office (“circumstances are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving”); Calvert County
Sheriff’s Office (“when the use of force is necessary to gain control of an individual for a lawful purpose”);
Charles County Sheriff’s Office (“to incapacitate a resistive person”); Frederick County Sheriff’s Office
(“when . . . attempts to subdue or control the subject by other conventional tactics have been, or will likely
be, ineffective”); Gaithersburg Police Department (on “non-compliant individuals”); Garrett County
Sheriff’s Office (“circumstances are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving”); Harford County Sheriff’s
Office (“to bring an unlawful situation safely and effectively under control”); the Maryland State Police
Tactical Assault Team (“to safely effect an arrest”); Montgomery County Police (“to safely effect an
arrest”); Prince George’s County Sheriff’s Office (“effect an arrest”); Washington County Sheriff’s Office
(“to safely effect an arrest”); and Worcester County Sheriff’s Office (“to safely effect an arrest” or “to
control the situation”).

4

•

Ten agencies strictly limit the use of ECWs on handcuffed persons to those
actively presenting a threat of bodily harm, but not all agencies address the
issue.

•

Fifteen agencies require officers to call out a warning before firing the ECW,
both to alert other officers (who might mistake the ECW for a gun) and to give
the subject a chance to comply.

•

The Baltimore County Police Department requires that the use of an ECW
must be approved by a supervisor, except in exigent circumstances.

•

The Baltimore County Police Department, Howard Police Department, and St.
Mary’s County Sheriff explicitly prohibit the use of ECWs for punitive
purposes.

Permissible Methods of Use
Many jurisdictions impose restrictions or caution against certain methods of discharging
ECWs. For instance, fifteen jurisdictions prohibit officers from aiming ECWs at sensitive
areas such as the head, face, or groin, and eight jurisdictions specifically require officers
to use the minimum number of bursts necessary to bring the person under control.
Some jurisdictions, like the Bowie Police Department, require officers to affirmatively
justify the need for additional bursts. The Baltimore County Police Department specifies
that only three ECW bursts may be applied, absent “immediate exigent circumstances.”
Several jurisdictions also instructed officers to apply only one ECW at a time, unless
there are exigent circumstances.9 A few jurisdictions, however, have no restrictions on
the number or duration of ECW bursts.10
The Gaithersburg City Police Department and the Howard County Sheriff disfavor the
use of an ECW’s “stun drive” mode and require additional justifications for its use.
Medical Treatment Following Use
There is no consensus among the surveyed agencies as to the type of medical care
required after an individual is shocked with an ECW. Eight agencies require Emergency
Medical Services to be summoned to assess any suspect who is shocked by an ECW.
Of those agencies, six further require that the person be taken to the hospital. The
Gaithersburg City Police Department requires that EMS be summoned if the person is
shocked either more than three times or with more than one ECW. Twelve jurisdictions
simply require that police monitor the person and request EMS only if there are signs of
trouble or the person requests medical attention. The Frederick County Sheriff and the
St. Mary’s County Sheriff have no provisions for medical treatment, and the Wicomico
County Sheriff requires medical treatment only to remove ECW darts from a person’s
skin.
9

The Baltimore County Police, Bowie Police, Howard County Sheriff’s Office, and Wicomico
County Sheriff’s Office prohibit using multiple ECWs against a person simultaneously.
10
Baltimore City Police, Charles County Sheriff’s Office, Frederick County Sheriff’s Office, and
Worcester County Sheriff’s Office have no restrictions on the method in which an ECW is used.

5

Post-Use Reporting
All agencies surveyed require officers to document each use of an ECW (both
accidental and deliberate), typically in a use-of-force report. Seven agencies also
require that a supervisor be contacted after the deployment of an ECW and that the
supervisor respond to the scene. Other agencies require that photographs be taken,
both of the impact area and of any secondary injuries. Thirteen jurisdictions also
require that the data from ECWs be downloaded, and included in the use-of-force
report.11 Some jurisdictions also require supervisors to periodically to track use of
ECWs by reviewing downloaded data from ECW deployments. The Bowie Police
Department has an additional reporting requirement designed to monitor general ECW
use: the Department’s regulations provide that the commander will create an ECW use
database, then periodically download data from all ECWs, enter the use data into the
database, and then compare the database to the use-of-force reports to ensure that
each use of an ECW is reported.

11

The Dorchester County Sheriff’s Office requires a data download only “in the event of a
questionable discharge,” or one that leads to injuries.

