Police and military officers should be banned from using Taser International Inc. stun guns until their safety can be proven, Amnesty International said in a report released today.The electronic weapons have contributed to more than 70 deaths, Amnesty International said. Police are using Tasers "as a routine force option'' rather than to avoid using lethal weapons, the London-based human rights group said.Amnesty's 93-page report comes after stories by the New York Times and CBS News connecting Taser weapons to deaths. Taser, the largest maker of stun guns, denies any connection to deaths, and says that its weapons have been deemed safe by the U.K. and U.S. governments. The company's shares had more than tripled this year as more police departments and armed forces bought the guns.
The weapons' "capacity to inflict severe pain at the push of a button without leaving substantial marks'' makes them open to abuse, Amnesty said. In "many'' instances, their use may have been in violation of international laws against torture and rules on the conduct of law enforcement officers, the report said. "We applaud the idea that people are coming up with alternatives to deadly force and a way for police officers to protect themselves,'' said LeMille. "But 80 percent of the time Tasers are being used on unarmed people.''
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