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Answer Man: Taser carry policy for APD, Sheriff s Office?

Today’s batch of burning questions, my smart-aleck answers and the real deal: Question: The news has recently covered a story in which a law enforcement officer in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, a suburb of the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, accidentally shot and killed an individual with her service pistol when she thought she was firing her Taser. It appears from the report of the incident that her service pistol and the Taser were both on the strong hand side of her body. It seems to me that those two weapons should be on opposite sides, with the Taser being on the weak hand side of the law enforcement officer s body, and the lethal force service pistol on the strong hand side. This would eliminate the possibility of a tragic mistake. What is the policy and training related to the use of service pistols and Tasers in the Asheville City Police Department and the Buncombe County Sheriff s Department? Is there a requirement that those two weapons be on the opposite side of an officer s

Detainee dies 3 hours after being booked into Buncombe jail

Buncombe County Sheriff s Office says an inmate died just over three hours after she was booked into the Buncombe County Detention Facility on April 10. According to a news release from the sheriff s office, a detention officer at the jail was performing regular supervision rounds at 3:27 p.m. April 10 and spoke with the detainee, Tania Shepherd, 37, who wasn’t feeling well. The officer called for a nurse who arrived 2 minutes later. The nurse checked Shepherd s vital signs and administered Narcan, a medication used to counter the effects of opioid overdose. Buncombe County EMS arrived at the detention facility at 3:41 p.m. and continued medical care as the detainee was transported to Mission Hospital. Shepherd had been booked into the jail at 12:19 p.m. that same day, charged with possession of a stolen motor vehicle and given a $5,000 bond, said Aaron Sarver, Buncombe County Sheriff s Office spokesman.

Police investigating woman s death at North Carolina jail

Woman killed, man arrested in Buncombe County, deputies say

Woman killed, man arrested in Buncombe County, deputies say Ronald L. Haynes, 74, charged with one count of first-degree murder Share Updated: 11:31 PM EST Jan 12, 2021 Anne Newman Ronald L. Haynes, 74, charged with one count of first-degree murder Share Updated: 11:31 PM EST Jan 12, 2021 Hide Transcript Show Transcript AND THE BODY. THEY ROLLED THIS A SUICIDE. MICHAEL: A 74-YEAR-OLD MAN IS IN JAIL TONIGHT. RONALD HAYNES IS ACCUSED OF KILLING ELVIS MELTZER. THE TWO LIVE TOGETHER IN A HO TRACKING THE COVID-19 VACCINE Ronald L. Haynes, 74, charged with one count of first-degree murder Share Updated: 11:31 PM EST Jan 12, 2021 Anne Newman Executive Producer A North Carolina man was charged Tuesday with murdering a woman he lived with, according to Aaron Sarver, Buncombe County Sheriff s Office.Ronald L. Haynes, 74, has been charged with one count of first-degree murder in the death of Belva Smeltz

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