6

Al

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Appendix
Overview of Maryland Law Enforcement Agencies' CED Policies

Training
Relies on Taser International materials
Created own materials
Fully explains medical risks
Officers practice using taser
Officers practice use-of-force decisions
Officers take written test
Use Restricted on Vulnerable Classes
Children
Pregnant women
Elderly, frail, or infirm
Subjects with heart problems
Use Restricted to Avoid Secondary Injuries
Near flammables
Subject in elevated position
Subject fleeing
Subject operating vehicle
Danger of drowning
Use-of-Force Continuum
Permited only if subject actively resists or threatens safety
Expressly prohibited against passive subject
Vague stantard permitting use in wide variety of circumstances
Warning required before using
Restricted against subject in handcuffs
Method of Use
Multiple shocks restricted
Use on sensitive areas restricted
Medical Care Required After CED Use
Must summon EMS
Must take subject to hospital
Summon EMS only on need or request
Reporting Required After CED Use
Use-of-force report required for all discharges
Supervisor must report to scene
Photographs must be taken
Monitoring CED use with data downloads

9

9
9

9

9
9
9

9
9
9
9

9

9
9

9

9
9
9

9
9
9

9
9
9
9

9
9

9

9
9
9
9

9

9

9

9
9

9
9

9
9

9
9

9

9

9
9

9
9

9
9

9
9

9

9
9

9
9

9
9

9
9

9

9

9

9
9

9
9
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9
9

9

9
9
9

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9
9

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Note: The following agencies do not permit their officers to use CEDs: Annapolis Police, Anne Arundel Police, Baltimore City Schools Police, Baltimore County Sheriff, Carroll
County Sheriff, Kent County Sheriff, Talbot County Sheriff, and the University of Maryland at College Park Police.
*Charles County Sheriff and Howard Police use Taser International materials for their initial training but created their own re-certification materials.

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Appendix D
Glossary of Terms
Accidental Discharge: The unintentional firing of an ECW in probe mode.
Aiming: Directing an ECW at a person or other intended target.
Arcing/Arching: Activating an ECW without a cartridge.
Automatic External Defibrillator (“AED”): An apparatus that monitors the heart of the
patient and then automatically administers a controlled electric shock to the chest to
restore normal heart rhythm.
Cartridge: The replaceable ECW cartridge that fires probes on connecting wires,
sending a high voltage/low current signal into a subject upon impact.
Command and Control Approach: A method of arresting or securing a person that
focuses on use of verbal commands and/or physical restraint to achieve compliance
and physical control of a person.
Confetti Tags/Anti-Felon Identification Tags (“AFID”)/Serialized Identification
Tags: Confetti-like tags expelled from a cartridge of an ECW when fired to shoot
probes. Each tag contains a serial number unique to the specific cartridge used.
Continuum of Force/Response to Resistance/Use of Force Model: A training
model/philosophy that supports the progressive and reasonable escalation and deescalation of officer-applied force in proportional response to the actions, level of
resistance offered by a subject and danger posed by the subject. The level of response
is based upon the situation encountered at the scene and the actions of the subject in
response to the officer’s commands. Such response may progress from the officer’s
physical presence at the scene to the application of deadly force.
Darts/Probes/Barbs/Electrode: Projectiles that are fired from an ECW and penetrate
the skin; wires are attached to the probes leading back to the ECW.
Dart/Probe Placement: Point of entry for a dart/probe on a person’s body.
Dart/Probe (Barb) Removal: The act of removing a dart/probe from a person’s body or
clothing.
De-escalation Techniques (Verbal and Non-Verbal): Part of a broader set of trained
techniques also known as “crisis intervention” techniques used to calm or lessen the
intensity of a scenario or conflict. Effective de-escalation techniques have been
developed and used by mental health professionals, law enforcement and others to
focus on responding to and reducing the symptoms and sources of serious agitation or
stress without use of force. These techniques can include containment, simple
listening, active listening, acknowledgement, reassurance of safety, apologizing,
agreeing and inviting criticism.
Deployment: Sending ECW devices into the field with law enforcement officers.
Deadly/Lethal Force: Any tactic or use of force that has an intended, natural, and
probable consequence of serious physical injury or death.

