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  1. I have made an entry at Talk:UCLA Taser incident regarding your edit of that article. Flatscan 02:40, 29 November 2006 (UTC) My main concerns are that this section imperfectly duplicates information available at UCLA Taser incident. Since this is in the section about controversies involving electroshock devices, expanded exposition is fine, but ...

  2. I was asked to comment on the inclusion of the taser incident in this article. UCLA Taser incident has a long, fully developed article. It survived on AfD in 2006 and I doubt it would be deleted in another AfD. Since it is here to stay, it is logical to have a short mention of the incident in this article.

  3. Taser safety issues relate to the lethality of the Taser. The TASER device is a less-lethal, not non-lethal, weapon, since the possibility of serious injury or death exists whenever the weapon is deployed. [1] It is a brand of conducted electroshock weapon sold by Axon, formerly TASER International. Axon has identified increased risk in ...

  4. Nov 22, 2006 · UCLA police confirmed late Monday that the officer who fired the Taser gun was Terrence Duren, who has served in the university’s Police Department for 18 years. Duren, who was named officer of the year in 2001, also has been involved in several controversial incidents on campus.

  5. A brief outburst of violence at UCLA amid the encampment and protest left one woman detained by campus security. As KNX News' Pete Demetriou reports, the incident happened just before 2:00 in the ...

  6. It seems that this is in response to my comment. I suggest an organization similar to UCLA Taser incident, where the lead is very brief, the initial description of the incident is concise and NPOV, and additional detail and POV disputes follow in separate sections. Flatscan 00:53, 22 September 2007 (UTC) Reply

  7. If one searches that blog for "taser", there are a number of results, including ones regarding the UCLA Taser incident and the University of Florida Taser incident. Flatscan 04:08, 12 October 2007 (UTC) I removed the section stating two deaths had been reported in the Wake Forest study, simply because the study doesn't claim any deaths.

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