Tennessee cops torturing a suspect



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4744588/Three-cops-suspended-repeatedly-tasering-teen.html



'I'll keep on doing that until I run out of batteries': Three Tennessee deputies are suspended after horrifying footage emerges of them repeatedly using a Taser on a boy, 18, while he was tied to a chair

  • Jordan Elias Norris, now 19, has filed an excessive force lawsuit after his arrest for drugs and weapons offences last November
  • The teen says he was repeatedly tasered while he was restrained by deputies at Cheatham County Jail
  • Shocking footage appears to show one of the officers repeatedly using a taser on Norris while he was bound to a chair
  • 'I'll keep on doing that until I run out of batteries,' the officer is heard telling Norris in the jail surveillance footage
  • Norris claims he suffered more than 40 pairs of taser burns while in custody
  • Three Cheatham County are now on administrative leave and the sheriff has contacted the District Attorney to request an independent investigation
By Hannah Parry For Dailymail.com

Published: 16:38 EDT, 30 July 2017 | Updated: 21:07 EDT, 30 July 2017


Three Tennessee deputies have been suspended for repeatedly tasering an 18-year-old suspect while he was restrained, according to the teen's lawsuit.

Jordan Elias Norris, now 19, claims he suffered more than 40 pairs of taser burns after he was arrested and held at Cheatham County Jail for drugs and weapons offences last November.

He has since filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court accusing the deputies of using excessive force, failure to protect and deprivation of civil rights.

Shocking footage appears to show one of the officers repeatedly using a taser on Norris while he was bound to a chair.



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Three deputies have been suspended for allegedly, repeatedly tasering an 18-year-old while he was restrained (pictured, one officer holds the taser to Jordan Elias Norris's chest while the sound of the stun gun being discharged in audible on the surveillance video )

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The lawsuit states that Norris was repeatedly tasered while in bound to the restraining chair



'I'll keep on doing that until I run out of batteries,' the officer is heard telling Norris in the jail surveillance footage.

The surveillance also shows the deputy telling him to 'stop resisting,' while stunning Norris, who automatically tenses in pain.

The deputy went onto to stun Norris 'four times totaling approximately fifty seconds on his stomach and legs,' according to the suit, obtained by the Tennessean.

The suit adds the deputy involved acted in a 'sadistic and malicious nature in repeatedly tasing Plaintiff Norris, such that the force was unreasonable.'

Three Cheatham County Sheriff's deputies - the one using the taser and two who stood by and failed to act - have now been placed on administrative leave. None have been named.

Cheatham County Sheriff Mike Breedlove says he is examining the office's Use of Force policy and has contacted the District Attorney General Ray Crouch Jr. to request an independent investigation.



Norris, (in his mugshot) now 19, claims he suffered more than 40 pairs of taser burns after he was arrested and held at Cheatham County Jail for drugs and weapons offences last November

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'I'll keep on doing that until I run out of batteries,' an officer is heard telling Norris in the jail surveillance footage

'As Sheriff, I want our citizens to know that any inappropriate behavior that may have violated an individual's rights will not be tolerated,' he said.

'I have placed the employees involved on administrative leave while the investigation is conducted. We will work closely and cooperatively with the TBI and District Attorney's Office to ensure all facts are provided and all angles of this incident are thoroughly investigated.'

Norris was arrested November 3, 2016, for felony manufacturing/possession of marijuana for resale, possession of drug paraphernalia, theft under $500 and five counts of possession of a prohibited weapon, vandalism of over $1,000 and simple assault.

He was in jail for almost two weeks before he was bonded out on November 16.

When he was released, he had around 40 pairs of taser burns throughout his body, according to the suit.




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Use of Force reports filed by deputies, report that Norris was first stunned while in booking. They claim he resisted efforts to cuff him, so he was stunned and taken to a restraint chair

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The suit adds the deputy involved acted in a 'sadistic and malicious nature in repeatedly tasing Plaintiff Norris, such that the force was unreasonable'

'Most of the taser burns sustained by Plaintiff Norris are not accounted for by the Use of Force Reports and video clips received from the Cheatham County Sheriff's Office, raising further questions and creating a reasonable belief that Plaintiff Norris was also repeatedly tased on other occasions without proper justification,' said the suit.

Use of Force reports filed by deputies, report that Norris was stunned while in booking after they thought he might start a fight with another inmate. They claim he resisted efforts to cuff him, so he was stunned and taken to a restraint chair. The report reveals they stunned him again for resisting as he was put in the chair.

Deputies say he was in the chair for three hours, during which time he was shouting he wanted to die, the Use of Force report reveals.

A report reveals that officers stunned him multiple times that evening at 10.20pm, on November 5, for 'compliance' to transport him to a vehicle to take him to jail.

He was stunned 15 minutes later, for 'one second on the calf' in another attempt to transfer him to the vehicle, another report reveals.

The lawsuit, which is seeking unspecified damages, claims that these reports do not reflect the 'unreasonable, unnecessary, excessive' use of force used against a young suspect who was suffering a mental health episode.
 
Looks kind of staged, but I guess I'm just used to seeing chitty footage from security cameras; plus dailymail.

Looks like that young man is set for life. Good for him.
 
Lets cut to the chase-
The "victim" is a white male.
Outside of the anti-cop agenda this doesn't fit the liberal media agenda so it won't be covered.

Also, those pictures are crystal clear so I'm thinking there is a lot more that we don't know here. Those cops knew they were being taped so I think that guy might have been completely out of control and their use of force was warranted.
 
At first I was rather horrified, but there are a lot of officers and support in those photos, and they knew they were being taped. I suspect there is more to this than is being released here.
 
I am very much surprised that law enforcement people in the USA , I mean the first world power, don't receive proper training so as to make professionals of law enforcement that everyone could admire.
More it goes, and more I wonder if the USA image overseas is not just a smokescreen.
 
I am very much surprised that law enforcement people in the USA , I mean the first world power, don't receive proper training so as to make professionals of law enforcement that everyone could admire.
More it goes, and more I wonder if the USA image overseas is not just a smokescreen.

Give it a rest. There are bad apples in all groups, everywhere.

You're French, right? You think GIGN or RAID doesn't have brutal tactics on suspects/prisoners when no one is watching? You're deluding yourself.
 

apparently 'denial' is not good.
"Denial is a defense mechanism that helps us cope with aspects of ourselves we don't want to look at because it would be too upsetting. It's like sweeping dirt under a rug. It's still there. We just don't see it. In many cases, it's not that big a deal. We can get through our lives sufficiently without facing some truths about ourselves. But in some cases denial can be a very unhealthy approach to life. If you're in denial about being an alcoholic or drug addict, for example. Or if you're in denial about a growth on your body because the thought of having cancer is too frightening, so you don't go to a doctor until it's too late. Not a good move. It's best that we deal with the difficulties in our lives and in ourselves sooner rather than later. It's best if we have the courage to hold a mirror up to ourselves and look at the truth of who we are and what we're doing to ourselves and to others that we are not consciously aware of. Oftentimes it is our friends and family who point out these unconscious truths to us. Oftentimes we don't want to hear it. We get defensive and angry. We "shoot the messenger." This is a mistake. We need these messengers in our lives to tell us things we are afraid to tell ourselves."
May be it works as well in politics?
 
I am very much surprised that law enforcement people in the USA , I mean the first world power, don't receive proper training so as to make professionals of law enforcement that everyone could admire.
More it goes, and more I wonder if the USA image overseas is not just a smokescreen.


Good. Please tell the millions trying to come here illegally that it is horrible here.
 
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