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Cash Starved Forest Service Spends $600,000 to
Buy Tasers
Devices Remain in Boxes Because Rangers Lack Training
Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER)
December 4, 2007
WASHINGTON, DC - The U.S. Forest Service has bought $600,000
worth of "Electronic Control Devices" without any training program, rules for
use or even a written explanation as to why the devices are needed, according
to agency records posted today by Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility (PEER). The devices, known as Tasers, are sitting in storage and
cannot be issued because the agency has yet to develop a training course.
Due to an intense fire season, the Forest Service is now
staggering under a more than a quarter-billion dollar deficit, causing it to
begin jettisoning core programs. For example, the agency lacks enough funds to
draw up new timber sales. At the same time, the Forest Service law enforcement
program is hobbled by more than 200 vacant positions, leaving only one officer
to cover each 300,000 acres of National Forest and 750,000 annual million
visitors.
In late September 2007, the Forest Service purchased 700
weapons and "related accessories" from Aardvark Tactical, Inc. of Azusa,
California, a subsidiary of Taser International, at a cost to taxpayers of
$600,001.52, according to agency records obtained by PEER under the Freedom of
Information Act. This represents enough to equip every single Forest Service
special agent and law enforcement officer with an Electronic Control system at
a cost of $857 apiece.
The reason for this purchase is unknown since the Forest
Service was unable to produce any document justifying the need for these
weapons. John Twiss, the Director of Law Enforcement and Investigations and the
official who made the decision to buy the Tasers, wrote PEER in a letter dated
November 7, 2007:
"[I]n the interest of customer service, we can tell you that
the Forest Service is currently developing the required training and law
enforcement officers will be required to attend prior to the issuance of, or
authorization to carry or use, an Electronic Control Device."
"There must have been a fire sale on Tasers, otherwise why
would an agency buy 700 of them without a program, protocol or need?" asked
PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that the federal fiscal year ended
September, around the time of the hurried single source purchase. "The Forest
Service has many more pressing law enforcement priorities that should have
received any end-of-fiscal-year surplus."
In addition to the cost of training its entire law
enforcement staff, the Forest Service may be assuming significant financial
liability for injuries and deaths. In October, Amnesty International released a
study estimating that 290 civilians have died from police use of Tasers since
2001.
Tasers are touted as a non-lethal alternative to the use of
deadly force. Since Forest Service rarely is called upon to apply deadly force,
the role of these electronic devices on national forest visitors is
problematic. Nonetheless, Taser International now also equips the National Park
Service.
"The proliferation of Tasers within federal land management
agencies has all the earmarks of a mindless arms race that has eluded any
thoughtful public or congressional review," Ruch added. "As a result, in
addition to the howl of the coyote and the hoot of the owl, the plaintive cry
of 'Don't tase me, bro' may soon echo through the forest night."
Read the Forest
Service response to the PEER Freedom of Information Act request
View the
sole Forest Service justification document
See the $600,000
invoice
Compare the
severe understaffing in the Forest Service law enforcement program
Look at the Amnesty
International study on police Taser deaths
Delve into the
background of the Forest Service official who ordered the tasers
Check the Taser International press release announcing the Forest Service order
CONTACT: Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) Carol Goldberg
(202) 265-7337
[Non-text portions of this
message have been removed]
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