Discharge: Depressing the trigger of an ECW causing an ECW to fire.
Display: Removing the weapon from the holster and pointing the weapon at a subject,
arc the weapon or using it in the laser dot mode, prior to pulling the trigger.
Drive Stun Mode: The use of an ECW to deliver an electric charge by making direct
contact with the body for the purpose of compliance by the delivery of nonincapacitating pain or to complete an incapacitation circuit. See also Pain Compliance
Mode.
Drug Induced Psychosis: Psychosis is functionally a break with reality, wherein the
patient exhibits hallucinations and/or delusions.
Duration: The aggregate period of time that ECW shocks are discharged.
Early Warning System: Data-based police management tool designed to identify
officers whose behavior is problematic and to allow for early intervention to correct that
performance.
ECW Cycle: An electrical discharge occurring when an ECW trigger is pressed and
released. The standard 5-second cycle may be shortened by turning the ECW off
before 5-seconds has passed, or lengthened by pressing and holding the ECW trigger,
in which case the ECW will continue to deliver an electrical discharge until the trigger is
released.
Electronic Control Weapon (“ECW”)/Electronic Control Device
(“ECD”)/Conducted Energy Device (“CED”): A device primarily designed to disrupt a
subject’s central nervous system by means of deploying electrical energy sufficient to
cause uncontrolled muscle contractions and override an individual’s voluntary motor
responses. The Task Force has elected to refer to these devices as Electronic Control
Weapons.
Excited Delirium: Term used by some to describe a collection of symptoms that
include extreme mental and physiological excitement, characterized by extreme
agitation, hyperthermia, epiphora, hostility, exceptional strength, and endurance without
fatigue.
Exigent Circumstances: Circumstances that would cause a reasonable person to
believe that prompt and unusual action is necessary to prevent physical injury to self or
others.
Firing: Discharging ECW darts or electronic charge at a person.
First Responder: A generic term referring to the first medically trained responder to
arrive on scene (police, fire, EMS).
Fleeing: An active attempt by a person to avoid apprehension by a law enforcement
officer by attempting to leave the scene.
Incapacitation: In the context of ECW use, the deprivation of the power or ability to
control muscle movement or strength. The electrical current of an ECW overrides the
brain’s communication with the body and prevents the voluntary control over the
muscles.

Incapacitation mode: The use of an ECW to gain compliance by incapacitation of the
subject’s neuromuscular system.
Initial Certification: Successful completion of the first basic ECW training provided to
officers prior to issuance of an ECW.
Intermediate-Force Weapon: A weapon usage category situated between a verbal
command and lethal force on a traditional force continuum.
Laser Dot (Red Dot): Aiming an ECW and activating its laser dot.
Less Lethal: A concept of planning and force application that meets an operational or
tactical objective, with less potential for causing death or serious injury than
conventional, more lethal police tactics.
Less-Lethal Weapon: Any apprehension or restraint device that, when used as
designed and intended, has less potential for causing death or serious injury than
conventional police lethal weapons.
Medical Crisis: A medical condition at an unstable point in its natural course that
requires urgent or emergent evaluation or care and may present with abnormal
behavior.
Mental Health Crisis: An unpredictable psychological event not under the individual’s
control.
Oleoresin Capsicum (“OC”): Pepper spray, also known as OC spray (from “Oleoresin
Capsicum”), OC gas, and capsicum spray, is a lachrymatory agent (a chemical
compound that irritates the eyes to cause tears, pain, and even temporary blindness)
that is used primarily in riot control, crowd control, and personal self-defense.
Pain compliance mode: The use of an ECW to gain compliance by the delivery of
non-incapacitating pain. See also Drive Stun Mode.
Passive Resistance: Physical actions that do not prevent the officer’s attempt to
control, for example, a person who remains in a limp, prone position, passive
demonstrators, etc.
Performance-based testing Scenario- or judgment-based components: Training
and testing usually involving role-playing and recreation of real-life interactions and
designed to elicit manual or behavioral responses.
Physical injury: For the purpose of this report physical injury has the same meaning
as it does in Maryland’s definition of second degree assault on a law enforcement
officer. Specifically, “physical injury” means “any impairment of physical condition,
excluding minor injuries.
Post-Discharge Investigation: An investigation of the circumstances surrounding the
intentional or unintentional discharge of an ECW.
Potentially Lethal: A situation, condition or device that could conceivably result in, or
contribute to death.
Probe Mode: The use of an ECW to deliver an electric charge by firing darts into the
body for the purpose of incapacitating a subject.

