MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — More than 200 people
marched through Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 6, clogging tourist-filled
sidewalks to demand the arrest of a policeman who fired a stun gun at a
graffiti artist who died in police custody on Aug. 6.
The protesters alleged that Officer Jorge Mercado used excessive
force when he used a Taser on Israel Hernandez-Llach, 18, during an arrest
attempt in August.
“He was sentenced like a prisoner when he goes before a firing
squad,” Hernandez-Llach’s father, Israel Hernandez Bandera, said on the steps
of Miami Beach City Hall.
Friends, family and supporters carried signs reading “Paint is
temporary, death is forever” and chanted “No justice, no peace” in English and
Spanish.
Hernandez-Llach was prolific graffiti artist nicknamed “Reefa,”
and the march was led by the Justice for Reefa Committee and the American
Community Council. Marchers asked that Mercado be fired and arrested and that
the Miami Beach Police Department change its policy regarding use of stun guns.
Police discovered Colombian-born Hernandez-Llach spray-painting
the wall of an abandoned McDonald’s early on the morning of Aug. 6. The
teenager fled, evading police for several minutes before he was cornered and
stunned with the Taser.
He died shortly afterward and friends who were with him said
they heard and saw officers celebrating and high fiving while the young man’s
body lay on the ground.
Medical examiners have yet to release a toxicology report or
cause of death. Miami Beach Police have declined to comment pending an ongoing
investigation.
The teenager’s father submitted a letter late last month to the
U.S. Department of Justice and President Barack Obama alleging that police used
excessive force and refused to provide him with information regarding the
incident.
“I’m not an investigator, just a broken father who wants
answers,” he wrote.
He said his son’s body showed signs of mistreatment, including
an injury to the forehead, after it was turned over to the family for the
funeral.
“My biggest concern is was it due to the Taser or was it from
blows (by police),” said his father.
Hernandez-Llach’s sister, Offir Hernandez, disputed speculation
that her brother was on drugs at the time of the incident, but said that
according to friends he had smoked marijuana that morning.
“He took care of himself,” she said. “He was very healthy and
wouldn’t even drink sodas and ate salads and fish. He’d never put acid in his
body.”
Hernandez-Llach’s family has also filed a lawsuit in Miami-Dade
County Circuit Court against the Miami Beach Police Department and Mercado,
seeking an undisclosed amount for damages and alleging the police used
“unnecessary, excessive and unconstitutional force.”
The Colombian-born artist was slightly built and unarmed, and
“officers had no reasonable basis to fear for their own safety or the safety of
the public,” the lawsuit said.
Mercado was named in several prior complaints according to
police Internal Affairs reports obtained by Reuters. He was disciplined for
failing a drug test in 2011 but was exonerated in several other cases,
including punching a man in the face during an off-duty fight in a men’s room
in 2007.
DEATH OF MIAMI BEACH TEEN REKINDLES DEBATE ON TASER SAFETY
By Kevin Gray of Reuters
October 14, 2013
MIAMI — When police spotted Israel Hernandez Llach spray painting a
shut-down McDonald’s in August, the Miami teenager decided to make a run for
it.
Moments later the unarmed, 18-year-old graffiti artist was dead.
He had been struck in the chest by a police stun gun. The Florida Department of
Law Enforcement is still investigating what caused the Aug. 6 death of the
Colombian-born teenager. His death in Miami Beach, where police conduct has
come under intense scrutiny in recent years, has triggered protests calling for
a change in the way officers use the stun guns known as Tasers.
It has also reignited a debate about whether the electrical
shock the Taser delivers can sometimes trigger a cardiac arrest when fired at
the chest area.
“The fact that he was shot in the chest is something we are
analyzing,” said Jose J. Rodriguez, a lawyer for Hernandez Llach’s family.
“We’re working with the assumption for now that the Taser caused his death.”
Tasers, used by police officers in the United States and
globally, have been the target of criticism from advocacy groups like Amnesty
International and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which argue they
can be lethal and have called for more stringent rules on their use.
Proponents of Tasers say stun guns are a very useful tool for
law enforcement officers, enabling them to subdue suspects without deadly
force.
“It’s not a magic bullet,” said Steve Tuttle, a spokesman for
Taser International. “But it is the most effective, accountable tool that
officers have.”
A study published last year in the American Heart Association
journal, Circulation, analyzed the cases of eight people in the United States
who suffered cardiac arrest after being shocked by a Taser in the chest.
