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  1. UCLA Taser incident. On November 14, 2006, Mostafa Tabatabainejad, a fourth-year University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) student, was drive stunned five times with a Taser by campus police while handcuffed. Tabatabainejad allegedly refused to show his school ID to a fellow student acting as security at the college library Instructional ...

    • November 14, 2006
    • Shocked by a Taser
    • Mostafa Tabatabainejad
  2. Tabatabainejad filed a lawsuit against UCLA; settled with $220,000. The UCLA Taser incident occurred on November 14, 2006, when Mostafa Tabatabainejad, a fourth-year University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) student, was drive stunned multiple times with a Taser by campus police, for allegedly refusing to be escorted out of the College ...

    • November 14, 2006
    • Shocked by a Taser
    • 11:30 p.m.
  3. A campus-wide alert to avoid the area was issued via UCLA's BruinAlert system at 9:49 a.m. PDT, and Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers were summoned to the building shortly before 10:00 a.m. PDT. When officers responded at Engineering IV and met Lynch, he gave them his office key so they could check rooms, and then left with another ...

    • June 1, 2016, Before 9:49 a.m. (PDT)
    • Handgun
    • Engineering Building IV UCLA, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
  4. Jan 18, 2007 · Jan. 18, 2007 12 AM PT. From Times Staff and Wire Reports. The UCLA student who was stunned with a Taser gun by campus police when he refused to show his identification filed a federal lawsuit ...

  5. Nov 18, 2006 · The move came hours after more than 200 students marched to the UCLA police station calling for an independent investigation into the Taser incident as well as the suspension of the officers involved.

  6. Aug 2, 2007 · Tabatabainejad, then a 23-year-old senior at UCLA, was in the campus library one night last November when a security guard asked him to provide identification during a routine check to make sure ...

  7. Nov 22, 2006 · When I saw the video, I was horrified and disturbed. The student did not pose any danger to the officers or his fellow students. How can the officers, the UCLA police, or the University justify the use of force for not having a student ID, especially after the student stated load and clear he a medical condition.

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