1. Revenge Effects and Electronic Control Weapons: A Cautionary Tale about the Unintended Consequences of Technology in the American Justice System.
- Author
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Vaughn, Paige E., Greene, Claire, and Klinger, David
- Subjects
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ELECTRONIC control , *POLICE attitudes , *JUSTICE administration , *POLAR effects (Chemistry) , *POLICE shootings , *CRIMINAL justice system , *PROCEDURAL justice - Abstract
Nonlethal weapons, such as electronic control devices (ECWs), have become increasingly commonplace in American law enforcement as our society seeks to reduce citizen injuries and deaths at the hands of the police. There is reason to suspect, however, that police possession of nonlethal weapons such as ECWs can sometimes increase the likelihood that a citizen will suffer serious injury or death during an interaction with the police. This paper lays out the theoretical basis for this suspicion and presents empirical evidence that the presence of ECWs has led police officers to shoot citizens in numerous cases where they otherwise would not have discharged their firearms. Police leaders—and policy makers throughout the criminal justice system—should carefully consider the potential downside(s) of given technologies before adopting them and seek means to ameliorate negative consequences if they opt to use them. • Police possession of nonlethal weapons designed to reduce citizen injury and death by police can increase the likelihood of citizen injury or death by police, producing a revenge effect. • TASER-confusion shootings are those revenge effects in which a police officer mistakenly draws and fires their service pistol when they mean to draw and fire their TASER. • TASER-induced shootings are revenge effects in which the presence of TASERs interacts with other elements police-citizen encounters to produce officer-involved shootings that otherwise wouldn't have occurred. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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