Taser Cops Cleared Hollywood In-custody Death 2002(2)
Download original document:
Document text
Document text
This text is machine-read, and may contain errors. Check the original document to verify accuracy.
Tests: Taser gun not factor in death ofhomeless man By VICKY AGNEW STAFF WRITER The Broward County Medical Examiner's Office said a shot from a Taser gun did not contribute to the death of a homeless man who died in late January after struggling with Hollywood police. Tests revealed Vinnie Del'Ostia had cocaine in his system, but the medical examiner would not release the cause of death Tuesday. Hollywood police spokesman Tony Rode said the department has always felt Tasers are safe and that officials are satisfied with the medical examiner's findings. The department has used Tasers for HOLLYWOOD· Vinnie Del'Ostia, 31, died Jan. 27 after Hollywood police tried to subdue him. more than a year and has experienced no problems, he said. Del'Ostia, 31, a diagnosed schizophrenic with a h.istory of drug abuse, stumbled into the Entrada Motel on Federal Highway in Hollywood on Jan. 27, behaving erratically and damaging property. He refused to comply with police demands to lie on the ground, so an officer shot him with a 50,000-volt M-26 Taser. Officers on the scene said Del'Ostia ripped the probes .from his chest after being hit and continued to behave irrationally. After wrestling him to the ground, officers said they noticed he was having trouble breathing and called for paramedics. Del'Ostia was dead before he could be taken to a hospital, Hollywood fire officialssaid. Toxicology tests revealed Del'Ostia had cocaine in his • lASER CONTINUES ON 28~ ~ f3 Taser gun cleared in man's death • lASER CONTINUED FROM PAGE lB system and died from causes unrelated to the Taser, said an employee with the Medical Examiner's Office. The Taser, also known as a stun gun, fires two projectile darts, connected to the weapon by wires, that reach a subject up to 21 feet away. The charge causes muscle contractions but not heart contractions, said Dr. Richard Luceri, director of the Arrhythmia Center at Holy Cross Hospital in Fort lauderdale. Luceri is an expert in arrhythmia and sudden death and is not affiliated with the Medical Examiner's Office. A 1991 study by·the Univer- . heart significantly. Their senssity of Southern California said es are heightened by the drug, it found at least one death from and they may not be aware the original Taser device, they're having palpitations, so whose technology is the basis they just keep on doing what for the Taser International gun they're doing and that's what used by Hollywood police and gets them into trouble electriabout 1,100 other police de- cally," Luceri said. "Forget the partments around the country. Taser, the circumstances are Taser International is only 8 just plain old ripe to have cardiyears old, and no deaths have acarrest. been linked to its product, a "Then comes law enforcement, and the person may pu't company spokesman has said. For a Taser to be deadly, it up a fight, which increases the would have to expose a subject adrenaline even more ... I to certain amounts of voltage think the Taser is just another and current long enough to do stimulant and is not causing damage, said Luceri. He added cardiac arrest or the death." someone who has certain Law enforcement agencies drugs in his system is more vul- are not obligated to keep renerable to cardiac problems. cords of deaths from Taser-re"Heroin an,d cocaine are ma- lated incidents, and medical evjor stimulants that race the idence on the subject.is murky. That's what bothers civilliberties groups like Amnesty international, who argue that not enough research has been done on stun guns. "These things have no place in policing, especially if-they have no accountability structured around them," said Derreck Kayongo, an Amnesty International spokesman. "We' think Tasers should be the last resort if they are a resort at all. The police have had various mechanisms to subdue suspects before Tasers came along." Vicl~y Agnew can be reached at vagnew@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385- 7922.