Seven of the people died and one survived, leading the study’s
author to conclude that electricity delivered by a Taser can speed up the heart
rate and provoke cardiac arrest in some cases.
“Cardiac arrest can happen,” said Dr. Douglas Zipes, a
cardiologist and distinguished professor at the Indiana University School of
Medicine who led the study. “It’s infrequent, but how infrequent, we don’t
know.”
Taser International has questioned the study’s results, saying
it fails to establish a clear connection. In 2009, the company adjusted the
guidance it provides to police departments on Taser use, warning officers to
avoid, if possible, shots to the chest because of extremely low risk of an
“adverse cardiac event.”
“If there is going to be a cardiac arrest, it’s going to be
extraordinarily rare,” Tuttle said.
In its safety materials, Taser recommends users aim away from
the chest area as well as the head, throat and any areas with an existing
injury, if possible.
John Burton, a California lawyer who has successfully tried
several cases against Taser involving chest shots, said the language needs to
be clearer about potential risks, and more data is needed.
“No one is going around collecting these incidents, studying
their frequency, studying what happened,” he said.
When a person dies from being Tasered, sometimes the cause of
death is not clear, Burton said.
Hernandez Llach’s father, Israel Hernandez Bandera, is awaiting
a medical examiner’s report that could reveal the cause of death. The report’s
findings are being withheld because of a civil suit the family filed accusing
the police of excessive force. Such withholding is normal when suits are filed.
“I just want some answers,” he said. “Was it the Taser? Was it
something else?”
TASERS ARE WIDELY USED
Tasers, which were first introduced in 1994, can deliver a
charge of up to 50,000 volts that paralyze a person’s muscles, allowing
officers to easily subdue them. Officers can use a Taser from a distance of up
to 25 feet; the weapon fires prongs connected to metal string that pierce the
skin.
The devices are used by nearly 17,000 law enforcement agencies
in 107 countries, including police forces in most major U.S. cities, according
to Taser International. Tasers for law enforcement start at around $500.
Earlier this year, a Connecticut state lawmaker unsuccessfully
introduced a bill supported by the ACLU to set training and reporting standards
for Taser use in the state.
Concerns about the risk of cardiac arrest have led at least one
police department to tighten restrictions on their use. The Cincinnati Police
Department prohibited frontal shots last year except in situations of self
defense, said Sargent Julian Johnson, a department spokesman.
It is not known if Hernandez Llach had a pre-existing condition,
such as heart disease, or other factors like drug or alcohol use that could
have contributed to his death. Miami Beach Police officials have suggested he
may have died from a pre-existing condition or physical exertion.
Hernandez Llach’s sister, Offir Hernandez, said her brother did
not use hard drugs, such as the counter-culture psychedelic drug acid, or
cocaine, but said his friends told her he smoked marijuana that morning.
“He took care of himself,” she said. “He was very healthy and
wouldn’t even drink sodas, and only ate salads and fish.”
She said that detectives who came to their house to break the
news of her brother’s death immediately asked the family if Hernandez Llach had
been using acid.
“He’d never put acid in his body,” she said.
Hernandez Llach died after leading officers on an early morning
foot chase through alleyways on Miami Beach. When he was cornered, he bolted
toward the officers. A policeman responded by firing a stun gun at his chest,
according to the Miami Beach Police Department.
Once in police custody, Hernandez Llach showed signs of medical
distress and officers rushed him to a hospital. Shortly afterward, he was
pronounced dead.
Miami Beach Police spokesman Sargent Bobby Hernandez declined to
discuss specifics about the case pending the investigation.
He said the department’s officers have to be Tasered themselves
during training to understand how much pain it can cause, and added that the
department’s guidelines spell out that the department “prefers” that officers
aim for the abdomen.
“Now when you’re dealing
with someone who is resisting and not complying, when it shoots it doesn’t
exactly land where you were aiming,” he said.
Hernandez said he had recently completed the department’s
regular training for Tasers. The course offered no explanation why the chest
area should be avoided, he said.
Emma Andersson, an attorney with the ACLU Criminal Law Reform
Project, said she worried that officers were reaching too quickly for their
Tasers, particularly in non-violent situations because some police officers may
view a Taser as non-lethal.
“It’s a lot easier to whip out your Taser if you have it on your
belt than it is to spend 10 to 15 minutes trying to negotiate with someone,”
she said.