Supplementary » November 13, 2006
Going After the Civilian Market
Taser expands marketing to sell stun guns to police and civilians.
By Silja J.A. Talvi
Police officers aren’t the only people toting Tasers.
For a decade, Taser stun guns have been available to civilian buyers in 43 states. And in the last couple of years, the company has stepped up its marketing to make sure that the $999 Taser X-26C Citizen Defense System becomes the home defense weapon of choice. Toward that end, Taser has demonstrated the civilian model in cities across the country.
The X-26C doesn’t differ significantly from the one used by law enforcement. Instead of a 21-foot range, the civilian model has a 15-foot range. It can shock someone for up to 30 seconds.
Early concerns about civilian misuse were pooh-poohed by Taser executives. Douglas Cote, manager of citizen sales, told the AP: “[W]e make the device. We don’t tell everybody how to use it.”
They certainly don’t. In August, two men armed with Tasers robbed two women outside of San Antonio shopping malls. In Pasadena, a man appropriately named the “Taser Bandit” is on the loose after robbing a bank in October, armed only with his stun gun.
In June, Clark David Thomas, 43, kidnapped his 21-year-old estranged wife, and held her captive in a North Charleston, S.C., hotel room for two days. Thomas bound the woman and then repeatedly stunned her with his Taser until she was able to make an escape.
And, it appears violent predators have caught on to a new way to torture their prey. In August, in Modesto, Calif., a serial rapist kidnapped and brutally raped a 27-year-old woman after stunning her with a Taser.
More information about Silja J.A. Talvi
-
subscribe to print magazine
-
email this article to a friend
-
Reader Comments
There are no comments on this article yet. Start the discussion below.
-
register a new account »Posting Security
Appeared in the November 2006 Issue
Also featured
Witnessing Extraordinary Rendition
Semper Fi: The Way to Win
Wave of Party Switchers Hits Republicans
Full contents
Previous issues
Subscribe and save!
Also by Silja J.A. Talvi
- De-escalating the Drug War
Obama's pick to head ONDCP is better than your average drug czar.Posted on March 13, 2009 - Ending the War on Drugs
Will the Obama administration put justice back in the criminal justice system?Posted on March 2, 2009 - Our Town vs. Exxon
Marine biologist Riki Ott explains how Cordova, Alaska, rebounded 20 years after the oil spill. Posted on February 20, 2009 - All Work, No Play
Vacation time shouldn't be the privilege of a few, but the right of all Posted on October 22, 2008 - Reporting From The Ground Up
The power of street reportingPosted on June 28, 2008
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- 7.
- 8.
- 9.
- 10.