Ex-Taser worker alleges she was threatened

by Barry Artiste | November 22, 2007 at 06:58 am
1123 views | 15 Recommendations | 3 comments

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M18 M18L TASER Pistol Demo www_ExtremeTactical_com

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M18 M18L TASER Pistol Demo www_ExtremeTactical_com

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Taser International "got's some splainin to do"

Taser International "got's some splainin to do"

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uploaded by Barry Artiste

Certainly a disturbing series of events in what seems to be a Taser company protecting it reputation as well as the interests of it's stocks shareholders.

Ex-Taser worker alleges she was threatened

Accusations a 'complete sham,' company replies

Adrian Humphreys, National Post, with files from Shannon Kari and Kelly Grant, National Post

Published: Thursday, November 22, 2007

Amid all the litigation involving Taser International -- 100 claims against the company alleging wrongful death or injury and lawsuits launched by the company against coroners, claiming their popular stun gun was wrongly named as a cause of death -- lies a case with distinction: startling allegations by a former company employee.

Pam Schreiner, who worked for the Arizona-based maker of the electric-shock weapons in 2004, says she was threatened and intimidated, including her home being shot at, after she saw company officials intentionally shredding Taser injury reports during a legal proceeding, according to court documents.

"Since leaving Taser International, I have lived in fear of what Taser International will do to me. The company has enormous resources and connections through law enforcement," Ms. Schreiner says in an affidavit sworn this summer and filed in a court in Georgia.

Taser International says it "aggressively defends our products in all litigation brought against the company."View Larger Image View Larger Image

Taser International says it "aggressively defends our products in all litigation brought against the company."

  "I have been verbally threatened by people hired by Taser to harass and intimidate me. I was told by the two Chandler [Arizona] police officers that they had conducted surveillance of my residence, followed me around and gone through my garbage," her affidavit says.

"I was confronted at the grocery store by someone I had never met and told that it would not be a good idea for me to be testifying against Taser. In the summer of 2005, shortly before giving my deposition in [a previous case against Taser], a window was shot out of my residence."

Ms. Schreiner's allegations have not been tested in court nor previously reported. They also come with a firm denial by Taser, which called them "a complete sham" and "wild accusations."

Answers to Taser questions, Page A8

Lawyers for Taser, who are defending against the Georgia suit, filed weighty legal arguments trying to keep a jury from hearing Ms. Schreiner's allegations. Taser said in court she resigned after working for nine months when she was accused of providing false information during a corporate investigation and that her affidavit contradicts her earlier statements.

A judge in Georgia denied Taser's motion, however, and Ms. Schreiner is scheduled to give sworn deposition in the case next month.

The Georgia case that includes Ms. Schreiner's allegations involves claims of a debilitating back injury sustained by David Wilson, a former Georgia State Trooper, during his training on how to use the device.

That case, launched last year, is similar to one filed by RCMP Constable Dan Husband, who was stationed in Revelstoke, B.C., when he suffered a back injury after a voluntary Taser strike, he claims. Officers are encouraged to experience a Taser shot as part of their training, the suit says. Const. Husband's suit was filed a year ago but only made public this week in the National Post.

There have been at least 10 training-injury lawsuits filed against Taser since 2003, according to the company. They are among the more than 100 product-liability suits it has faced, according to the company's most recent filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the U.S. stock market regulator.

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Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:18 on November 22nd, 2007

I'm not surprised that that the company is going into aggro-self-defense mode. There's a "shocking" joke in there somewhere, but I'll take the high road for a change.

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks for the flag and the additional material, suprisingly it worked this time, most of the time when contributor add material to my stories and I hit the link to allow the "Cannot contact Peter Reardon" comes up and  it doesn't allow new material to be added, so it pretty much a crap shoot when it allows and not allows.

RC Cone
RC Cone
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 12:57 on November 22nd, 2007

Great story, very relevant the current headlines.  Please keep us updated.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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