A couple of stories this past week highlight a troubling new trend in the United States: Cops using tasers on kids. I’m not talking teenagers, either. I am talking about two ten year olds, both tasered for behaving unruly in the presence of sheriff’s deputies. You’d think we could have a consensus that this is clearly an abuse of force — but no, in both cases the use of force was deemed to be justifiable by the Police Departments in question. I think a Citizen’s Review Board would find differently.
In the first case we have a ten year old girl in Ozark, Arkansas who refused to take a shower before her bedtime. Inexcusably, her mother resorted to dialing 911 instead of finding her own solution to deal with this common bedtime problem. Kids hate going to bed and they hate taking showers, we all know this. Calling the police to solve this domestic conflict is horrible parenting, but it is something citizens are being conditioned to do nowadays because the Nanny State tells us not to spank our kids or even yell at them when they misbehave, under threat of removing your children from your care. What’s a frustrated parent to do?
Officer Bradshaw stated in the report that he “decided there was not going to be a peaceful resolution to the issue,” and told the girl she was under arrest. After receiving permission from the girl’s mother to use their Taser, the girl continued to resist the officers, Bradshaw gave the girl a light shock to her back. She immediately stopped fighting, and was carried out to the officer’s patrol car. Eventually she would be transported to a Youth Shelter where she can continue her education of how the state treats its stubborn citizens who do not submit unquestioningly to authority.
It may make you feel better to know that Officer Bradshaw was subsequently relieved of his duties. However the reason wasn’t because he used the taser on a defenseless unarmed ten year old girl. “The policy that Officer Bradshaw failed to obey is failure to have his camera placed on his Taser,” Chief Jim Noggle wrote. So those of you in Ozark can rest easy knowing that the next time the cops taser your children they will probably take some photos of the incident.
Next up is Pueblo, Colorado where a ten year old boy supposedly “threatened deputies with a pipe and a stick, and threw a piece of wood at them.” Naturally they proceeded to shock the youth with a taser and take him into custody under suspicion of menacing with a deadly weapon. This time no one will likely be fired. Capt. Jeff Teschner says that the deputies involved were justified in their use of force.
It’s clear to me that we have a major shortage of real dangerous thugs and criminals in this country. They’ve become near extinct, apparently, and now police have no choice but to turn their highly honed law enforcement skills and cat-like reflexes on the would-be criminals of tomorrow. One has to wonder what the civilian response will be when one of these children is killed by a taser shock and the blame is ultimately placed on the victim.

