Jacksonville Deputy Suspended For Using Stun Gun On Girl
POSTED: Tuesday, May 17, 2005
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- An officer has been suspended for zapping a 13-year-old girl at least twice with a stun gun while she was handcuffed in his caged patrol car.
An internal report by the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said Llahsmin Lynn Kallead was handcuffed and in the back seat of the patrol car when Officer G.A. Nelson stunned her twice.
"I felt like a bunch of static electricity, multiple static electricity shocks all over my back and legs," Kallead told Channel 4 in March.
Nelson and his partner had been called to the apartment Kallead shares with her mother Rosie Vaughan because they were fighting Feb. 7.
Vaughan wanted police to help get medical help for her daughter, who had been hospitalized for observation in the past for emotional disorders.
Nelson, a 6-foot-2 officer weighing 300 pounds, allegedly used the low-setting stun mode when the 4-foot-8 Kallead wormed the handcuffs from behind her back and would not do as directed.
"The situation was under control at this point," the internal report said.
Sgt. D.E. Smith, who was called to the scene, said, "Please don't tell me this is the person you Tased."
Department spokesman Ken Jefferson said Nelson has been suspended for three days.
"A supervisor questioned the judgment of the officer, and he began the investigation process," Jefferson said Monday.
Nelson did not violate written guidelines on using stun guns, but his actions showed poor judgment, the report said. He had been trained to use Taser guns and received training as an instructor in January.
Copyright 2004 by JustNews.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.