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         NEWS: 
        A public service offered by Paul Kemp - Central Nova - Nova Scotia 
        
        Leaders need a serious reality 
        check - It is the duty of our public servants and elected 
        representatives to do the greatest good for the greatest number of 
        people over the longest period of time.  
        Cast your vote in the next election 
        by the measure of what our political managers and public servants 
        actually do. Our actions are our final decisions.  
        
          
          
        
          
        
          
        
        
         Globe and Mail 
        POLICING CONTROVERSY  
         
        RCMP has a lot to answer for in heartbreaking
        
        taser death (CAP U-Tube News Video) 
         
        GARY MASON  
         
         
        October 20, 2007  
         
        I feel sick today for Zofia Cisowski.  
         
        Ms. Cisowski is the mother of Robert Dziekanski , the 40-year-old Polish 
        man who died in the early morning hours last Sunday, shortly after RCMP 
        fired barbed hooks into his body, along with 50,000 volts of 
        electricity.  
         
        I watched an interview with Ms. Cisowski this week on Global BC and it 
        was one of the saddest things I've ever seen. She talked about how she'd 
        worked two jobs for several years to save enough money for her son to 
        move to Canada. Last Sunday he was finally making the long trek from 
        Pieszyce, Poland, to start a new life in Canada with his mother.  
         
        Ms. Cisowski drove four hours from her home in Kamloops to meet her 
        son's flight at the airport. He was scheduled to touch down around 3:30 
        in the afternoon. But 3:30 came and went without any sign of him, then 
        4:30 and 5:30 and 6:30.  
         
        She appealed to airport officials to look for him. She was concerned 
        he'd become lost and wouldn't be able to ask for help because he didn't 
        speak English. By 10 o'clock, she gave up hope that her son would emerge 
        from behind the glass doors of the international arrival area and 
        returned home.  
         
        The next day she would learn he was dead.  
         
        "I want to be with him now," Ms. Cisowski cried in broken English. "He 
        must be here, not in God's room.  
         
        "Very soon I was going to realize my son's hug. I was smiling nicely 
        because I would meet my son soon. My boy, my boy, how does this happen? 
        I was there waiting for him. He was waiting, too, but he wait too many 
        hours alone by himself. No language, no English, no food, no water.  
         
        "He didn't see me," Ms. Cisowski said, continuing to sob. "I didn't see 
        him. I'm so sad."  
         
        No one can be unmoved by Ms. Cisowski's lament. Her grief is so 
        palpable. Here is a woman whose nesting instinct compelled her to make 
        enormous personal sacrifice to help out her child, now having to deal 
        with an unimaginable loss, one made even more tragic and heartbreaking 
        by the senseless circumstances surrounding it.  
         
        Almost a week after the fact, I still don't understand, or accept, the 
        decisions made by the RCMP to bring Ms. Cisowski's son down in the 
        manner in which it did.  
         
        Here is what we know: For some reason Mr. Dziekanski was wandering 
        around the Vancouver International Airport at one o'clock in the 
        morning, apparently lost and visibly upset. He began throwing things, 
        hitting windows and yelling in Polish. Someone called the police.  
         
        Three RCMP officers arrived at 1:30 a.m., encountered the distraught man 
        and quickly tasered him. He would die minutes later.  
         
        Witness accounts of what happened are at odds with the RCMP's version of 
        events. For instance, the police have said they fired their stun guns 
        twice, while a woman standing nearby distinctly recalls the sound of 
        four taser blasts hitting the man. The RCMP has said its officers didn't 
        use mace or pepper spray to subdue the man because the airport was too 
        crowded. However, Lorne Meltzer, a corporate valet who called the RCMP 
        in the first place, said that's not true. Mr. Meltzer told an 
        interviewer the "place was empty" - which wouldn't be a surprise given 
        what time it was.  
         
        Mr. Meltzer, who witnessed the incident, has come to the same conclusion 
        many of us have: The police were too hasty in using their tasers. He'd 
        told police the man didn't speak English and yet the officers evidently 
        only twice issued a quick command in English - "put your hands on the 
        desk" - before using their stun guns.  
         
        Mr. Meltzer says Mr. Dziekanski was waving a stapler around in a 
        threatening manner - a stapler. And yet three RCMP officers and airport 
        security couldn't subdue him without using a taser gun? Come on. With 
        the help of a couple of my old high school buddies from Sarnia, I could 
        have subdued this guy - without mace or a baton.  
         
        Given the potentially deadly consequences of taser use, why would the 
        RCMP officers in this case spend so little time trying to figure out 
        what Mr. Dziekanski's problem was? In some cases, police will spend 
        hours and hours negotiating with someone holed up in a home threatening 
        suicide, and yet in this case RCMP didn't spend more than two minutes 
        negotiating with a clearly distraught foreigner brandishing nothing more 
        than a stapler.  
         
        Of course, this being an in-custody death, the RCMP will once again be 
        investigating themselves. I'm going to go out on a limb here and predict 
        the officers who tasered Mr. Dziekanski will be exonerated. Just 
        following procedure and all that.  
         
        My heart breaks for Zofia Cisowski.  
        
          
        
         
         
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