We had an incident in Ontario involving a gentleman and six or seven trained tactical officers. Those are officers who work in a full-time agency of around 400 full-time members. That is what they do; they attend dangerous calls. They were sent to gain control of an individual and they had great difficulty. In fact, I testified at the inquest, and I recall one of the officers describing how he, at well over 200 pounds, put as much weight as he could on the individual's arm, but the man was able to curl his arm in towards the side and extend it back as though the officer was not on his arm.
You need to appreciate that a human being can get into a state, which I think is best described as a runaway of the fight-or-flight response, and the capabilities that person possesses are extraordinary.
In the training we provide at the Ontario Police College, I tell the biggest recruits--and they haven't been trained in this aspect yet--to get the biggest person in the class and to use any method they want, other than hurting them...hold on to them in any way they like and just try to keep them on the ground. They grab his arms and his shoulders, they sit on his hips and they grab his legs, and within four or five seconds the person is usually at least at their knees.
Then we take the five smallest people in the class and the largest person in the class, and I show them how, in a perfect situation, to lock up the joints so that it limits the person's movement. I can get five of the smallest people to hold the biggest person on the ground and he can't really move. But that's an ideal situation, where the person has allowed those joints to be misaligned, if you will, to make the ability to hold that person optimal and the resistance minimal. Theoretically, it can be done.
Actually, in my policing career, my active career--I'm no longer a police officer; I've been at the college for 12 years now. I'm a citizen. But in my active career I had to subdue a woman who was experiencing this excited delirium state, if you will, and it took three of us to hold this woman down. She was about 40 years old. We tried everything we could. We didn't want to harm her because we knew she was out of contact with reality that day and was suffering from mental illness. It took us four or five minutes to gain control without harming her, to get the handcuffs on her and take her out to the car, and she survived. I didn't recognize it for what it was at the time because I was not even familiar with the term back at that stage of my career. But it is not as simple as it seems.
We believe that rather than fighting with an individual for 10, 15, and in some cases as much as 20 minutes, it may be more prudent, in fact safer and more effective, to use a device that can gain control or assist in gaining control in five to 10 seconds, maybe 15 at the top. You can get the individual in handcuffs and transition this event from a police response, which it traditionally has been, to a medical response, which is probably more what needs to happen.
So when we talk about multiple exposures, and you've seen that it's a five-second window...after that, my experience in having endured a taser discharge is that when the switch goes off, there is no lingering effect. Yes, you feel tired, but you are as capable of resisting after the event as you were before the event. We try to use those cycles to get the cuffs on, get the person handcuffed, and then put them on a stretcher so we can get them off to the hospital.
With regard to the exchange of bodily fluid, if you want to be frank about it, the old way involved punching somebody, kicking somebody, or whacking them with a stick, which is now a metal rod. You can break an arm. You hit the person; people move, they get struck on the head and the head bleeds profusely, despite the fact that it's not necessarily a lethal injury--we don't teach officers to hit people in the head, but accidents happen. You punch a person in the nose, the lips split, your knuckles get damaged, teeth cut into the knuckles, there's an exchange of fluid. We don't know what's going to happen.
You're right, we don't always deal with people whose background and medical history we know. Sometimes we do, but most often we don't. Those things all have to be considered. A person who's involved in a medical crisis...if the officer honestly believes this is something they've seen before and they don't think this is something that would be good for the subject, it may be prudent to gain control and transition that person off to the hospital, in their interest and in a public safety interest as well.