Recertification process: The process of ensuring an individual remains a competent
and appropriate candidate to be issued an ECW. This process would include updated
training as well as the review and analysis of an officer’s downloaded data and use-offorce reports to determine if the officer’s past history of ECW use indicates that he or
she is not using the device appropriately.
Secondary Injury: Physical trauma indirectly associated with ECW use (e.g., injuries
from falls).
Sensitive Areas: A person’s head, neck, chest, and genital area.
Serious Injury: Bodily injury that, either at the time of the actual injury or at a later
time, involves a substantial risk of death, a substantial risk of serious permanent
disfigurement, a substantial risk of protracted loss or impairment of the function of any
part or organ of the body, or breaks, fractures, or burns of the second or third degree.

Appendix E
List of Acronyms Used in the Report
ACLU: American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland
AED: Automatic external defibrillators
AFID: Anti-Felon Identification
ALS: Advanced life support
AMA: American Medical Association
CED: Conducted Energy Device
BATF: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms
ECW: Electronic Control Weapons
GOCCP: Governor’s Office of Crime Control and Prevention
IACP: International Association of Chiefs of Police
ICE: Immigration and Customs Enforcement
MPCTC: Maryland Police and Correctional Training Commission
NAACP: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People of Maryland
OC: Oleoresin Capsicum
PERF: Police Executive Research Forum

Appendix F
Acknowledgments
The Task Force wishes to thank the following individuals and organizations:
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The Maryland Attorney General, Douglas F. Gansler, for creating the Task
Force and initiating the process leading to this report;
The Maryland State Conference of the NAACP and the Maryland ACLU for
encouraging the creation of the Task Force;
The Maryland Chiefs of Police Association for supporting the creation of the
Task Force;
Dan Seiler, Founder/Chief Investigator, Cops, Inc., for serving as an observer
to the Task Force;
Katherine Winfree, Chief Deputy Attorney General, for assisting the Task
Force;
Kristen Mahoney, Executive Director, Governor’s Office of Crime Control and
Prevention, for assisting the Task Force;
Sherrilyn Ifill, University of Maryland School of Law, for assisting the Task
Force;
Carol Scheiber, Management Associate to the Attorney General, for providing
administrative support to the Task Force;
Raquel Guillory, Public Information Officer in the Office of the Attorney
General, for assisting the Task Force;
Shanetta Paskel, Director of Legislative Affairs for the Office of the Attorney
General, for assisting the Task Force;
Deborah Pinkham, Assistant to Task Force Chair Michael Higginbotham, for
providing administrative support to the Task Force;
The law firm of Joseph, Greenwald & Laake for providing meeting space for
the Task Force;
Craig Thompson, Venable LLP, for assisting the Task Force in publicizing the
public hearings;
Doug Wilson, Stephen H. Weil, Jennifer Baker, Courtney Schmidt, Phil
Schreiber, Shannon Ross, Beth France, Shanna Singh Hughey, Allison Hart,
and Stephanie Rogers for assisting the Task Force;
Prince George’s County Parks and Recreation Department for providing
facilities for the Task Force’s public hearing;
University of Baltimore School of Law for providing facilities for the Task
Force’s public hearing;
Anne Rubins, University of Baltimore School of Law, for assisting the Task
Force;
Heather Dunn, University of Baltimore School of Law, for assisting the Task
Force;

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Sergeant Angelo Giafes, Captain Alan Goldberg, Captain Ken Hasenei,
Police Officer III Joan Logan, Chief William McMahon, Training Coordinator
Richard Speake, Terry Bohrer, Mike Mage, Roger Copeland, Elbridge James,
June Dillard, Sen. Delores Kelly, Reuben Collins, Edith Patterson, Judy
Cooper, Del. Talmadge Branch, Chief Deputy Douglas Dodd, 1st Sergeant
Jason Pulliam, 1st Sergeant Tim Eikenberg, Police Officer II Brian Brummitt,
Commissioner Frederick Bealefeld, Chief Bernadette DiPino, Guy Djoken,
Barry Kissing, Coleman Bazelon, Mark Shmueli, and Peter Holran for
providing testimony, oral or written, to the Task Force at the open hearings;
and
Gil Genn, lobbyist for TASER International Inc., and Dr. Mary Ripple, Medical
Examiner’s Office of the State of Maryland, for presenting material to Task
Force members and/or engaging in discussions with Task Force members.

REPORT OF THE MARYLAND ATTORNEY GENERAL’S

TASK FORCE ON ELECTRONIC WEAPONS

Office of the Attorney General
200 St. Paul Place
Baltimore, Maryland 21202
Tel: (410) 576-6300
www.oag.state.md.us